Associate Professor Maxine Bonham |
Federal Health Minister, the Hon. Greg Hunt, today announced over $500 million in grants through the NHMRC and Medical
Research Future Fund (MRFF) Clinical Researchers Program, as part of the biggest
round of funding for the year.
The School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health (SCS) received more
than $17 million in project grants from a total of $91 million awarded to the
Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences.
The Monash Health Translation Precinct (MHTP) attracted 27% of the Faculty's total NHMRC Project grants, the second largest recipient among the nine schools of such funds in this round.
The Monash Health Translation Precinct (MHTP) attracted 27% of the Faculty's total NHMRC Project grants, the second largest recipient among the nine schools of such funds in this round.
The funding will support a diverse range of projects at the MHTP, from antibiotic resistance in blood stream
infections, to management of stroke after hospital discharge and a novel weight loss regime in overweight shift
workers.
The results brings Monash to a total $101 million in medical and
health research funding secured by the University this year across multiple
NHMRC and MRFF Clinical Researchers Program categories.
Head, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health Professor Eric
Morand said our continued success in attracting grant funding is a testament to
the world leading research being undertaken at the Monash Health Translation
Precinct.
The successful investigators below
include researchers from SCS and Hudson Institute.
Researcher
|
Grant
|
Project summary
|
Dr Poh-Yi Gan
|
$631,653
|
We have discovered mast cells as injurious participants in
two important kidney diseases, autoimmune ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV) and
ischaemia-reperfusion injury resulting in acute kidney injury (AKI). This grant
is a pre-clinical study to re-purpose an anti-allergy drug, disodium
cromoglycate, to treat autoimmune AAV and prevent the development of AKI.
|
Dr Ben Rogers
|
$1,233,368
|
The
grant is a collaboration between the Infectious Disease and ICU research
teams at Monash. It is to allow up to 800 Australian patients from 15-20
hospitals around Australia to participate in a global clinical trial (planned
to enrol 3500 patients). It will be the world’s largest clinical trial of
blood stream infections.
The
study is comparing 1 week to 2 weeks of antibiotics for patients with blood
stream infections. At the moment around the world patients usually 2 weeks of
antibiotics. But this may be too long and expose patients to a higher risk of
complications from the treatment and increase the rates of antibiotic
resistance in hospitals and the community.
|
Professor Justin St John
|
$669,790
|
Many women suffer
from either failed fertilisation or their embryos arrest during early
development. This often results because their eggs have too few copies of
mitochondrial DNA otherwise known as mitochondrial DNA deficiency. Using a
pig model of mitochondrial deficiency, the project will show how
supplementation with autologous populations of mitochondrial DNA induces
changes in the genes that an embryo expresses to promote the transition from
a metabolically poor fate to a metabolically healthier fate.
|
Dr Guiying Nie
|
$817,063
|
Embryo
implantation is a key step in establishing pregnancy and a bottleneck in IVF
treatment to overcome infertility. For implantation to succeed, the uterus
must prepare appropriately so that an embryo can attach and implant. This
project will investigate a novel mechanism that regulates the uterus for implantation
and its implications in improving IVF.
|
Dr Sam Forster
|
$878,108
|
Antimicrobial
resistance is emerging at an alarming level, rendering some bacterial
infections untreatable and increasing dependence on last line antibiotics.
This project seeks to characterise antimicrobial resistance within the
naturally occurring gut bacteria to inform clinical antibiotic selection and
minimise the emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance within the
hospital and community setting.
|
Professor Paul Hertzog
|
$1,195,066
|
Some
patients who are susceptible to specific infections have a deficiency in
components of the interferon signalling
pathway. Interferons are long known to
protect from infections, but each component was thought to contribute broad
protection, not to specific pathogens. In this project, we will characterise
new specific functions of interferon components
and pathways to generate new biomarkers of disease, patient response and new
therapies.
|
Dr Kate Lawlor
|
$646,890
|
Obesity
and type 2 diabetes are among the fastest growing chronic conditions in
Australia and globally. This project aims to identify how different forms of
cell death contribute to tissue inflammation and the development of
obesity-induced type 2 diabetes. This fundamental knowledge will help direct
the development of new therapies to treat these conditions.
|
Professor Dominique Cadilhac
|
$1,769,409
|
Over 50,000 new strokes occur annually. Transition to home
after stroke is poorly managed within the health system with only half of
patients receiving a care plan or prevention education at the time of
hospital discharge. We propose a randomised controlled trial in 890 survivors
of stroke to assess the effectiveness and value of a new discharge support
intervention with 12 weeks of tailored electronic self-management support to
reduce readmissions and improve self-efficacy within 90 days.
|
Professor Richard Kitching
|
$1,392,005
|
When
the immune system malfunctions the body can lose tolerance one of its own
proteins, leading to autoimmune diseases that affect 5-7% of the population.
