
BHF awards £35 million funding to top UK universities

After years of disruption due to the Covid-19 pandemic and uncertainty over the UK’s association with the Horizon funding programme, the awards give UK cardiovascular disease research a much-needed boost.
The funding will enable cutting-edge research to address some of the most pressing issues in cardiovascular disease, including regenerative medicine to prevent and treat heart failure, improving diagnosis with artificial intelligence, the impact of health inequalities, genes and the risk of heart disease, vascular dementia, the role of the immune system in heart disease, and how type 2 diabetes can lead to heart failure.
The funding comes from the our highly competitive Research Excellence Awards funding scheme. The nine universities, which will each receive between £1 million and £5 million, are: Imperial College London, King’s College London, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, University of Leeds, University of Leicester, University of Manchester, University of Oxford and University College London. The awards will provide funding over the next five years.
Springboard for further funding
Future breakthroughs
The Research Excellence Awards were first launched in 2008, with Accelerator Awards introduced in 2019. Since then, we have invested over £90 million at 12 universities across the scheme, supporting research that has laid the foundations for future breakthroughs including:
Development of an artificial intelligence tool that could identify people at risk of a heart attack years in advance by spotting ‘invisible’ warning signs in routine heart scans. The tool, developed at the University of Oxford, is currently being piloted at five NHS hospitals.
Development of a biodegradable gel that could help to repair damaged hearts. Researchers showed that the gel can be safely injected into the beating heart to act as a scaffold for cells to grow into new heart tissue. They hope that it could form a new generation of treatments to repair damage caused by a heart attack.
A trial led at the University of Edinburgh that showed that a simple scan could save thousands of lives every year by improving the diagnosis of people coming to hospital with chest pain. The scan is now recommended as a first-line diagnostic tool in NICE guidelines for people presenting at hospital with chest pain.