
We warmly welcome you to the ICAT Celebration Event
Celebrating Impact and Excellence in Clinical Academic Training
Event programme
Morning
10:00 Coffee, poster viewing and registration
10:50 Welcome - Professor David Williams, ICAT Programme Director
11:00 Opening address - Dr Gráinne Gorman, CEO Health Research Board
11:10 Session 1 - Training Tomorrow’s Leaders: ICAT’s Role in Advancing Health Through Research on the Island of Ireland
Panel discussion chaired by Professor Susa Benseler, Children’s Health Ireland
- Professor Michael Gill, Trinity College Dublin
- Professor Michael Conall Dennedy, University of Galway
- Professor Peter Maxwell, Queen’s University Belfast
- Professor Paddy Mallon, University College Dublin
- Dr Annalisa Montesanti, Health Research Board
11:35 Session 2 - Innovating Health: Collaborative Advances in Therapeutics and Medical Technologies
Research introductions, then panel discussion chaired by Dr Gerard Walls, ICAT Alumnus, Queen’s University Belfast
- Dr Catherine Duane, ICAT Fellow, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences
- Dr James Curneen, ICAT Fellow, University of Galway
- Dr Lisa Kiely, ICAT Fellow, University College Cork
12:00 Research impact video 1
12:10 Session 3 - Bridging Gaps, Building Impact: Research Innovation and Patient Involvement
Research introductions and panel discussion chaired by Professor Caroline Sabin, University College London
- Dr Andrea Bowe, ICAT Alumnus, University College Cork
- Dr Eithne Nic an Ríogh, ICAT Fellow, Trinity College Dublin
- Dr Kiran Reddy, ICAT Alumnus, Queen’s University Belfast
12:30 Session 4 - Public and Patient involvement in research, experiences from patient and researcher perspectives
Panel discussion chaired by Professor Martina Hennessy, Trinity College Dublin
- Dr Louise Rabbitt, ICAT Fellow, University of Galway
- Mr Richard Kendrick, member of the Head and Neck PPI Subgroup of the Northern Ireland Cancer Research Forum
Afternoon
12:45 Lunch and poster viewing
13:25 - Session 5 Connected Health: Bridging Global Research, One Health, and Comparative Medicine
Research introductions and panel discussion chaired by Dr Rachel MacCann, ICAT Alumnus, University College Dublin
- Dr Alison Lee, ICAT Fellow, Trinity College Dublin
- Dr Margaret Brennan, ICAT Fellow, Trinity College Dublin
13:45 Research impact video 2
13:55 Session 6 - Beyond the White Coat: Navigating Career Growth and Personal Life in Clinical Academia
Panel discussion chaired by Professor Camille Harron, Northern Ireland Medical and Dental Training Agency
- Dr Peter Barrett, ICAT Alumnus, University College Cork
- Dr Katie Ridge, ICAT Alumnus, Trinity College Dublin
- Dr Gerard Walls, ICAT Alumnus, Queen’s University Belfast
- Dr Dearbhla Doherty, ICAT Alumnus, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences
14:20 Research impact video 3
14:30 Session 7 - One Island, One Vision: ICAT’s Role in Advancing Clinical Research and Education
Panel discussion chaired by Professor David Williams, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences
- Professor Carmel Mooney, University College Dublin
- Professor Gerry McKenna, Queen’s University Belfast
- Professor Conall Dennedy, University of Galway
- Dr Caroline Garvan, Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine
- Professor Bernadette McGuinness, Queen’s University Belfast
14:55 Closing address - Professor David Williams, ICAT Programme Director
Speaker biographies
Session 1 - Training Tomorrow’s Leaders: ICAT’s Role in Advancing Health Through Research
Professor David Williams
David Williams is Professor of Stroke Medicine at the RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences and Consultant Stroke Physician at Beaumont Hospital Dublin. He is Past President of the Irish Association of Pharmacologists(IAP) and Past Vice-President (Clinical) of the British Pharmacology Society (BPS)He is a fellow of the Royal Colleges of Physicians of Ireland and Edinburgh, The British Pharmacological Society, The British and Irish Hypertension Society and the European Stroke Organisation. His research interests include stroke medicine, hypertension, patient safety and prescribing. He has served as Clinical Vice-President of the British Pharmacological Society between 2007-10 and is currently managing editor of the European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology(EJCP). He is currently the Irish National Speciality Director of training for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, National Director of the Irish Clinical Academic Training (ICAT) programme and co-director of the Irish Stroke Clinical Trials network. He was the Principal Investigator for the Irish National Adverse Events Study(INAES 1 and 2) and Co-Lead for the HRB-funded Collaborative Doctoral Award , iPASTAR which is examining improved pathways for acute stroke care and rehabilitation.