This project will use autoimmune kidney disease to understand why we lose
tolerance to ourselves, a critical step in the future development of
more effective and less toxic therapies for autoimmune diseases.
|
Associate Professor David Nikolic-Paterson
|
$955,024
|
Patients with chronic kidney disease and/or diabetes are at high risk
of developing acute kidney injury due to the markedly reduced blood flow to
the kidneys which occurs during life-saving cardiopulmonary bypass surgery.
Using new models of acute kidney injury in animals with chronic kidney
disease or diabetes, we have identified potential therapies that could
prevent this kidney damage. Importantly, two of these potential therapies are
currently in clinical trials in other diseases, indicating that they could be
re-purposed as treatments
to prevent this common form of anticipated acute kidney injury.
|
Professor Thanh Phan
|
$711,032
|
Stroke
is a leading cause of disability worldwide and results in significant
economic and societal cost. Ischaemic stroke, resulting from an obstructive
clot, comprises approximately 85% of all strokes. There are several new
therapies, including the clot-busting drug, tissue plasminogen activator
(TPA) and also endovascular clot retrieval (ECR) for large clots which
obstruct the main artery. However, only a small subset of patients is
eligible for these therapies. There is
interest in stem cell therapy as another treatment modality, especially for
patients who are unable to receive ECR or TPA therapies or for whom standard
treatment has failed. This grant will
fund a Phase 1 trial of amnion stem cells in acute ischemic stroke (I-ACT).
The development of a safe, well-tolerated and effective cell-based therapy
for ischaemic stroke would be transformational for the larger pool of
patients who miss out on TPA and ECR.
|
Associate Professor Maxine Bonham
|
$1,413,033
|
Approximately one fifth of employed Australians are engaged in shift
work. Eating at night is associated with weight gain and the circadian
disruption experienced by shift workers is associated with higher rates of
cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes when compared with day
workers.
Current weight loss strategies do not take into consideration the
lifestyle behaviours associated with shift work. This
collaborative study between Monash University and University South Australia
will investigate a novel weight loss regime in shift workers who are
overweight. We hypothesise that a combination of energy restriction and
meal timing will increase weight loss success over traditional energy
restriction and reduce the significant and increasing burden of metabolic
disease in the shift working population.
|
Dr Robert Galinsky
|
$978,979
|
Cerebral palsy is
a devastating life-long condition. A large proportion of cases are associated
with exposure to inflammation at the time of preterm birth. There is no
effective treatment. The study will examine how inflammation impairs brain
development and function in preterm infants and test whether blocking a key
inflammatory protein in the blood, called tumour necrosis factor, improves
brain development.
|
Professor Caroline Gargett
|
$1,397,337
|
Pelvic
organ prolapse (POP) Is a hidden disease burden affecting 25% of all women.
POP is the herniation of pelvic organs into the vagina, resulting from injury
during childbirth causing sexual, bladder and bowel dysfunction years later
as the condition progresses. POP has limited treatment options. We will
evaluate our novel cell-based therapy combined with degradable
nanobiomaterials for treating and preventing POP using mesenchymal stem cells
from the lining of the womb.
|
Associate Professor Suzie Miller
|
$1,256,312
|
Fetal growth restriction (FGR) is a common pregnancy complication in
which the fetus fails to thrive. FGR is associated with complex brain injury
comprising altered basic cell morphology and whole brain connectivity. This
project will examine the neuroprotective benefits of two treatments in a
preclinical model of FGR and assess microstructural
development. This will be correlated with connectivity measures from advanced
diffusion MRI and functional assessments, which could be readily applied to
the human brain.
|
Associate Professor Graeme Polglase
|
$1,289,423
|
A staggering one in five babies born in Australia require
help breathing at birth. This project
examines ways of improving the way in which babies are delivered by
investigating the utility of giving respiratory support before the umbilical
cord is cut. By introducing this simple intervention, the aim is to improve
the outcomes of all babies born in Australia.
|
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