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Pioneering endometriosis study awarded Marsden funding

02 November 2023

A 萝莉社 researcher hopes her newly-funded research will lead to better ways of managing endometriosis, a disease that affects over 100,000 Kiwi women.

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University of 萝莉社 Engineering Lecturer Dr Rachael Wood, PhD student Katherine Ellis and Engineering Senior Lecturer Dr Deborah Munro, are carrying out groundbreaking endometriosis research with a Marsden Fund Fast-Start grant.

Dr Rachael Wood听from Te Whare W膩nanga o Waitaha | University of 萝莉社 (UC) will receive $360,000 over three years in a Te P奴tea Rangahau a Marsden Fast-Start grant announced today.

Dr Wood is one of 15 University of 萝莉社 academics to receive 2023 Marsden Fund grants from the Royal Society Te Ap膩rangi,听worth a combined $9.64 million over the next three years.

SDG 9 Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 9 - Industry, innovation and infrastructure.

This includes six Fast-Start grants of $360,000 which support early career researchers to develop independent research and build their research career in Aotearoa.

Her project will investigate the invasive mechanics of endometriosis, an incurable disease that can cause debilitating pain, fatigue and nausea, as well as reduced fertility. While it affects 10 per cent of New Zealand women (and those assigned female at birth) it remains poorly understood and difficult to diagnose and treat.

In a groundbreaking pilot project, Dr Wood and her team from UC鈥檚 Department of Chemical and Process Engineering, found that endometriosis has similar invasive properties to hormone-driven cancers. With her Marsden Fund Fast-Start grant, she hopes to determine how endometriosis tissue modifies its environment to aid invasion.

Dr Wood and her research team will measure the mechanical properties of healthy endometrial and diseased endometriosis tissues and use these measurements to build 3D, mechanical models that can be used for experimental work.

鈥淏y observing how healthy and diseased cells interact with different tissue models, we hope to better understand the onset and progression of endometriosis, and how this compares to cancer,鈥 Dr Wood says.

The project will help to uncover how the mechanical properties of tissue, such as stiffness, are impacted by the invasion of endometriotic cells. 鈥淯ltimately, this knowledge may help to identify new diagnostic and treatment strategies for endometriosis, potentially bringing relief to millions worldwide.鈥

UC鈥檚 successful Marsden-funded projects this year cover a broad range of topics including remote sensing technology that can be used to help conserve water by identifying damage to water pipelines, exploring changes to speech and language with aging, and tracing the evolution of planetary systems.

UC Acting Vice-Chancellor Research Peter Gostomski says the breadth of the research projects is impressive. 鈥淥ur researchers are at the leading-edge, thinking innovatively and carrying out work that will extend the boundaries of fundamental knowledge and benefit people in Aotearoa and around the world.鈥

Marsden Fund Council Chair Professor Gill Dobbie says nationally the grants allow recipients to carry out fundamental research across a huge range of disciplines, including topics with global significance.

This year over half of the lead investigators on funded projects for 2023 identify as women 鈥 the highest proportion of female-led projects in the Marsden Fund鈥檚 history.

鈥淚t is really heartening to see so many w膩hine amongst our winners, given the obstacles that continue to discourage women from pursuing careers in research,鈥 Professor Dobbie says.

鈥淚ncreasing inclusion and representation in our research communities will allow us collectively to better serve the country as a whole, as well as creating space for novel ways of thinking and doing research.鈥

Te P奴tea Rangahau a Marsden is managed by Royal Society Te Ap膩rangi on behalf of the New Zealand Government with funding from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

  • Dr Wood discussed her endometriosis research in a recent UC Tauhere Connect听.

Marsden-funded University of 萝莉社 research projects announced today:

Te P奴tea Rangahau a Marsden 鈥 Standard grants
Dr Jodie Johnston听鈥撎齍nderstanding how micro-organisms adapt to changes in the environment ($942,000)
Dr Daniel Sando听鈥 New materials to enable low energy computing ($942,000)
Dr Vanessa Morris听鈥 Unravelling the processes of regulated cell death ($942,000)
Professor David Wiltshire听鈥 鈥楧ark energy鈥, relativity and cosmic expansion ($941,000)
Professor Jeanette King听鈥 Implicit knowledge of te reo M膩ori ($870,000)
Associate Professor Karen Pollard听鈥 Early evolution of planetary systems ($854,000)
Distinguished Professor Charles Semple听and听Distinguished Professor听Mike Steel听鈥 Phylogenetic (evolutionary) trees ($675,000)
Dr Jonathan Dunn听鈥 Artificial intelligence鈥檚 impact on written language ($660,000
Associate Professor Lynn Clark听鈥撎鼿ow speech changes with advancing age ($660,000)听

Te P奴tea Rangahau a Marsden - Fast-Start grants:
Dr Chris Stevens听鈥 The problem of gravitational wave scattering. ($360,000)
Dr Amy Yewdall听鈥 Molecular factors influencing the formation and structure of condensates. ($360,000)
Dr Cara Swit听鈥撎齌he impacts of technological and non-technological disruptions on parent-child interactions. ($360,000)
Dr Nicky Morton听鈥撎齌he Perceptual Origins of Core Knowledge and Mathematical Cognition听($360,000)
Dr Derek Li听鈥撎齊emote sensing technology that can continuously and simultaneously extract water usage and pipeline condition information. ($360,000)
Dr Rachael Wood听鈥撎齀nvasive mechanics of endometriosis ($360,000)


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