兔子先生

Research News

student researcher at poster talking with attendees
UHCOP Ph.D. candidate Fatima Dagher, left, talks about her project on optimizing pancreatic cancer therapeutics.

Clinical and Translational Research Symposium

Event's Successful Second Year Showcases Trainee, Faculty Projects from Across UH and Neighboring Institutions

May 27 鈥 With more than 70 projects presented in poster or podium sessions, the second Clinical and Translational Research Symposium May 9 at the 兔子先生 College of Pharmacy showcased the cutting-edge work of undergraduate, graduate and professional students, postdoctoral fellows and faculty researchers from across the Houston area. 

The range of projects included better diagnostics and treatments for a variety of life-threatening and debilitating diseases, from cancer and infectious diseases to opioid use disorder and neurodegeneration. The daylong program featured 45 poster presentations, 16 podium presentations and 10 short talks by trainees and faculty investigators from across several UH colleges, as well as neighboring institutions, such as Baylor College of Medicine, UTHealth Houston, MD Anderson UTHealth Houston Graduate School, Texas Southern University, Texas A&M Health, and the Houston Methodist Research Institute. 

ctrs award winner fatima with harris and trivedi
Keynote speaker Paul Harris, left, and UHCOP Professor and CTRS Organizing Committee Chair Meghna Trivedi, right, present the 1st Place Poster Presentation Award to UHCOP Ph.D. candidate Bilqees Fatima.

Paul Harris, Ph.D., FACMI, FIAHSI, Vanderbilt University Medical Center professor and Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research vice president for research informatics in Nashville, Tenn., presented the keynote. Harris discussed his work creating and serving as faculty lead for the REDCap data collection and management platform and REDCap Consortium, which serves more than 7,700 academic, nonprofit, and government institutional partners across 160 countries. He also provided insights into All of Us, a data resource platform that stores health data from participants across the United States, and ResearchMatch, a national recruitment registry which pairs over 120,000 potential study volunteers with research teams at 251 U.S.-based institutions.

ctrs award winner huang with harris and trivedi
Keynote speaker Paul Harris, left, and UHCOP Professor and CTRS Organizing Committee Chair Meghna Trivedi, right, present the 1st Place Podium Presentation Award to Sophia Huang from UTHealth MD Anderson Graduate School.

Three researchers were honored for their poster presentations: 

First place 鈥 Bilqees Fatima, Pharm.D., UHCOP Pharmaceutical Sciences Ph.D. candidate, for "Predictors of Progression-Free Survival Following CDK4/6 Inhibitor Therapy in Patients with Hormone Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer" 

Second place 鈥 Yasindu Seneviratne, UH Biology and Biochemistry graduate student, for "In-vitro assessment of the Association of Global ISGylation and the Androgen Receptor in Endocrine Resistant Hormone Receptor Positive Breast Cancer"

Third place 鈥 Cara Guernsey-Biddle, M.S., MD Anderson UTHealth Houston Graduate School Ph.D. student, for "The Promise of Multi-targeted ADC Therapy in Colorectal Cancer: Epiregulin and Amphiregulin."

student researcher at poster discussing her project with attendee
UH Honors College undergraduate student Reece Collins discusses her UHCOP lab breast cancer research project with an attendee.

In addition, three researchers were recognized for their podium presentations: 

First place 鈥 Sophia Huang, MD Anderson UTHealth Houston Graduate School, for "Estrogen-Related Receptor Alpha Promotes Muscle Regeneration and Mitigates Myopathy in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy"

Second place 鈥 Olajumoke Olateju, UHCOP Pharmaceutical Sciences Ph.D. candidate, for "Evaluating the Effectiveness of Buprenorphine Dosing on Adherence and Opioid Overdose Risk"

Third place 鈥 Dipali Rinker, Ph.D., LPC, UHCOP research assistant professor, for "Minority Stress Impacts Use of Medication Assisted Treatments/Medications for Opioid Use Disorder."

researcher discussing poster with CTRS attendee
Bowen Xu, UHCOP Ph.D. student, explains his research findings in cancer muscle loss (cachexia) to a symposium attendee.

To view more photos from the CTRS 2025, visit the .