Director of major research centre to head up Manchester faculty
09 Jul 2018
Professor Graham Lord, a leading clinical academic and Director of one of the country’s major biomedical research centres, is to join the University as Vice-President and Dean of the Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health
He will also take up the role of Executive Director of the Academic Health Science Centre as part of Health Innovation Manchester, and will represent the University on the Board of the Northern Health Science Alliance.
Professor Lord is currently Director of the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London. He is also a clinician at Guy’s and St Thomas’.
He will join The University of Manchester in early 2019 to lead the Faculty, which has more than 11,000 students and 3,200 staff and an annual research income of £122 million. It has the largest medical school in the country, as well as extensive postgraduate taught programmes, and is the largest supplier of healthcare graduates to the NHS in the north-west of England.
Professor Lord qualified in medicine from the University of Cambridge in 1991 and undertook a period of general clinical training as a junior doctor in Cambridge, Hammersmith, Oxford and at the Royal Brompton Hospital. Following specialisation in nephrology, transplantation and general medicine at the Hammersmith Hospital, he undertook a period of research in molecular immunology at Imperial College London that led to a PhD in 2000, funded by an MRC Clinical Training Fellowship.
He was appointed as a Consultant in Nephrology and Transplantation at the Hammersmith in 2003. From 2003-2008, funded by an MRC Clinician Scientist award, he was a visiting scientist at Harvard University and then came back to the UK to become the Chair of Medicine at King’s College London.
He has built up a research group at King’s, investigating fundamental immune cell biology and the translation of this knowledge to the diagnosis and treatment of patients with organ transplant rejection and autoimmune diseases. As a consultant at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust he practices clinical nephrology with a particular interest in renal and pancreatic transplantation.
He led the successful application for the NIHR BRC at Guy's and St Thomas' and was appointed as Director of the Centre in 2012. In this role, he is responsible for the delivery of programmes of translational research and experimental medicine with a significant part of the Centre’s portfolio focussed on regenerative and personalised medicine, advanced therapeutics and informatics.
He was elected as an NIHR Senior Investigator in 2013 and a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2016. He has sat on the NIHR Strategy Board and is now on the National Clinical Research Network Co-ordinating Centre Board and advised the UK Government as a member of the Expert Advisory Group of the Accelerated Access Review, representing the BRCs across the UK.
Professor Lord said: “With its devolved healthcare system, Manchester is a unique environment to conduct research and work in partnership to deliver real improvements to people’s health. The Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health is a huge contributor to that process – educating and training thousands of students each year and delivering world-class research. It is a great challenge with an outstanding faculty which I am very much looking forward to leading.”
Congratulating Graham on his appointment to The University of Manchester, Professor Chris Whitty, Chief Scientific Adviser for the Department of Health and Social Care, said: “I am extremely grateful for Graham’s contribution to the NIHR’s strategic goals over the last six years, driving systems leadership across health and clinical research, and his instrumental role in positioning experimental medicine at the heart of healthcare systems locally, nationally and globally.”
Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice-Chancellor of The University of Manchester said: “Graham has a highly impressive background in delivering major biomedical research projects and is a clinician scientist of great distinction. Along with his background, his passion for education and enthusiasm for the opportunities we have here in Manchester made him a natural choice to lead the Faculty.”