Dr Gráinne Gorman
Session 1 - Training Tomorrow’s Leaders: ICAT’s Role in Advancing Health Through Research
Professor Susa Benseler
Susa Benseler trained in Paediatrics in Freiburg and Bonn, Germany. In 2001, she moved to the Hospital for Sick Children (Sickkids), Toronto, Canada providing academic care in Rheumatology and Emergency Medicine. She established interdisciplinary clinical programs for neuroinflammation and vasculitis and international care transformation networks for rare inflammatory diseases providing evidence-based care protocols that have significantly reduced the morbidity and mortality. For the past decade, she served as the director of the Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute advancing transformational child health programmes. She is also the co-lead of the Understanding Childhood Arthritis Network (UCAN), a multinational, transdisciplinary partnership with families for precision health in childhood arthritis. Since early 2024, Susa serves as the Chief Academic Officer for Children’s Health Ireland focussed on jointly advancing an academic health sciences system for child health across the island.
Emeritus Professor Peter Maxwell
For almost 30 years, Peter Maxwell was a consultant nephrologist at the Belfast City Hospital, Northern Ireland (NI) after clinical training in the UK and Canada. He was also the Professor of Renal Medicine at Queen’s University Belfast where he pursued his interests in medical education and research. He was the NI Training Programme Director for nephrology for 15 years and NI Clinical Academic Training Programme Director for 5 years. Peter has been a member of the ICAT Executive Team since the launch of the ICAT programme in 2016.
Peter’s research interests include diabetic kidney disease, genetic risk factors for chronic kidney disease and renal transplant outcomes. He led a multidisciplinary Nephrology Research Group at Queen’s University and has supervised over 50 postgraduate students (doctors and scientists) to completion of higher degrees
Peter has also been directly involved in development and expansion of Renal Services in Northern Ireland in partnership with health care commissioners and patient advocacy groups.
Emeritus Professor Michael Gill
Professor Michael Gill is Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin. During his career, he led the Neuropsychiatric Genetics Research Group which contributed Phenotypic and Genomic investigations into Autism, Psychosis and ADHD. The goal of this ongoing international research is to identify and investigate the function of genetic variation contributing to disease risk as a means of improving understanding of disease biology, developing better methods of diagnosis, and establishing new therapeutic approaches. The group has played a significant role in large collaborative genomics studies and has been part of several significant discoveries published in journals such as Nature, Nature Genetics, Archives of General Psychiatry and the British and American Journals of Psychiatry.
In 2012 he was appointed as Director and Principal Investigator of the Dublin Centre for Clinical Research that includes the network of four CRFs at TCD, UCD and RCSI and the Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility at St. James’ Hospital. Between 2013 and 2018, he was the first Director of the Trinity St. James’s Clinical Research Facility. Michael was the Principal Investigator of the Wellcome/HRB funded Irish Clinical Academic Training (ICAT-1) Programme. He was Head of the School of Medicine at Trinity College from 2017 up to his retirement in 2022.
