Rheumatology (Bloomsbury)
Our work
Projects
- Autoimmune Rheumatic Disease
Lead investigator: Professor Mike Ehrenstein
This research group focuses on how biologic therapy can be utilised as a molecular scalpel to understand the pathogenesis of autoimmune rheumatic disease, in particular systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis, both in terms of loss of immune tolerance and ongoing inflammation, to develop novel (and safer) therapies and improve existing therapies, and to target therapies to patients most likely to benefit through biomarker identification. One impact of this research was the BEAT-LUPUS trial which arose from experimental medicine studies looking at the immune consequences of B cell depletion (rituximab) in patients with SLE and was one of the first trials to test combination biologic therapy (belimumab after rituximab) for patients with SLE. Following identifcation of a biomarker that predicts response to belimumab after rituximab, IgA2 anti-DNA antibodies, a biomarker enrichment trial is planned for patients with SLE.
Group members
- Dr Daniel McCluskey, Postdoctoral Fellow
- Immune Profiling and Metabolomics
Lead investigator: Professor Elizabeth Jury
The group investigates lipid metabolism and how this can influence immune cell function in patients with autoimmunity. The group also uses multi-omic and clinical data and machine learning analysis to stratify patient subgroups according to disease severity, cardiovascular disease risk and response to therapies.
Group members
- Alexandra Oppong, PhD student
- Antiphospholipid Antibodies
Lead investigator: ProfessorÌýAnisur Rahman, Professor Ian Giles
The APS Group focuses on the structure, function, origin, and pathogenic consequences of the antiphospholipid antibodies. These antibodies are linked to a predisposition to arterial and venous clotting and an increase in the risk of pregnancy losses - the clinical condition known as the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. They are working on understanding at a cellular level how these antibodies cause clinical effects and on the development of a novel therapeutic agent.
Group members
- Abida Rym, Clinical Research Fellow, PhD student
- Pregnancy in Autoimmune Rheumatic Diseases
Lead investigator: Professor Ian Giles
Professor Giles’ group studies factors affecting the outcomes of pregnancy in patients with autoimmune rheumatic diseases, especially systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis and antiphospholipid syndrome. This includes changes in the immune system and metabolomics profiles as well as effects of medication.
Group members
- Bethan Goulden, Clinical Research Fellow, PhD student
- Autoimmune Rheumatic Diseases in Adolescence
Lead investigator: Professor Coziana Ciurtin
This group works on investigating the impact of puberty and sex determinants on immune system function using a gender-diverse adolescent cohort, including trans-gender individuals, aiming to understand why girls and females are more predisposed to developing autoimmune diseases. They are also working on understating the molecular causes that drive immune system dysregulation in lupus and Sjogren disease with onset in childhood and their role in causing damage and increased comorbidity risk in young people with these conditions.
Group members, Adolescent Rheumatology
- Dr Maria Leandro, Consultant
- Dr Hannah Peckham, Postdoctoral Research Associate
- Dr Ania Radziszewska, Postdoctoral Research Associate
- Junjie Peng, PhD student
- Heather Thorn, Research Manager (until 1 September)
- Kathryn O'Bryan, Research Manager (maternity leave)
- Immunomodulation of Pathogenic B Cell Responses by Metabolites
Lead investigators: Dr Elizabeth Rosser
Our group focuses on understanding the nature of the environmental signals that drive pathogenic B cell differentiation in paediatric and adolescent rheumatic disease. We use a multi-layered experimental approach to:
- characterise how B cell biology is altered in these diseases;
- identify potential metabolic signals, such as those from the gut-microbiota or diet, that may be modulating B cell function.
Our group is funded by a senior research fellowship awarded to Dr Rosser by the Kennedy Trust for Rheumatology Research in 2022.
