Ms Aya Mousa and Dr Stacey Ellery |
Early career researchers
Ms Aya Mousa and Dr Stacey Ellery have won the MHTP Research Week ECR speed
networking event, receiving a $10,000 grant to progress their collaborative
research idea.
Co-organised by the
Hudson Institute and School of Clinical Sciences ECR Committees, the event
invited early career researchers from across the precinct to submit a
collaborative grant idea.
Aya Mousa (a PhD
student/early post-doctoral researcher at MCHRI, SPHPM) and Stacey Ellery (a
postdoctoral researcher in The Ritchie Centre) emerged from the event with a novel
idea that combines their expertise in pregnancy and metabolic disorders to help
women with gestational diabetes.
“Gestational diabetes
(GDM) is a common disease developed by 20,000 Australian women during pregnancy
each year,” Ms Mousa and Dr Ellery said.
“Not only are women with
GDM at higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes including pre-eclampsia, and
preterm birth, the disease also predisposes both the mother and infant to developing
diabetes and cardiovascular diseases later in life.”
Using plasma samples from
over 500 pregnant women, stored in clinical biobanks at MCHRI and The Ritchie
Centre, the researchers will explore the influence of diet and lifestyle
intervention on the development of gestational diabetes and will conduct the
first studies to comprehensively assess lipid biomarkers in GDM.
By combining samples from
both low- and high-risk pregnancies, they will potentially identify novel metabolic
markers (lipids) that could be used to improve risk prediction, prevention, and
management of GDM in the future.
Ms Mousa and Dr Ellery said
the ECR event was instrumental in forming this new collaboration, as their
respective research teams were not previously aware of their joint interests.
They said the support of funds pledged by Hudson and SCS also ensured the idea
could be made a reality, an opportunity not often afforded to young
researchers.
During Research Week,
ECRs met for casual one-on-one conversations to find common interests and
unearth potential novel research ideas. The committee reviewed EOIs and then,
after an initial round of selection, full applications.
Event co-organiser Dr
Aimee Dordevic said ECRs at MHTP are spread across many different centres and
departments, and the event provided important opportunities for face-to-face
meetings.
“It was fantastic to see
how well the event was able to facilitate collaborations between researchers
that may not have otherwise come to life. We look forward to seeing the
outcomes of the projects, from Aya and Stacey, and all of the other grant
applicants,” Dr Aimee Dordevic said.
“Importantly, we would
like to thank Hudson and SCS for supporting this event. We plan to run the
event again in 2018 so that we can continue to nurture collaborations between
ECRs and foster world-class research outcomes.”
About the winners:
Ms Aya Mousa recently
completed her PhD at the Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation
(MCHRI). She has published extensively in diabetes, nutrition and metabolism,
developing expertise across the research continuum (mechanistic,
epidemiological, clinical, and translational research).
Dr Stacey Ellery is based
at The Ritchie Centre, Hudson Institute. She has published extensively in the
field of metabolic regulation during pregnancy and the use of dietary
interventions to improve pregnancy outcomes.
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