PEOPLE

Researcher awarded grant to study preeclampsia

By Staff
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Choudhury

Choudhury

Mahua Choudhury, a University of Colorado School of Medicine researcher, has been awarded a $100,000 grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to study the cause of preeclampsia in pregnant women.

"I feel honored to have been selected for this prestigious award," said Choudhury, who specializes in neonatology at the school's department of pediatrics. "Childbirth is a wonderful thing but when a mother and child die, it's a double tragedy. So if I can contribute in any way to preventing this, I would be very satisfied."

The Grand Challenges Explorations (GCE) awards fund scientists and researchers worldwide to explore ideas that can solve persistent global health and development challenges.

Choudhury's project, titled "A Sensitive Epigenic Tool for Prediction of Preeclampsia," is one of 88 GCE grants recently announced by the foundation. She was one of a 2,500 applicants from 100 countries.

"These grants are meant to spur on new discoveries that could ultimately save millions of lives," said Chris Wilson, director of Global Health Discovery at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

To receive funding, Choudhury and other winners demonstrated an idea in one of five critical global heath and development areas: polio eradication, HIV, sanitation and family health technologies, and mobile health.

Choudhury focused on preeclampsia because of its widespread occurrence and the fact that it kills more than 75,000 women and babies every year. Women with the condition develop high blood pressure and protein in their urine. Choudhury said 4 percent to 8 percent of pregnant women in developed countries are affected by it along with up to 20 percent in developing nations.

"It is a condition with many facets but no single factor is found in all patients," she said. "That indicates that there is true causation still out there, a central unifying factor. And I am hoping we can find it."