For Dr Stephanie Kuo, the biggest breakthroughs in medicine don’t start in the lab – they begin with patients.
A nephrologist at The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Dr Kuo works on the frontline of kidney transplantation, caring for people whose lives depend on striking a delicate immune balance.
At the Snow Centre for Immune Health, she’s focused on a simple but urgent question: how can we better protect transplanted organs – and the people who rely on them – over the long term?
“Transplantation can be life‑changing,” Dr Kuo says.
“You see people regain independence and get their life back. That’s incredibly powerful.”
But success comes with risk. To prevent rejection, transplant patients must take immune‑suppressing drugs for life.
Too much suppression increases the risk of infection and cancer; too little can mean losing the transplant altogether.
“Right now, we often discover problems after they’ve already happened,” Dr Kuo explains.
“By the time rejection or infection occurs, we’re already behind.”