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Professor Roman Romero-Ortuno

Professor of Ageing Medicine & Frailty / (Medical Gerontology)
      
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Professor Roman Romero-Ortuno

Professor of Ageing Medicine & Frailty / (Medical Gerontology)

 


Roman Romero-Ortuno is Professor of Ageing Medicine & Frailty (Personal Chair) in the Discipline of Medical Gerontology, School of Medicine, and is a Consultant Physician in St. James's Hospital, Dublin. In 2002, he graduated from University of Barcelona with a degree in Medicine, and in 2003 he completed an MSc in European Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He has a music degree from the Conservatory of Barcelona. His basic postgraduate medical training took place in Manchester and London and his higher medical training in Geriatric and General (Internal) Medicine was completed in Dublin. Between 2014 and 2018 he worked as a Consultant Geriatrician in Addenbrooke's Hospital (Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) and during that time he held an Honorary Visiting Fellowship to the Clinical Gerontology Unit of the Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge. Prof. Ortuno is Faculty member of the Global Brain Health Institute (GBHI) where he brings clinical and academic expertise in frailty, dementia, delirium and comprehensive geriatric assessment. He co-chairs the Irish Frailty Network (IFN) of the Irish Gerontological Society. He is Board Member of the Geriatric Medicine Section of the European Union of Medical Specialists (UEMS). His research contributions in the area of frailty have been recognised with the 2015 British Geriatrics Society Rising Star Award, the 2017 Count of Cartagena Award from the Royal National Academy of Medicine of Spain and the 2018 President of Ireland Future Research Leaders Award. Prof. Ortuno leads the delivery of Trinity's online frailty education programme: a 12-week Micro-credential in Assessment and Management of Frailty in Ageing Adults, offered annually in Semester 1, and a one-year, part-time Postgraduate Certificate in Advanced Ageing and Frailty Studies. Both courses are open to healthcare professionals across all disciplines: https://microcreds.ie/partners/trinity-college-dublin/offerings/assessment-management-of-tmyx-5 https://www.tcd.ie/courses/postgraduate/courses/advanced-ageing-and-frailty-studies-pgradcert/ On the 1st October 2020, Prof. Ortuno was promoted to the grade of Professor In Medical Gerontology. In December 2020, he was appointed as Associate Director of Postgraduate Teaching and Learning (M.D. Studies); and in August 2022, he was elected Head of the Discipline of Medical Gerontology in Trinity's School of Medicine (2022-2025). On Monday 24th April 2023, he was elected to Fellowship of Trinity College Dublin. In 2024, he was elected to the EuGMS Executive Board as Director for Education & Training (2024-2027). On 1st October 2024, he was promoted to a Personal Chair in Ageing Medicine & Frailty in Trinity College Dublin.
  Frailty & Resilience   Gerontology and geriatrics
Project Title
 FRAILMatics: Mathematical research and big data analytics towards the development of the next generation of transdisciplinary diagnostics for the assessment of physiological vulnerability in older adults: challenge-based disruptive technology initiative
From
01/12/2019
To
30/11/2024
Summary
https://tilda.tcd.ie/frailmatics/ Increasing numbers of older people are living with frailty. Frailty is defined as dysregulation in multiple physiological systems and consequent reduction in physiological reserve. A frail person is vulnerable to decompensate and experience adverse health outcomes in the face of stressors. The higher the number of physiological systems that are dysregulated, the less physiological reserve. Despite consensus in the concept, frailty operationalisations in clinical practice are limited and a universally accepted diagnostic method does not exist. However, there is evidence that early recognition of frailty could prevent or delay adverse outcomes. The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA) has collected detailed information on real-time functioning of physiological systems, with and without challenge: neurological (choice reaction time, sustained attention to response task, cerebral blood flow before and after standing), cardiovascular (continuous blood pressure and heart rate, before and after standing), and locomotor (gait with and without cognitive challenges). For this research, TILDA will offer the opportunity to host infrastructure and capacity in mining, processing and modelling its largely unexplored complex and computationally expensive "big data". We aim to discover new frailty signals and models, validate them in clinical cohorts, and lead towards new diagnostic tools to help tackle the ageing challenge.
Funding Agency
Science Foundation Ireland
Programme
President of Ireland Future Research Leaders 2018
Person Months
4
Project Title
 Technology Assisted Solutions for the Recognition of Objective Physiological Indicators of post-COVID-19 Fatigue (TROPIC Study)
From
1 December 2020
To
31 January 2021
Summary
Many COVID-19 patients are experiencing symptoms consistent with severe fatigue a median of 10 weeks after their initial illness, while almost one-third of those previously employed have not returned to work. At present, most clinical and research measurements of fatigue have relied upon self-reported perception of sensations such as exhaustion or weariness. Using such tools, there is an inherent challenge for clinicians in differentiating between patients who are experiencing fatigue at a psychosocial level, versus those who are actively physiologically and neurocognitively deconditioned.The TROPIC study will use our existing clinical expertise and technology-assisted solutions to address features of post-COVID-19 fatigue by quantifying physiological signatures of adverse sequelae in adult patients previously diagnosed with COVID-19, who are now COVID-19 negative. Our suite of assessments will encompass four systems; physical deconditioning, orthostatic instability, neurocognitive deficits and respiratory sequelae. This will not only inform accurate objective diagnostics of post-COVID-19 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, but will also guide clinicians in directing the most appropriate therapeutic interventions with maximum efficacy and specificity, bringing not only patient-related but also health system and economic benefits.