Group members
- Dr Diana Matei, Postdoctoral Research Associate
- Dr Ben Ingledow, Postdoctoral Research Associate
- Beth Jebson, PhD student [50% ICH]
- Vicky Alexiou, PhD student
- Persephone Jenkins, Research Assistant
- Chadwick Pils, Research Assistant
- Antigen Detection and Characterisation
Lead investigator: Dr Thomas McDonnell
The McDonnell group works on discovering new antibodies in diseases with difficult diagnosis, whilst also characterising the underlying structural abnormalities which lead to the development of these autoantibodies. The diseases the group currently work on vary from Rheumatoid Arthritis, Sjogren Disease and Antiphospholipid Syndrome, to Chronic Histiocytic Intravillousitis and Cardiovascular Disease. The group also maintains strong links with other departments including Biochemical Engineering, Biophysics, Archaeology and the Fetal Medicine Unit.
Group members
- Christophe Lalaurie, Research Fellow
- Emily Cornish, PhD student, Obstetric Registrar
- Lucia Martin, Senior Research Technician
- Multiomic Mechanisms of Adolescent Autoimmunity
Lead investigator: Dr George Robinson
The Robinson group focuses on understanding both immune and metabolic pathological mechanisms of systemic lupus erythematosus across age, with a focus on younger patients and associated comorbidities including cardiovascular disease. This research uses rare patient cohorts to combine immunological laboratory techniques, in-depth multi-omic (immune-phenotype, proteomic, metabolomic, and transcriptomic) data, and artificial intelligence modelling to understand the disease.
Group members
- Heather Cross, PhD student
- Targeting and Programming of T and B Cells
Lead investigator: Dr Venkat Reddy
I am a clinical academic. I have three key areas of research interests spanning the life course in healthy ageing and autoimmune disease:
- Targeting of B lineage cells including anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies such as Rituximab and Obinutuzumab; CAR-T cells and T cell engagers;Ìý
- Signalling pathways and metabolic programming of B and T cellsÌý
- Interactions between the immune and musculoskeletal systems.
- Omics and Machine Learning: Advancing Precision Medicine in Autoimmune Disease
Lead Investigator: Dr. Muhammad Shipa
This group is at the forefront of integrating omics and machine learning to transform the treatment of autoimmune rheumatic diseases, particularly systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), Sjogren’s disease, and other rare conditions. In collaboration with leading researchers, the team is dedicated to identifying distinct disease endotypes and novel biomarkers that are essential for customising precision medicine. The goal is to develop an advanced machine learning platform that not only predicts patient responses to biologic therapies but also discovers new therapeutic targets, effectively translating groundbreaking immunological discoveries with next-generation clinical practice.
- B Cell Depletion
Lead investigator: Prof. Jo Cambridge
This group focuses on B cell depletion (an idea it introduced with the now retired Professor Jo Edwards over 20 years ago to treat rheumatoid arthritis). It explores more precisely how the technique works and tries to explain the marked variation in response between different patients.
Are drugs to treat rheumatoid arthritis harmful in pregnancy?
For the Medical Sciences Lecture Series, Prof. Ian Giles discussed whetherÌýstopping biologic drugs in pregnancy has harmful effects. Rheumatoid arthritis is more common in women and often requires biologic drugs to control symptoms and prevent joint damage. Many women under treatmentÌýbecome pregnant, and thereÌýis uncertaintyÌýif biologic drugs should be continued. Treatment of RA in pregnancy is important because active arthritis may increaseÌýrisk of adverse outcomes and is more likely if biologic drugs are stopped.
Our experts
Additional members
- UCLH Honorary Staff
- Postdoctoral Research Associates
- Dr Ben Ingledow
- Clinical Research Fellows
- Rym Abida MD
- Research Technicians / Managers
- Heather Thorn
- Lucia Martin-Gutierrez
- Research Assistants
- Persephone Jenkins
- Chadwick Pils
- PhD Students
- Vicky Alexiou
- Administrative Staff
- Esther Geary
- Samia Jahangir
- Mahnaz Abbasian
Selected Publications
- Radziszewska A, Peckham H, de Gruijter NM, Restuadi R, Wu WH, Jury EC, Rosser EC, Ciurtin C (2024). . Sci Rep. 2024 Jun 6;14(1): 13074.
