Five Trinity researchers to benefit from new grant to lead independent research
Five Trinity researchers have been awarded a Health Research Board-funded Emerging Investigator Award, designed to enable mid-career researchers to shift gear and progress to becoming independent investigators.
According to a report in the University Times, the Health Research Board is investing €8.3 million through the grant to support 11 researchers across Ireland with a maximum of €800,000 being awarded per investigator across the four years. Awardees were selected for demonstrable promise in reaching research independence and will be recognised as principal investigators by their host institutions.
The 11 grants awarded stretch across a huge variety of research topics, from health-economics and health-services research to pharmacology and immunology.
The Trinity-based projects include one led by Dr Mark Robinson, who will work in Trinity’s Translational Medicine Institute. Robinson’s new work will focus on liver cirrhosis, which occurs when normal liver tissue is replaced by scar tissue, leading to the eventual failure of the organ. The project will involve patients with liver cirrhosis and aims to use advances made in immunology to determine the rate of progression of the disease, with the ultimate hope of predicting the risk of liver failure and stopping the progression of cirrhosis.
Other projects funded at Trinity include one led by Dr Niamh Lynam-Lennon, a senior research fellow in molecular and cellular biology, on rectal cancer treatment. Another, by Dr Cathal McCrory, will draw on the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA) dataset to determine why individuals from poorer socioeconomic backgrounds have poorer disease outcomes. Dr Peter Bede, Specialist Registrar in Neurology, will lead a project on the diagnosis and monitoring of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, a neurodegenerative disease for which there is currently no effective treatment. The final project will be led by Dr James O’Mahony and be focused on the reliability of health economic evidence in Ireland.
In a press statement, Mairéad O’Driscoll, Interim CEO at the Health Research Board said that the challenge now for these individuals is to “build their successful research team, advance their research programmes, foster collaborations and leverage funding to build a sustainable research programme. Everyone is well qualified for the challenge”.´