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PolyU and Stanford Medicine join hands to establish joint collaboratory for longitudinal deep omics

22 Apr 2025

Events PolyU-Stanford Joint Collaboratory for Longitudinal Deep Omics

Witnessed by Prof. Jin-Guang Teng, PolyU President (back row, 4th from left); Prof. David Shum, Dean of the PolyU Faculty of Health and Social Sciences (back row, centre); Prof. Larry Chow, Head of the PolyU Department of Applied Biology and Chemical Technology (back row, 2nd from right); Prof. Kee Chea-su, Professor and Head of the PolyU School of Optometry and Associate Director of the Research Centre for SHARP Vision; (back row, 4th from right); Prof. He Mingguang, Chair Professor of Experimental Ophthalmology of the PolyU School of Optometry, Director of the Research Centre for SHARP Vision and Global STEM Scholar (back row, 3rd from right); Prof. Yip Shea-ping, Chair Professor of Diagnostic Science and Molecular Genetics of the PolyU Department of Health Technology and Informatics (back row, 3rd from left); Prof. Zhou Lei, Professor of the PolyU School of Optometry (back row, 2nd from left); Prof. Thomas Lam, Associate Professor of the PolyU School of Optometry (back row, 1st from left); and Dr Zhou Xin, Basic Life Research Scientist in Genetics at Stanford University (back row, 1st from right), the MoU was signed by Prof. Christopher Chao, PolyU Vice President (Research and Innovation) (front row, left), and Prof. Michael Snyder, Stanford W. Ascherman Professor of Genetics at Stanford University (front row, right).

Prof. Jin-Guang Teng said that the establishment of LDO will further develop and reinforce PolyU’s strengths in the fields of healthcare and AI.

Prof. Michael Snyder shared Stanford University’s commitment to advancing research on ageing, improving lives and promoting healthy ageing.


The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) and Stanford Medicine have recently signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for the establishment of the PolyU-Stanford Joint Collaboratory for Longitudinal Deep Omics (LDO). Leveraging PolyU’s strengths in biomedical engineering, AI-driven health analytics, and precision medicine–alongside Stanford Medicine’s pioneering expertise in genetics and multi-omics–this partnership aims to establish a standardised multi-omics ageing cohort to investigate the biological mechanisms underpinning healthy and pathological ageing, identify personalised biomarkers, predict ageing-related diseases, and advance the development of precision medicine.

Witnessed by Prof. Jin-Guang TENG, PolyU President; Prof. David SHUM, Dean of the PolyU Faculty of Health and Social Sciences; Prof. Larry CHOW, Head of the PolyU Department of Applied Biology and Chemical Technology; Prof. KEE Chea-su, Head and Professor of the PolyU School of Optometry and Associate Director of the Research Centre for SHARP Vision; Prof. HE Mingguang, Chair Professor of Experimental Ophthalmology of the PolyU School of Optometry, Director of the Research Centre for SHARP Vision and Global STEM Scholar; Prof. YIP Shea-ping, Chair Professor of Diagnostic Science and Molecular Genetics of the PolyU Department of Health Technology and Informatics; Prof. ZHOU Lei, Professor of the PolyU School of Optometry; Prof. Thomas LAM, Associate Professor of the PolyU School of Optometry; and Dr ZHOU Xin, Basic Life Research Scientist in Genetics at Stanford Medicine, the MoU was signed by Prof. Christopher CHAO, PolyU Vice President (Research and Innovation), and Prof. Michael SNYDER, Stanford W. Ascherman Professor of Genetics at Stanford Medicine.

Prof. Jin-Guang Teng remarked, “PolyU’s commitment to advancing medical innovation and nurturing talent for positive health outcomes has never been stronger. Recently, the University submitted a comprehensive and innovative proposal to the HKSAR Government to establish the city’s third medical school. Our aim is to cultivate the next generation of medical professionals and leaders who can excel in the future AI-driven healthcare landscape by leveraging our strong foundation of excellence in health sciences, engineering, and AI. The establishment of LDO will further develop and reinforce our strengths in the fields of healthcare and AI.”

Prof. Michael Snyder also shared Stanford Medicine’s commitment to advancing research on ageing, improving lives and promoting healthy ageing.

Ageing is a primary factor contributing to chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, neurodegenerative conditions, and cancer. However, individuals age differently, exhibiting distinct patterns and pathways known as ageotypes. Current ageing research remains limited by its narrow focus on specific markers and ageotypes, lacking a comprehensive view of ageing’s impact on health.

Through this partnership, PolyU and Stanford Medicine will conduct joint research on deep omics and related disciplines, focusing on the Asian population. Research will centre on integrative analysis of ageing mechanisms and individual variability. LDO will perform longitudinal multi-omics analysis of existing cohorts, including genomic, proteomic, metabolomic, and lipidomic profiling, along with retinal imaging and electronic health records. The collaboration will also develop a real-time health monitoring platform, predictive algorithms for age-related diseases, and institutional exchanges for PhD students and postdoctoral fellows.

Over the past half-century, PolyU has trained over 50,000 healthcare professionals, including nurses, physiotherapists, optometrists, radiologists and more, playing a pivotal role in the development of Hong Kong’s medical system. Supported by a robust team of over 1,300 healthcare-related teaching and research staff and equipped with more than 90 specialised laboratories and research facilities, PolyU has leveraged its strengths in medicine-engineering integration to advance healthcare technology. In addition to its collaboration with Stanford Medicine, PolyU has established partnerships with several universities and hospitals both globally and in Mainland China, and is actively preparing for the establishment of the third medical school to address the medical needs of Hong Kong and the Greater Bay Area.

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