Professor Michael Conall Dennedy
Michael Conall Dennedy is a Consultant Endocrinologist at Galway University Hospital and Associate Professor in Therapeutics at the University of Galway. He is a Galway graduate, completing a BSc in Pharmacology in 2000, MB, BAO, BCh in 2002, MD in Obstetrics in 2007 and PhD in Medicine in 2013. He trained through the HSE HRB National SpR Academic Fellowship Programme, an integrated academic clinician scientist programme. Following this he completed a fellowship in endocrinology at the University of Cambridge and Addenbrooke’s hospital. His research interests centre on the pathogenesis and treatment of functional adrenal tumours, both benign and malignant. He retains links with the Institute of Metabolic Science, University of Cambridge and has forged collaborations with the Centre for Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, University of Birmingham. He is also affiliated with the CÚRAM programme and the Translational Medical Device Laboratory.
Conall is the Principal Investigator of the ICAT-2 Programme, director of the undergraduate MB PhD programme at University of Galway and International Specialty Director for Endocrinology for the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland, International Clinical Fellows Programme.
Dr Annalisa Montesanti
Dr Annalisa Montesanti is a Programme Manager within the Research Strategy and Funding Directorate at the Health Research Board (HRB), Ireland. Since joining the HRB in 2005, she has overseen a range of funding schemes, including investigator-led projects and programmes, career development initiatives, and European and other collaborative research efforts.
Since 2016, Annalisa has led the strategic development of the HRB’s Research Careers portfolio, which supports capacity and capability building in applied health research across Ireland—from PhD training to research leadership. Her work aligns closely with the HRB’s strategic objectives and aims to strengthen the national research ecosystem.
She also plays a key role in advancing grant management practices, including the integration of persistent identifiers such as ORCID, and contributes to the development of related policies. Annalisa is actively involved in promoting open science, FAIR data principles, and responsible research assessment. She supports the adoption of DORA and CoARA principles and the implementation of narrative-style CVs, working in close collaboration with international partners.
Prior to her role at the HRB, Annalisa had extensive experience in scientific research across Italy, England, and Ireland. She holds a BSc from the University of Palermo, a PhD in cancer biology from the Institute of Molecular Medicine, Oxford, and has been awarded prestigious fellowships from the Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC) and the European Commission’s Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA).
Professor Patrick (Paddy) Mallon
Professor Patrick (Paddy) Mallon is Professor of Microbial Diseases and Head of the UCD School of Medicine, and a Consultant in Infectious Diseases in St Vincent’s University Hospital. He is the Director of the UCD Centre for Experimental Pathogen Host Research (CEPHR) – one of the few academic research centres in Europe that integrate host and pathogen research comprising clinical, translational, statistical and biomedical researchers.
Prof Mallon graduated in Medicine from Queen’s University Belfast, and undertook subsequent clinical training in infectious diseases and internal medicine in Sydney, Australia, where he completed a PhD in long-term toxicities in HIV. Deeply involved in clinical and translational research and policy activities at both national and international levels, he was a member of the COVID-19 Advisory Group to the Government of Ireland and currently sits on the Governing Board of the European AIDS Clinical Society (EACS).
He is a founding director of the Wellcome-HRB Irish Clinical Academic Training Programme (ICAT). A past President of the Infectious Diseases Society of Ireland and former Chair of the EACS Co-morbidities Guidelines Panel, Prof Mallon is currently Head of Education for EACS and a member of the Programme Committee for the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI).
Session 2 - Innovating Health: Collaborative Advances in Therapeutics and Medical Technologies
Dr Gerard Walls
Gerard is a Senior Lecturer and Consultant in Clinical Oncology at Queen’s University Belfast and the Northern Ireland Cancer Centre. Clinically, Gerard’s practice is centred around radiotherapy and systemic therapy for lung cancer. Through his research he hopes to improve the prognosis of lung cancer by advancing how patients and treatments are selected and optimised. Gerard completed his PhD in cardiotoxicity in lung cancer in 2022 as a member of the 2nd ICAT cohort. His research spanned translational mouse models, spatial transcriptomics and clinical physics analyses. In 2023 he was a Visiting Fellow at Washington University in St Louis where he joined the Bergom Labortory for 3 months to work on cardiac SABR and cardiotoxicity studies – via a Fulbright Scholarship. Gerard completed a 1-year Clinical Trials Fellowship in Thoracic Oncology at the Christie NHS Foundation Trust and University of Manchester in Q1 2025 under the supervision of Professor Corinne Faivre-Finn and took up Principal Investigator role of the CONCORDE Trial in Belfast on his appointment. His research team is funded by a British Heart Foundation Project Grant Award.
