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external supervisor

Fredrik Karpe, Professor of Metabolic Medicine, Radcliffe Department of Medicine

background

Population-based cohorts have identified major modifiable risk factors for cardio-metabolic diseases, such as adiposity and physical activity, but the patterns and relevance of these factors varies greatly across populations, and previous evidence is predominantly from high-income countries. There is a high burden of cardio-metabolic diseases in South and Southeast Asian populations. However, the underlying mechanisms are yet to be fully elucidated, with previous evidence suggesting ethnically divergent body fat and muscle mass distribution to be a determining factor. Furthermore, physical activity has a complex relationship with body composition, and different patterns of physical activity between high- and low-/middle-income countries and between urban and rural areas might be an independent or explanatory factor in associations with cardio-metabolic diseases.

The objectives of this DPhil project may be to explore associations between different measures of body composition with objective measures of physical activity between populations and their individual and joint associations with cardio-metabolic diseases across different ethnicities, using data from different large-scale prospective studies. 

RESEARCH EXPERIENCE, RESEARCH METHODS AND TRAINING

This project will use data from three large prospective studies: the Indian Study of Healthy Ageing (ISHA), the Malaysian Cohort, and the South and Southeast Asian participants of the UK Biobank. It will provide unique opportunity for novel insights into disease risks and aetiology to inform global non-communicable disease control and prevention efforts.

Support and training for specific research methods and statistical analyses will be provided within the department and by HDRUK.

The student will be expected to present the results in internal meetings, as well as at national and international conferences, and to write papers as lead author for publication in peer-reviewed journals.  

FIELD WORK, SECONDMENTS, INDUSTRY PLACEMENTS AND TRAINING

The student will be working collaboratively with researchers from India and Malaysia, and may be expected to travel there for fieldwork. 

PROSPECTIVE  STUDENT

The project will suit someone with an interest in global health, in particular NCDs, with strong quantitative skills and postgraduate level training in epidemiology.

Supervisors

  • Sarah Lewington
    Sarah Lewington

    Professor of Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Director of Graduate Studies (Taught courses)

  • Aiden Doherty
    Aiden Doherty

    Professor of Biomedical Informatics