Elucidating Pathways of Steatohepatitis
Acronym
EPoS
Description of the granted funding
Strongly associated with the epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) that are testing healthcare systems worldwide, Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) is an increasingly common cause of advanced liver disease in the aging population of Europe. NAFLD is a spectrum of hepatic fat accumulation (steatosis); steatosis plus inflammation (non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, NASH); fibrosis/cirrhosis; and hepatocellular carcinoma in the absence of high alcohol consumption.
Up to 30% of the EU population have NAFLD, which will be the main aetiology underlying liver transplants by 2020. However, NAFLD is characterized by substantial inter-patient variability in severity and rate of progression. What determines this is unknown. A large population is at risk, but only some experience morbidity. NAFLD severity is currently best assessed by liver biopsy, an invasive, costly and risky procedure - factors that hinder treatment. There is a need to understand the biological and environmental factors that drive inter-patient variability and to develop robust and more acceptable methods for diagnosis, risk stratification and therapy so that effective medical care may be targeted to those that will benefit most.
The overall EPoS concept is that improved understanding of pathogenic processes and drivers of disease progression will best be achieved when multiple ‘omics’ approaches are applied to a single cohort of patients to build a multi-dimensional record of how systems are perturbed across the entire spectrum of disease. NAFLD sits at the intersection of key biological processes: carbohydrate/lipid homeostasis, immune/inflammatory activation, wound healing/fibrosis and cancer biology. Once completed, EPoS promises to deliver a substantial and definitive atlas of pathophysiological variation across a spectrum of progressive liver disease. Translation of these findings will therefore impact on closely related pathologies including T2DM and cardiovascular disease.
Show moreStarting year
2015
End year
2019
Granted funding
NORDIC BIOSCIENCE A/S (DK)
187 500 €
Participant
THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE (UK)
517 990 €
Participant
INST CARDIOMETABOLISME NUTRITION ICAN (FR)
1 012 317.5 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAETSMEDIZIN DER JOHANNES GUTENBERG-UNIVERSITAET MAINZ (DE)
261 000 €
Participant
FONDAZIONE TOSCANA GABRIELE MONASTERIO PER LA RICERCA MEDICA E DI SANITA PUBBLICA (IT)
10 000 €
Third party
OREBRO UNIVERSITY (SE)
568 059 €
Participant
IXSCIENT LIMITED (UK)
298 750 €
Participant
UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI TORINO (IT)
461 092.83 €
Participant
UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI FIRENZE (IT)
201 542.17 €
Third party
UNIVERSITA CATTOLICA DEL SACRO CUORE (IT)
41 250 €
Third party
CONSIGLIO NAZIONALE DELLE RICERCHE (IT)
481 815 €
Participant
UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE (UK)
1 629 948.5 €
Coordinator
Amount granted
5 985 521 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
Research and Innovation action
Framework programme
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call
Programme part
Health (5290 Understanding health, wellbeing and disease (5291 )
Topic
Understanding health, ageing and disease: determinants, risk factors and pathways (PHC-01-2014Call ID
H2020-PHC-2014-two-stage Other information
Funding decision number
634413
Identified topics
health care