RPH Cardiometabolic and Hypertension Service

RPH Cardiometabolic & Hypertension Services includes multiple specialities (general physicians, cardiologists, nephrologists, endocrinologists) and engages in numerous industry and investigator-driven clinical and research projects with the goal of improving services for a range of diagnosed cardiometabolic diseases, including lipid disorders, hypertension, obesity and diabetes mellitus.

Research interests and focus 

We have a strong record of impactful outcomes of our research into cardiometabolic disorders. Our research has contributed to better diagnosis of patients (identification), risk stratification with state-of-the-art genetic, imaging and other clinical methodologies, and development and testing of new treatment approaches. Our current research areas of interest include:  

Lipid disorders

Inherited disorders that affect the metabolism of fat (e.g. familial hypercholesterolaemia, lipodystrophy and severe chylomicronaemia), and their integrated care. 
Tracer kinetic studies of lipid metabolism.
Intervention studies of new lipid regulating therapy for patients at high-risk of cardiovascular condition.
Clinical quality registries of patients with lipid disorders (e.g. familial hypercholesterolaemia, elevated lipoprotein(a) and hypertriglyceridemia).

Hypertension 

The role of the sympathetic nervous system in hypertension and cardiometabolic / cardiorenal disease
Obesity related hypertension
Resistant hypertension
Novel pharmacologic and interventional approaches to treat elevated blood pressure 

Example projects 

Gene silencing therapy for patients with elevated lipoprotein(a), refractory hypercholesterolaemia and mixed hyperlipidaemia. 
CPI: Professor Gerald F Watts (EMHS)  


Use of web-based registry to improve care of familial hypercholesterolaemia: identification and treatment gap, outcome of cascade testing and non-adherence to pharmacotherapy. 
CPI: Professor Gerald F Watts (EMHS)

Best treatment approach for obesity-related hypertension comparing the effects of two approved blood pressure lowering medications in patients with obesity and hypertension.
CPI: Professor Markus Schlaich (EMHS)
Impact of anti-diabetes drugs (SGLT-2 inhibitors) on blood pressure and sympathetic nerve activity.
CPI: Professor Markus Schlaich (EMHS)
 
Last Updated: 23/04/2025