Dr James Curneen
Dr James Curneen is a Specialist Registrar in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics at Galway University Hospitals and a Fellow on the Irish Clinical Academic Training (ICAT) Programme. His PhD at the University of Galway focuses on developing a closed-loop intravenous antihypertensive drug-delivery system for real-time blood pressure control, conducted in collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Glasgow. His research integrates engineering, pharmacology, and clinical science to advance precision blood pressure management and has recently been awarded €347,000 in translational funding to support prototype development.
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Biography
Finbarr Allen is currently Professor of Prosthodontics and Oral Rehabilitation in University College Cork and Consultant in Restorative Dentistry at Cork Dental School and Hospital.
Since graduating from Cork Dental School, National University of Ireland in 1988, he has worked in general dental practice, hospital specialist practice and academia in the UK, Ireland and Singapore. He completed his specialist training in Prosthodontics and Restorative Dentistry in the UK and received his certificate of completion of specialist training in Prosthodontics and Restorative Dentistry by the General Dental Council in 2000. He completed a PhD at Newcastle University in 1999, and has published >150 peer reviewed scientific papers, > 100 research abstracts and is the author of 3 textbooks and twelve book chapters. He has been the PI for projects funded by national grant agencies and industry, and received nearly received nearly 5million Euro in research funding. His research interests are in geriatric oral health research (clinical trials, functional assessment), quality of life methodology and, health service research. He received a Distinguished Scientist Award in geriatric oral health research from the International Association for Dental Research in 2011 and the IADR/Unilever Social Entrepreneur Approach to Change Oral Health Behaviour Research Award, 2014.
In terms of leadership, he was the Dean of Dentistry/Head of Cork Dental School and Hospital from 2006 until 2013. From 2016-2022 he was Dean of the Faculty of Dentistry National University of Singapore, and Executive Director of the National University Centre for Oral Health, Singapore and a Senior Consultant at the National University Hospital, Singapore. He is a past chair of the Irish Committee for Specialist Training in Dentistry [2010-2015].
His clinical interests are Prosthodontics, implantology and craniofacial rehabilitation.
Session 3 – Bridging Gaps, Building Impact: Research Innovation and Patient Involvement
Professor Caroline Sabin
Caroline Sabin, PhD, is Professor of Medical Statistics and Epidemiology at UCL and the Director of the NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Blood-Borne and Sexually Transmitted Infections at UCL. She is a leading expert on the design and analysis of observational studies in HIV and has initiated and/or been responsible for statistical analyses of many of the studies that have determined models of care for people living with HIV. Caroline’s research interests are in describing adverse events of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and the effects of aging among people living with HIV. She established the UK Collaborative HIV Cohort Study, one of the longest running cohorts of people living with HIV, and was the principal statistician for the D:A:D study, which demonstrated associations between ART drugs, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer. She is the co-principal investigator for the Pharmacokinetic and clinical Observations in PeoPle over FiftY (POPPY) study, which describes the clinical comorbidities and healthcare needs of people with HIV as they age. She is the co-Editor-in-Chief of HIV Medicine and has published over 700 papers.
Dr Andrea Bowe
Dr Andrea Bowe is a final year specialist registrar in Public Health Medicine. She has completed a Masters in Public Health at University College Dublin and recently completed her PhD at the INFANT Research Centre University College Cork. Her PhD work, supervised by Professor Deirdre Murray, focussed on using machine learning for predicting cognitive outcomes in childhood at a population level.
