The Children’s Diabetes Centre is an integrated clinical and research centre conducting research into Type 1 diabetes (T1DM) and childhood onset Type 2 diabetes.
The Children’s Diabetes Centre includes researchers at The Kids Research Institute Australia’s Diabetes and Obesity Research Team and researchers and clinicians within the Diabetes Service at Perth children’s Hospital (PCH) as part of the Western Australian Department of Health.
Our goal is to improve the lives of all children with diabetes by diminishing the devastating impact of the disease on children, their families and the adults they will become. We focus on the care of people with T1DM and their families that includes improving the clinical and at-home management of T1DM and reducing the psychosocial impact.
Our primary objective is to generate significant new knowledge that will lead to tangible improvements in care that improves outcomes. We do this by focused research studies that include clinical investigations, clinical trials, epidemiological studies and qualitative research projects and we translate the results of these studies into the clinic and the community.
We aim to:
- Be instrumental in translating new treatments and knowledge into routine clinical practice
- Restore blood glucose levels as close to normal as possible and thus reduce the long-term complications of diabetes.
- Reduce the frequency and impact of low blood glucose (hypoglycaemia) which is a common and dangerous side effect of insulin treatment in diabetes
- Develop, test and refine new diabetes technologies such as closed loop systems and translate these into clinical practice.
- Increase the confidence of children, adolescents and young adults with T1DM as well as their families and their health professionals in using technology (continuous glucose monitoring and insulin delivery technology).
- Better understand the impact of food and exercise on glycaemic control – that will be progressively translated into clinical practice and guidelines.
- Measure and improve the mental health and quality of life for young people with T1DM and their families.
- Improve educational outcomes for children and young people with T1DM.
The Children's Diabetes Centre was established in 2015 by a Centre for Research Excellence (CRE) grant from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and JDRF Australia. It is the only paediatric clinical diabetes CRE in Australia.
Team Highlights
Last year, the Children’s Diabetes Centre took a key step along the way to a fully automated closed-loop insulin delivery system. Researchers in the Technology theme, working with five hospitals across Australia, conducted the first in-home trial of an insulin pump designed to predict and prevent hypoglycaemia – another step on the way to a fully automated closed-loop insulin delivery system. This study found that pump technology that suspends insulin delivery when blood glucose levels fall can halve the incidence of hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar) in young people with Type 1 Diabetes compared with traditional treatments.
Professor Tim Jones, co-director of the Centre and the Australian investigator for a global adolescent Type 1 Diabetes study, found drugs used to treat blood pressure and cholesterol in adults can reduce the risk of kidney disease in young people with diabetes. The four-year AdDIT (Adolescent Type 1 Diabetes cardio-renal Intervention Trial) study involved screening 4407 young people across three continents — Australia, the United Kingdom and Canada — with the aim of understanding more about the development of long-term kidney, eye and cardiovascular complications in adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes.
Our study exploring the effect of Real-time continuous glucose monitoring (RT CGM) on psychosocial factors, specifically fear of hypoglycaemia and quality of life in children and their caregivers found that RT CGM and remote monitoring improves multiple measures of quality of life and reduces family stress. To our knowledge, this is the first randomised trial exploring psychosocial outcomes of using RT CGM with remote monitoring.
Team leader
MBBS DCH FRACP MD
Co-head, Diabetes and Obesity Research
MBBS FRACP PhD
Theme Head, Chronic & Severe Diseases; Clinical Lead, Diabetes and Obesity Research
Team members (23)
BSc GradDipComp MPH
Project Manager, Australasian Diabetes Data Network
MClinPsych/PhD
MB BS, FRACP (paeds), PhD, DCH
Honorary Research Fellow
BA (Hons), MBBChir, MA (Cantab), PhD
Mary Abraham
Clinical Research Fellow
Sabrina Binkowski
Research Assistant/Research Officer
Ace Choo
Project Manager
Carol Cole
Clinical Research Nurse
Julie Dart
Clinical Research Nurse
Leanne Fried
Research Fellow
Tanyana Jackiewicz
Senior Program Manager
Leah Laurenson
Clinical Data Manager
Amanda Lewis
Communications Specialist
Jane Makin
DPMS National Roll-out Coordinator
Asma Minhaj
Research Assistant
Joanne O’Dea
Research Assistant
Nirubasini Paramalingam
Clinical Research Manager
Heather Roby
Clinical Research Associate
Vinutha Shetty
Clinical Research Fellow
Alison Roberts
Clinical Research Nurse
Grant Smith
Biostatistician
Wayne Soon
Research Assistant
Alexandra Tully
Clinical Research Nurse
Featured projects
Exercising Safely with Type 1 Diabetes – Development of Clinical Guidelines
Our research focuses on what are the best ways for patients with Type 1 Diabetes to exercise safely. We aim to develop clinical guidelines that provide improved advice for patients and educate patients on how to prevent hypos during and after exercise.
National Hybrid Closed-Loop Outpatient Trial
The national Hybrid Closed-Loop Outpatient Trial will test the use of an automated insulin delivery system to see if it is better at optimising blood glucose levels than standard therapy.
Other projects
Using continuous glucose monitoring to detect early dysglycaemia in children participating in the ENDIA study (Sub Protocol) Validation of Physical Activity Assessment in Type 1 Diabetes – an Essential Step to Incorporating Systematic Measurement of Activity as the Standard of Care in Youth Promoting Resilience in Stress Management for Parents (PRISM-P) intervention in parents of young children with T1D Using co-design to understand and enhance the experiences of emerging adults with type 1 diabetes and their parents as they transition from paediatric to adult care in metropolitan and regional Western Australia The effect of oral insulin on subcutaneous insulin requirements and glycaemia in T1DM Does commencement of a gluten- free diet improve blood glucose control in children and young people with Type 1 Diabetes and Coeliac Disease? All Diabetes and Obesity Research projects