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Our research projects

We fund world-class diabetes research

At any one time, we have around 120 diabetes research projects making discoveries across the UK. Each of these research projects is only possible thanks to the generous support of our members, donors and local groups

Every research project is reviewed by experts and approved by our research committee and our panel of people living with diabetes. So you're supporting diabetes research of the highest scientific quality, led by researchers with the skills and experience to succeed.

Your support of our research projects means we can keep tackling the complications of diabetes and bring us one step closer to a cure.

Find a research project

Use the search tool to discover research taking place in your local area, or choose a subject or type of diabetes you’re interested in.

Each project page showcases the details of the research, and if you find a research project you could really get behind, you can support it in lots of different ways.

85 results found

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Subject

Getting the diabetes diagnosis right for everyone

Project:
Exeter
Status:
Project available for adoption
Tags:
Type 1 and Type 2
Rare types of diabetes
South West
Healthcare
Innovation
England
Project Summary

It’s not always easy to diagnose which type of diabetes a person has. This is because the symptoms and test results can overlap, particularly in people from some ethnic groups. In this project, Dr Shields will improve calculators used to get the diagnosis right in many more people with diabetes. 

Getting to the heart of diabetes in pregnancy

Project:
London
Status:
Project available for adoption
Tags:
Type 1 and Type 2
London
Pregnancy
Healthcare
England
Project Summary

Pregnant women with diabetes have a higher chance of their babies being born with heart problems. Dr Chivers is researching the factors that can cause this and also better ways of working out which babies are at greatest risk. In the future, this could help give better care to pregnant women with diabetes and their babies. 

Tuning molecule signals to protect kidneys

Project:
London
Status:
Project available for adoption
Tags:
Type 1 and Type 2
Complications
England
Innovation
London
Project Summary

Living with diabetes can increase the risk of kidney disease, which in turn increases the risk of heart disease. Professor Luigi Gnudi has found a new protein that can tune signalling molecules to protect kidney cells and blood vessels. Understanding how the protein does this could help researchers to develop new treatments that can heal damaged kidney cells and also lower the risk of heart and blood vessel problems for people living with diabetes. 

Repairing cell batteries to protect eyes

Project:
Birmingham
Status:
Project available for adoption
Tags:
Type 1 and Type 2
Midlands
Complications
Healthcare
Innovation
England
Project Summary

Mitochondria are important in powering our cells. Mitochondria that don’t work properly are usually replaced by new ones. But in diabetes this system doesn’t work properly and this can lead to sight loss. Dr Romero is working to understand how this happens and whether a new treatment to help mitochondria could stop eye damage. 

Combating type 1 diabetes stigma

Project:
London
Status:
Project available for adoption
Tags:
Type 1
Healthcare
London
England
Project Summary

Diabetes stigma is a serious problem and can have serious effects on people with diabetes’ physical and mental health. Professor Nick Oliver will look at the causes of type 1 diabetes stigma, explore how many people in the UK experience it and the impact it can have. Understanding the roots of type 1 diabetes stigma and how it evolves over time, could help to develop novel ways to manage or tackle it.

Keeping track of people at risk of type 1

Project:
Oxford
Status:
Project available for adoption
Tags:
Type 1
England
South East
Healthcare
Causes
Towards a cure
Project Summary

Autoantibodies are signs in the blood that show the immune system has started to plan an attack on insulin-making beta cells. People who have autoantibodies will almost certainly go on to develop type 1 diabetes. Dr Rachel Besser wants to make a list of everyone in the UK who has autoantibodies. This registry could help researchers to understand what life is like knowing you’re at risk of type 1, as well as connect people at risk with clinical trials testing new treatments that could prevent or delay type 1 diabetes, helping to bring forward the day when they become more widely available.

Finding new pancreas power genes

Project:
Exeter
Status:
Project is fully funded
Tags:
Type 2
Healthcare
South West
Innovation
England
Project Summary

Insulin-making beta cells are powered by energy factories within the cells, called mitochondria. Dr De Franco will look at the genes from babies who have too high or too low blood sugar levels to find genetic changes that alter how mitochondria power beta cells. This could give us a better idea about how mitochondria help to keep blood sugar levels normal and could lead to new and improved treatments for diabetes.  

Safer pregnancies after weight loss surgery

Project:
London
Status:
Project available for adoption
Tags:
Type 2
Pregnancy
London
England
Project Summary

Weight loss surgery can be a really effective way to lose weight and treat type 2 diabetes. But we don’t understand much about the impact of surgery on pregnancy. Professor Tricia Tan wants to figure out if one particular type of weight loss surgery is linked to a smoother pregnancy and birth. She’ll also look for better ways of diagnosing gestational diabetes in women who’ve had weight loss surgery. The findings could lead to safer pregnancies in women living with obesity, type 2 or gestational diabetes and healthier babies.

Understanding the extremely early onset of Type 1 diabetes

Project:
Exeter
Status:
Project has less than a year to run, but can still be adopted
Tags:
England
South West
Type 1
Causes
Towards a cure
Project Summary

Dr Oram will study an extremely rare form of Type 1 diabetes, which develops in children before 12 months of age. He wants to understand how it is possible to develop an immune attack against beta cells at such a young age. Dr Oram hopes that identifying the reasons behind this rare form of Type 1 diabetes, will shed a light on why Type 1 diabetes develops in general.

Sticking point of pancreas proteins

Project:
Lincoln
Status:
Project has less than a year to run, but can still be adopted
Tags:
Northern & Yorkshire
England
Type 2
Causes
Towards a cure
Project Summary

In type 2 diabetes the beta cells in the pancreas struggle to release insulin in the usual way. Professor Herbert’s made a discovery about some proteins that are important in this process. He’s now going to take this information forward and learn more about how these proteins stick to other molecules and work to release insulin. 

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