Young
Kenyan researcher wins prestigious international fellowship at UCT
Dr Nadia Chanzu will be investigating why HIV-positive pregnant
women on antiretroviral therapy are at particular risk of pre-term births,
while on a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at UCT, sponsored by the AXA Research Fund.
Nearly one million babies died in 2013 due to complications
related to premature (pre-term) birth, according to World Health Organisation
(WHO) estimates. For HIV-infected mothers, the risk of giving birth prematurely
is extremely high, putting these babies at risk of increased episodes of
illness and death. In order to develop alternative therapies to counter this
risk, scientists need a better understanding of the delicate immune balance
between an HIV-positive mother and her developing baby. It is to do exactly
this that the AXA Research Fund awarded Dr Nadia Chanzu, currently a research
scientist at the Gertrude's Children's
Hospital
in Kenya, a prestigious two-year junior (postdoctoral) fellowship at UCT's Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine.
The AXA Research Fund, the research-funding branch of the global
insurance brand, seeks to contribute to a greater understanding and prevention
of risk worldwide, including environmental, life and socio-economic risk.
Fellowships are one of the instruments through which they attempt to achieve
this aim. Chanzu is the first African researcher at an African university to be
awarded this highly competitive and prestigious fellowship.
The AXA Scientific Board, in awarding the fellowship to Chanzu,
described her as a "very promising young scientist" with
"significant potential".
"It is a great honour," says Chanzu, who graduated
among the top of her class in medical biochemistry from the University of Nairobi in Kenya, completed her master's degree in biomedical science
at Kingston University in London (UK) and went
on to complete her PhD at the University
of Nairobi Institute of Tropical and Infectious Diseases with a grant award from
the International Development
Research Centre (IDRC), Canada. Chanzu is also a graduate of the prestigious Canadian
Institutes of Health Research's International
Infectious Diseases and Global Health Training Programme (IID & GHTP), which sponsors
exceptional PhD trainees across Canada, Colombia, Kenya and India.
"I will use this time to improve my knowledge, skills and
experience and eventually contribute towards the advancement of the research
agenda in my own country."
Thirty-five million people around the world are HIV positive,
according to WHO statistics: of those, nearly 71% live in sub-Saharan Africa,
making Chanzu's research particularly relevant on the continent.
Today HIV can be successfully managed with the use of
anti-retroviral therapy (ART): however, says Chanzu, the ART exposure, along
with the HIV, appears to increase the risk of premature birth.
"The placenta is the only link between the developing child
and its mother," she explains. "But because a baby will inherit some
components from its father –
components that are foreign to the mother – the baby and the mother are at risk of rejecting one
another."
A successful pregnancy therefore requires a delicate immune
balance between mother and baby –
a balance that HIV and ART exposure may disrupt.
"My research aims to identify some of the altered immune
mechanisms within the placentae of HIV-infected women, in comparison with those
of HIV-negative mothers, to better understand the immune basis of pre-term
births in HIV-positive women."
Chanzu's research will have a direct impact on public health,
hopefully providing a foundation to inform alternative therapies and alleviate
the risks associated with pregnancy in HIV-infected mothers. She says South
Africa, and UCT in particular, is the ideal place for her to continue this
research.
"South Africa has developed into a hub of groundbreaking
HIV-prevention research with some of the leading global infectious diseases
experts residing at the University of Cape Town," she says. "Having
the opportunity to undertake the AXA Fellowship at UCT at the Division of
Immunology, under the mentorship of Professor Clive Gray and Dr Heather Jaspan,
will give me access to cutting-edge technology and expertise that is currently
lacking in my home country, Kenya."
Story by Natalie Simon
No comments:
Post a Comment