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Q&A with Shrey Shah: Developing Microneedles to Treat Autoimmune Diseases

May 6, 2024

PhRMA Foundation award recipient Shrey Shah, a graduate student at the University of Maryland, College Park, seeks to leverage the resilient properties of skin to deliver treatments for autoimmune diseases using microneedles.

About 1 in 5 Americans are living with an autoimmune disease in which their immune system mistakenly attacks their own tissues and organs. About 75% of those affected are women. Currently, these diseases have no cures, but their symptoms can be managed with treatments.

Shrey Shah, MS, a graduate student at the University of Maryland, College Park, received a 2024 PhRMA Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship in Drug Delivery for his research seeking to leverage the resilient properties of our skin to deliver treatments for autoimmune diseases.

As a biochemical engineer, Shah is developing microneedles made from gelatin that can be applied like a Band-Aid to deliver treatments. “Overall, what we’re trying to do is to make a treatment which is more accessible, more sustainable, and also helps treat a disease which does not have a cure yet,” he said.

Watch this video to learn about Shah and his research.

Learn more about the PhRMA Foundation’s fellowship and grant opportunities. Check out more researcher stories on our blog.

Researcher Stories

Get to know the PhRMA Foundation’s award recipients in our video interviews and blogs.