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Ken Walsh, PhD, and Research Team Earn $3.3 Million to Study Sex Differences in Heart Failure

May 29, 2026 by jta6n@virginia.edu

Kenneth Walsh, PhD

Kenneth Walsh, PhD

Ken Walsh, PhD, Lockhart B. McGuire Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine and resident member of the Robert M. Berne Cardiovascular Research Center, has earned a $3.3 million NIH grant to study the effects of the loss of Y chromosomes (LOY) in men facing heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF).

While other modes of heart failure have become more survivable, HFpEF has few treatments and poor outcomes. Interestingly, while women are more likely to be diagnosed with HFpEF, men have higher rates of mortality. Walsh’s research team recently showed that age-related LOY is connected to age-related heart failure. As people age, their cells accumulate mutations. Sometimes, mutant cells can outcompete their non-mutated counterparts, resulting in atypical cell populations becoming dominant over time. One manifestation of this process in men is the progressive loss of their Y chromosomes. In fact, Walsh has shown that the progressive LOY can account for much of the six-year difference in life expectancy between men and women in industrialized nations. Walsh and his collaborators in the UVA Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Amit Patel, MD, and Mohammad Abuannadi, MD, hypothesize that LOY contributes to the higher rates of HFpEF mortality in men.

Together, the three researchers will identify correlations between LOY and HFpEF severity, LOY-related changes at the cellular level, and whether mouse models can inform our understanding of the disease. Specifically, the team will investigate whether LOY increases the prevalence of fibrosis, the formation of scar tissue, in the heart.

“The work will merge molecular biology and clinical cardiology, particularly cardiac MRI,” Walsh explained.

The Walsh lab will provide expertise in LOY and molecular biology methods. Dr. Patel’s research specialization is in cardiac MRI, and Dr. Abuannadi is an expert in heart failure. The trio of researchers hope to identify the sex-specific mechanisms giving rise to HFpEF. Understanding these mechanisms will facilitate future work to develop treatments for HFpEF in men and women.

Filed Under: Research