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Session 4 -
Mr Richard Kendrick
Richard Kendrick qualified in Dentistry and Medicine and was a Consultant Oral & Maxillofacial surgeon based in The Ulster Hospital, Belfast. Retired in 2011 and became a patient when diagnosed with Lacrimal Sac Cancer under my left eye in 2021. Surgery in my old unit, followed by radiotherapy. Joined the Head and Neck PPI Subgroup of Northern Ireland Cancer Research Forum and have enjoyed my involvement to date.
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Session 5 - Connected Health: Bridging Global Research, One Health, and Comparative Medicine
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Session 6 - Beyond the White Coat: Navigating Career Growth and Personal Life in Clinical Academia
Professor Carmel Mooney
Carmel T Mooney is a 1986 veterinary graduate of UCD’. After spending several years in Scotland where she completed both MPhil (The University of Edinburgh) and PhD (The University of Glasgow) theses on feline hyperthyroidism, she returned to UCD as Lecturer and now Professor. She has been Head of Section and Head of Subject in Small Animal Clinical Studies from 2015-2023. She is currently Clinical Director of the University Veterinary Hospital, a position she also held between 2006 and 2008. Carmel was also Director of the European College of Veterinary Internal Medicine – Companion Animal (ECVIM-CA) residency programme in UCD’s Veterinary Hospital and Director of the DVMS Professional Doctorate Programme within the School of Veterinary Medicine.
Carmel obtained the ECVIM-CA Diploma in 1998 and is also a Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) Specialist in Small Animal Medicine (Endocrinology), awarded in recognition of her clinical and research work in the field of small animal endocrinology. She is a Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, awarded in recognition of her meritorious contributions to knowledge. Carmel has been President of the British Small Animal Veterinary Association (2005-6) and President of the ECVIM-CA (2015-17). She was Founding Secretary of the European College of Veterinary Endocrinology (2001-2005). She was Editor of the Journal of Small Animal Practice from 2010 – 2015 and is currently Specialty Chief Editor of Frontiers in Veterinary Science Comparative and Clinical Medicine, She is also Chair of the ECVIM-CA Clinical Studies Fund and co-Chair of the European Board of Veterinary Specialisation Standards, Quality Assurance & Governance Committee.
Professor Bernadette McGuinness
Bernadette trained in geriatric medicine and general internal medicine. During this time she graduated with an MD for work on neuropsychological changes in dementia and was awarded the Paul Beeson Career Development Award in 2007 which afforded three further years of research into mild cognitive impairment leading to a PhD. She currently works as Clinical Professor of Ageing within the Centre for Public Health at Queen’s University Belfast and Consultant Geriatrician in the Belfast Health & Social Care Trust where she leads a memory service. From a research perspective she is especially interested in Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment and the role of inflammation and nutrition in neurodegeneration; she leads a research portfolio of studies in these areas. Bernadette is Principal Investigator of the Northern Ireland Cohort of Longitudinal Ageing (NICOLA) study and leads on an NIA funded study comprehensively assessing cognition in NICOLA participants (HCAP).
Professor Gerry McKenna
Professor McKenna’s research is centred on optimising treatment options for older patients which positively impact their dental and overall health. His current position combines research, clinical teaching and specialist patient care. He is the immediate past President of British Dental Association in Northern Ireland and is a past president of the British Society of Gerodontology and the European College of Gerodontology (ECG) as well as the Geriatric Oral Research Group (GORG) at the International Association for Dental Research (IADR).
Dr Caroline Garvan
Dr Caroline Garvan qualified with a degree in Veterinary Medicine in 1993 and spent 4 years in farm animal practice in the UK and Ireland before spending a further 8 years in companion animal practice. She completed an MPhil in Food Safety and Environmental Health in 2007 before joining the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine as a Veterinary Inspector.
Caroline is currently a Senior Superintending Veterinary Inspector in the One Health One Welfare section and is head of the One Health, Veterinary Medicines and Antimicrobial Resistance Division. She also holds a Post graduate Certificate in Food Safety, a Diploma in Leadership and a Professional Certificate in Governance. Caroline is a member to the Veterinary Council of Ireland and also sits on the Health Products Regulatory Authority Advisory Committee on Veterinary Medicines.