Eugenie Lumbers


Eugenie Ruth Lumbers is an Australian medical researcher whose work has focused on the role of the renin-angiotensin system in fetal development and in women's health.

Career

She earned her MBBS and medical degrees from the University of Adelaide. She was the first woman to be awarded a CJ Martin Fellowship by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, and with that funding she studied fetal physiology at Oxford University. In 1974 she joined the faculty of University of New South Wales. She became the first woman appointed as a Scientia Professor at UNSW in 1999. She was elected to the Australian Academy of Science and received the Centenary Medal in 2002. In 2010, she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New South Wales. In 2012, she was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia. She received a joint appointment at University of Queensland in 2009 and held that until 2011. She left UNSW in 2013 and received an appointment as a professor at University of Newcastle.
Along with Brian Morris she discovered prorenin, ; her initial findings were met with disbelief from the field, when she began working on it during her doctoral studies. She has studied whether gene therapy could be a viable way to treat congenital diseases during fetal development, and has studied whether drugs that modulate the renin-angiotensis system could be useful to treat endometrial cancer.

Selected publications

Five most-cited papers as of August 2018:
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