- Oppong AE, Coelewij L, Robertson G, Martin-Gutierrez L, Waddington KE, Dönnes P, Nytrova P, Farrell R, Pineda-Torra I, Jury EC (2024). . iScience. In Press, Journal: February 14, 2024.
- Cope A, Jasenecova M, Vasconcelos JC, Filer A ... Ciurtin C, et al (2024). . The Lancet.
- Taylor PC, Askari A, Choy E, Ehrenstein MR, Else S, Nisar MKÌý(2023).Ìý. BMC Med 21, 55 (2023).
- Shipa M, Santos LR, Nguyen DXÌý...ÌýIsenberg DA, Gordon C,ÌýEhrenstein MRÌý(2023).Ìý.ÌýThe Lancet Rheumatology, Vol. 5 (1)Ìýe24-e35.
SandhuÌýHK,ÌýBoothÌýK ...Ìý¸é²¹³ó³¾²¹²ÔÌý´¡, et al (2023). . JAMA, 329 (20) 1745-1756.
Farina N, Webster J, Luo W, Garelick D, Pinto SM, Isenberg D, Rahman A (2023). . Semin Arthritis Rheum. 2023 Aug;61:152226.
- Clarke AE, Hanly JG, Urowitz MB, St Pierre Y ...ÌýIsenberg DA, Rahman A, et al (2023). . Arthritis Care Res.
- Peng J, Donnes P, Ardoin S, Schanberg L, Lewandowski L, Robinson G, Jury E,ÌýCiurtin C (2023).Ìý.ÌýArthritis and Rheum, 2023.
- JohnsonÌýSR, GladmanÌýDD, BrunnerÌýHI, ±õ²õ±ð²Ô²ú±ð°ù²µÌý¶Ù, ClarkeÌýAE ...Ìý¸é²¹³ó³¾²¹²ÔÌý´¡, et al (2023).Ìý. Arthritis Care Res.
- Wilkinson MGL, Moulding D, McDonnell TCR, Orford M, Wincup C, Ting JYJ, Otto GW ...ÌýRosser EC*, Wedderburn LR* (2023).Ìý. Ann Rheum Dis. 2023 May;82(5):658-669.
- Robinson GA, Peng J, Peckham H, Butler G, Pineda-Torra I, Ciurtin C, Jury EC (2022). . Lancet Rheumatol. 2022 Aug 31;4(10):e710-e724.
Kearsley-Fleet L, Baildam E, Beresford M ...ÌýCiurtin C (2022).Ìý.ÌýRheumatology, 62(5):Ìý1926-1935.
- Szylar G, Wysoczanski R, Marshall H, Marks DJB, José R, Ehrenstein MR,ÌýBrown JS (2022). . Sci Rep 12, 3990.
- Shipa MRA, Langley L, Sacks B, Yeoh S-A, Mainuddin MD, Mukerjee D, Castelino M, Ehrenstein MRÌý(2022). .ÌýRheumatology, 61(9):Ìýe270–e273.
- Conrad N, Verbeke G, Molenberghs G,ÌýGoetschalckx L, Callender T, Cambridge G, et alÌý(2022).Ìý.ÌýThe Lancet, Vol. 400 (10354),Ìýpp.Ìý733-743.
Facilities
Our new academic research laboratory on the fourth floor of the Rayne Building allows us to run virtually any kind of immunological experiment.
These range from the simplest ELISA to immuno-histochemistry and the very latest in flow cytometry using an image scanner which incorporates up to nine different colour variants identifying different cell populations.
We also work closely with colleagues in Cardiology, Respiratory, Pharmacology and Hepatology who each have their own specialists and imaging capacity.
Funding and Partnerships
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Clinical Services
Related programmes
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