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The Leicester Cilia Group (LCG) established methods to study ciliary damage and dysfunction, transforming the diagnosis and management of Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia (PCD), a genetic disorder that causes severe permanent lung damage in children. The group developed diagnostic methods, adopted in the UK and internationally, that increased the accuracy and speed of diagnosis, uncovering a number of previously unrecognised phenotypes. The group was instrumental in the establishment of the first nationally funded diagnostic service (three centres, including Leicester) in the world. This has resulted in the group jointly leading a successful bid (2012) to set up the first nationally funded management service for children with PCD.
The Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) questionnaire is a clinical and research tool, which has fundamentally shifted dermatology from being doctor-centred to patient-centred. Previously, no standard method to quantify the impact of skin disease on patients existed. The DLQI was created by interviewing people with skin disease and made clinically useful through development and validation of score bands. NICE/SIGN require UK dermatologists to use the DLQI when assessing severe psoriasis and hand eczema. DLQI is used in national psoriasis guidelines in 14 countries, is available in 91 language translations, has been used in 678 clinical research studies and generated £881,236 in royalties to Cardiff University.
Measurement of hormones is essential to the understanding and diagnosis of endocrine diseases. White and her research group have developed unique antibodies that are widely used in diagnostic assays for adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) and related peptides, including the first and only kit for measuring pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC), the precursor of ACTH. These assays are used worldwide for diagnosis, decisions on treatment, monitoring for recurrence of tumours and prognosis in a number of patient groups with life-threatening endocrine disorders. Global sales of the ACTH Elecsys tests by Roche exceeded 6 million kits since 2008. AstraZeneca has used the POMC and ACTH assays in its drug discovery programmes in the cardiovascular and metabolic diseases therapy area. The antibodies therefore have had health impact in relieving suffering and in improving patient care, as well as commercial impact in worldwide sales of assays and influencing drug development strategies.
Researchers at the University of Manchester (UoM) have made a significant impact nationally and internationally on improving the outcome for children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) (~450 pa in the UK). The changes in clinical practice based on our research are now national standards of care for children with de novo and relapsed ALL in the UK and Ireland. Other international groups have adopted key findings from the results of our frontline trials. Our relapse protocol for childhood ALL underpins European and North American strategy for the management of relapsed disease.
RTT (Real Time Tomography) scanning systems for airport baggage are becoming increasingly important due to growing air traffic and greater security concerns. Prior to our research, Rapiscan, a leading producer of baggage scanners, had been unable to make full use of the hardware in their latest generation of scanner prototypes. Our novel theory and image reconstruction algorithms are now a core part of a commercially successful 3D scanner that is significantly faster and more accurate than previous generations. The two models, RTT80 and large RTT110, have been approved by regulatory authorities and have already been field trialled at Manchester Airport and deployed at Seattle airport, with further US$20m orders placed.
The research and impact described herein was flagged in the citation for the UoM's 2013 Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education for its work in imaging techniques to support advanced materials and manufacturing.
Research at the University of Manchester (UoM) has changed the landscape of medical care and research in fungal infections internationally. The impacts include: the world's first commercialised molecular diagnostic products for aspergillosis and Pneumocystis pneumonia (£10m investment); pivotal contributions to the preclinical development (£35m investment), clinical developments and registrations of 3 new antifungals with combined market share of ~$2 billion; one (voriconazole, 2012 sales >$750m worldwide) now first line therapy for invasive aspergillosis with improved survival of 15-20%; and internationally validated methods to detect azole resistance in Aspergillus (an emerging problem partly related to environmental spraying of azole fungicides for crop protection).
Research carried out at the University of Southampton has led to the development of a new tool for detecting and managing malnutrition. The Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST) has been rolled out to more than 80% of hospitals and care homes in England and 98% in Scotland, is part of national health policy in Finland and the Netherlands, and has attracted interest internationally. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence bases its current quality standard for nutritional support in adults on the MUST framework; only two NICE guidelines have saved the NHS more money. MUST has become an integral part of the UK's health policy framework, embedded in routine clinical care and supported by bodies responsible for clinical and care excellence. It is central to learning programmes on managing malnutrition.
University of Bristol researchers at the Bristol Heart Institute (BHI) have pioneered the development and clinical take-up of the novel technique of off-pump coronary artery bypass (OPCAB) surgery. Over ten clinical trials and several large cohort analyses have assessed the impact of this technique on elective and high-risk patients. The results have shown that it is as safe as the conventional coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) technique that uses a cardiopulmonary bypass pump and cardioplegic arrest. Most importantly, however, OPCAB significantly reduces the risk of post-operative complications, and reduces morbidity and mortality. It also uses less hospital resources, reducing time in intensive care and length of hospital stay. In 2011 (the last year for which data are available), 20% of CABG operations in the UK were carried out with the OPCAB technique and it has had significant take-up overseas (for example, 18% of CABG operations in the US and 21% in the EU in 2010). NICE has recommended the safety and efficacy of OPCAB surgery.
A research programme of multi-centre clinical trials led by Professor Suzanne Hagen has established Pelvic Floor Muscle Training (PFMT) as an effective treatment for women with prolapse. Hagen's team has also successfully developed a Prolapse Symptom Scale and further tested a Prolapse Staging System to improve outcome measurement for women's health physiotherapists in the UK (20% and 15% clinical uptake respectively). The research has informed local, national and international guidelines and changed practice in 48% of UK physiotherapists. The research has also raised awareness of PFMT treatment for prolapse, with 70% of UK physiotherapists reporting an increase in prolapse referrals.
Fifteen years of research in advanced Lab-on-a-Chip technologies at the University of Glasgow has led to three spin-out companies: Mode-Dx, Clyde Biosciences and SAW-Dx. Since 2008 these companies have developed a range of products and services for the diagnostic screening of chronic diseases, for the detection of acute infections and for improving the drug discovery process. The three companies have secured a total of £2.3M in venture funding and secured key strategic collaborations with stakeholders including industry partners and the NHS.