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Biography
Dr David Khoury (Team Lead and Scientia Fellow – Translational Analytics Group, Kirby Institute, UNSW) is an interdisciplinary researcher who has pioneered statistical and modelling approaches to address critical questions in infection and immunity. He holds an NHMRC Investigator Grant (EL2), and his research focuses on using quantitative methods to translate basic science research into actionable evidence to guide drug and vaccine...view more
Dr David Khoury (Team Lead and Scientia Fellow – Translational Analytics Group, Kirby Institute, UNSW) is an interdisciplinary researcher who has pioneered statistical and modelling approaches to address critical questions in infection and immunity. He holds an NHMRC Investigator Grant (EL2), and his research focuses on using quantitative methods to translate basic science research into actionable evidence to guide drug and vaccine development, assessment and deployment decisions. David's research approach integrates evidence synthesis, experimental data and modelling, to deliver a coherent understanding of infection, treatment and immunity. He has provided key evidence to progress vaccine and drug development efforts for both established and emerging pathogens.
Since completing his PhD at UNSW in 2016, David's research impact has been broad. His work has been cited in >210 policy documents globally, including by the WHO, U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI). His expertise is frequently sought by leading health policy organisations including the WHO SAGE Advisory Group and the UK based National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).
David is recognised for being the first to establish neutralising antibodies as a surrogate of protection from COVID-19, which informed national and international regulatory decisions on vaccine deployment and boosting. He has also innovated the way we assess new drugs for malaria leading to multiple industry partnerships (including GSK, Zydus-Calida and Merck) and a formal consultancy role with the Gates-funded Medicines for Malaria Venture (2020-23). David has made major contributions to vaccine policy to combat the Mpox, his work has established the only known association between an immune response and protection against mpox after vaccination, and has informed international vaccination policy.
My Grants
Funding agency: WELLCOME TRUST
Grant name: Rising to the Strep A human challenge: Investigating protection against experimental human infection to predict vaccine efficacy.
Start date: 2025
Scheme: INVESTIGATOR GRANTS
Funding agency: NATIONAL HEALTH & MEDICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
Grant name: Reducing the burden of infectious diseases using translational analytics
Start date: 1 January 2025
Scheme: 2021 MRFF COVID-19 TREATMENT ACCESS AND PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIVITIES SHARED GRANT
Funding agency: UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE
Grant name: Immune responses to sars-cov-2 variants across age groups and vulnerable populations
Start date: 1 June 2022
Scheme: DISCOVERY PROJECT
Funding agency: AUSTRALIAN RESEARCH COUNCIL
Grant name: An interdisciplinary approach to host-pathogen interactions in infection.
Start date: 1 June 2018
Scheme: EARLY CAREER FELLOWSHIPS
Funding agency: NATIONAL HEALTH & MEDICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
Grant name: Interdisciplinary insights into the rational design of malaria therapy and vaccines
Start date: 1 January 2018
Scheme: SAO PAULO RESEARCH FOUNDATION (FAPESP) JOINT PROGRAM
Funding agency: UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES
Grant name: Modelling the relative contribution of relapses to plasmodium vivax infection in Brazil
Start date: 1 November 2017
My Qualifications
PhD, UNSW Sydney (2016)
B Science (Advanced Mathematics) (2009)
My Research Supervision
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