Discovering the causes of musculoskeletal and inflammatory conditions at the University of Oxford to deliver excellent and innovative care that changes lives.
NDORMS, University of Oxford
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They have found it is a single condition with common core biological pathways.
An international study led by researchers at the Kennedy Institute @kiroxford.bsky.social has found that osteoarthritis is not a collection of separate diseases, as many scientists had previously speculated.
Research, led by Edward Jenkins at the Kennedy Institute @kiroxford.bsky.social, has revealed how one of the immune system’s most important regulatory pathways operates at the earliest moments of T cell activation.
Another brilliant Botnar Institute Student Symposium!
Thank you to the wonderful students of the Botnar for sharing your research with such enthusiasm and style! 🔬🥼🧫🦴
What a brilliant couple of days at the Kennedy Institute Postdoc Symposium! An opportunity to share research and look for new collaborations! 🔬🧬🥼🧫
The STEpUP OA study found that osteoarthritis is not a collection of separate diseases, but a single condition with common core underlying biological pathways. https://www.ndorms.ox.ac.uk/news/largest-study-of-knee-osteoarthritis-tissue-reveals-the-core-biological-pathways-underlying-osteoarthritis
Are you considering a future in clinical research? Join us for a 45-minute session highlighting clinical research fellowship opportunities in Oxford across a range of specialities.
🗓️ Tuesday 16 June
⏰ 6pm
📍 Online
Register now 👉 https://forms.office.com/e/ad1pNcRQN8
Join us later in June to Meet the researcher!
We’ll be talking arthritis and rare bone diseases with University of Oxford researchers.
🗓️ Monday 22 June
⏰ 1 – 2pm
📍 Zoom
Register now 👉 https://medsci.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ewuAk1dfTZqcsITs_tY9lQ#
Researchers from NDORMS are playing leading roles in a new UK-wide research consortium aiming to improve treatment and outcomes for people living with osteoarthritis. https://www.ndorms.ox.ac.uk/news/pioneering-study-sets-out-to-answer-why-osteoarthritis-impacts-patients-differently
These new insights could help improve cancer immunotherapy.
Video
A major international study led by researchers at the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology at the University of Oxford has found that osteoarthritis (OA) – the most common form of arthritis worldwide – is not a collection of separate diseases, as many scientists had previously speculated, but rather a single condition with common core underlying biological pathways.
Kennedy researchers have revealed how one of the immune system's most important regulatory pathways operates at the earliest moments of T cell activation, providing new insights that could help improve cancer immunotherapy.