Improving The Lives Of Young People With Type 1 Diabetes Using State-of-the-Art Therapies
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,599,598.00
Summary
T1D profoundly affects the lives of an increasing number of young people and their families. H The proposed centre acknowledges these challenges and recognises the urgent need for a comprehensive and holistic approach involving a broad range of expertise, methodologies and collaboration. The centre will utilize clinical expertise of the CI’s, generating new knowledge for the successful development and use of technology in closed loop and semi-closed systems in young people with T1D.
Fenofibrate And Microvascular Events In Type 1 Diabetes (FAME 1) Trial
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,883,529.00
Summary
Diabetes is one of the commonest cause of blindness in adults. Vision loss, which is irreversible, is a most feared complication of diabetes. A blood fat lowering drug called fenofibrate, available in Australia, has been shown to reduce eye damage in people with Type 2 diabetes by 35-40%, and to prevent eye damage in Type 1 diabetic animal models. This study will evaluate the potential benefits of fenofibrate in 450 adults with Type 1 diabetes who have early diabetic eye damage.
The overall aim is to improve treatments and outcomes for people with osteoporosis. This will be achieved by better predicting those who are likely to fracture and subsequently those who do well post fracture from those who do poorly. Following an osteoporotic fracture there is an increased risk of re- fracture and of premature death. This research will define those risk factors for fracture, re-fracture and early death in a large group of men and women followed for over 20 years.
Improving Outcomes Of Diabetes And Related Conditions For Indigenous Australians: Causes, Intervention, System Change
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$274,218.00
Summary
My research program is focused on improving outcomes of diabetes and related conditions for Indigenous Australians through: (i) describing causal pathways; (ii) addressing health system change; and (iii) conducting clinical intervention studies.
Closed-loop Insulin Delivery Compared With Islet Cell Transplantation For Adults With Type 1 Diabetes And Impaired Awareness Of Hypoglycaemia
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$92,745.00
Summary
Hypoglycaemia in adults with type 1 diabetes is common. Evaluation of therapies – the ‘artificial pancreas’ and islet cell transplantation - is warranted in a cohort with repeated episodes of hypoglycaemia. This proposal will assess whether the ‘artificial pancreas’ and islet cell transplantation, compared with usual insulin therapy, will reduce hypoglycaemia and improve other clinical outcomes over 6 months. This has potential to expand therapies used in current clinical practice.
Defining the molecular and cellular mechanisms of beta cell dysfunction. This project will investigate the influence of environment in the functional adaptation and maladaptation of pancreatic beta cells in diabetes. The research will define the molecular and cellular mechanisms linking environmental triggers such as obesity, high fatty acid levels and hyperglycaemia to beta cell dedifferentiation and dysfunction.