Funding Agency
Science Foundation Ireland
Programme
COVID-19 Programme
Project Type
Clinical Research
Project Title
 FRAIL-INNATE Pilot Study: Investigating the Impact of Frailty on Innate Immune Responses
From
May 2021
To
May 2023
Summary
Older adults and those living with frailty (a condition of decreased physiological reserve affecting multiple systems) get higher rates of viral infections, most recently exemplified during the COVID-19 pandemic, where highest mortality is in older individuals and those with severe frailty. Yet older adults and those with frailty are not a homogenous group, and it is still unknown which individuals are most at risk from viral infections and why. There is therefore a fundamental lack of understanding in how increasing age and states of frailty affects anti-viral immunity and how this relates to frailty-associated changes in metabolic health (body composition, energy expenditure) - important influences on anti-viral responses in younger adults, yet remains unexplored in older adults. We hypothesise that by analysing the metabolic status of older adults in different states of frailty, and linking this with how their immune system activates anti-viral immunity, we will reveal crucial insights into anti-viral immunity in older and frail adults. The FRAIL-INNATE Pilot Study builds on the expertise of this clinician-scientist team (Prof. Roman Romero-Ortuno, Dr Nollaig Bourke, Dr Adam Dyer) and will be the first of its kind to address this hypothesis using a standardized method of characterizing innate immune responses in older adults across the frailty spectrum.
Funding Agency
TTMI Collaborative Pilot Study Awards - Building Engagements in Health Research 2020
Project Title
 NUTRI-AGE: NOVEL DIETARY COMPONENTS IN HEALTHY AGEING
From
18th March 2021
To
17 March 2024
Summary
The overarching aim of Nutri-Age is to investigate whether higher intakes of alkali-forming compounds present in fruit and vegetables, which are known to attenuate low grade metabolic acidosis, can protect against adverse agerelated changes in skeletal muscle, bone and metabolic health. Objectives: 1) To examine the impact of correcting age-related metabolic acidosis, via nutritional supplementation with the fruit- and vegetable-derived alkaline salt potassium citrate, on skeletal muscle protein synthesis, bone turnover and insulin sensitivity 2) To examine whether diets that are richer in fruit and vegetables (and are therefore lower in dietary acid load and less likely to induce low grade metabolic acidosis) are associated with a slower rate of decline in muscle strength, physical function, frailty status, bone density and glycaemic control in older adults in Ireland. 3) To examine food choice motivation and attitudes towards functional / fortified foods targeted at healthy ageing among older adults via an online survey (Awardee: Dr Caoileann Murphy).
Funding Agency
Tegasc
Programme
Research Leaders 2025 (Dr Caoileann Murphy)
Person Months
1
Project Title
 Neurocardiovascular instability as a risk factor for progression of Age-related Macular degeneration
From
1 September 2021
To
31 August 2023
Summary
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of vision loss in the over 50's in developed countries accounting for 8.7% of all blindness worldwide. In Ireland alone, ~80,000 people live with this condition. AMD is a progressive disease characterised in early stages by drusen deposition and pigmentary changes, which progresses to late stage geographic atrophy and choroidal neovascularisation. To date, treatment options are limited to late neovascular AMD, while preventative measures such as smoking cessation and increased supplement intake are advised for early and late geographic AMD. Multifactorial in nature, AMD has no defined aetiology, however several environmental and genetic factors have been identified as associated with increased incidence and progression. Neurocardiovascular instability (NCVI) which comprises of age-related changes in blood pressure and heart-rate behaviour manifests as exaggerated blood pressure variability, orthostatic hypotension (OH), orthostatic hypertension (OHTN), and autonomic dysfunction, and has been implicated in cardiovascular risk and associated end-organ damage. Evidence suggests a link between AMD and cardiovascular disease (CVD), with several AMD risk factors also found to be associated with CVD, suggesting that disordered circulation may be a common factor in both conditions. The eye being a highly vascular organ consisting of retinal and choroidal vascular beds, would be vulnerable to NCVI if ocular vasoregulation becomes impaired with age. Indeed, associations between OHTN and BPV and increased AMD risk and poor visual acuity have been established, suggesting the deleterious effect of dysregulated blood pressure behaviour on choroidal circulation may be linked to AMD pathogenesis and progression. In the proposed study we will utilize The Irish Longitudinal study on Ageing (TILDA) dataset to examine measures of visual function and AMD status with cardiovascular/cerebrovascular function and advanced haemodynamic parameters, in this population representative cohort of participants aged ≥50 years, in an effort to establish associations between NCVI and AMD and predictors of AMD progression (Awardee: Dr Emma Connolly).
Funding Agency
Irish Research Council
Programme
Government of Ireland 2-year postdoctoral fellowship (Dr Emma Connolly)
Person Months
1

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Language Skill Reading Skill Writing Skill Speaking
Catalan Fluent Fluent Fluent
English Fluent Fluent Fluent
Spanish Fluent Fluent Fluent
Details Date From Date To
Irish Gerontological Society
Irish Society of Physicians in Geriatric Medicine
Royal College of Physicians of Ireland
Irish Frailty Network for Education, Quality Improvement, Research and Policy
UEMS -Geriatric Medicine section (European Union of Medical Specialists)
EuGMS Executive Board, Director for Education & Training 2024 2027
Neuroscience Ireland Council
Romero-Ortuno, R., The evolution of geriatric day hospitals in Ireland, Nature Aging, 2025, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI  URL
Shaz Raja, Ciara Barry, Rohit Upadhyay, Rana Alash, Méabh O"Raghallaigh, Róisín Hayes, Roman Romero-Ortuno, HARMONIOUS AGEING: A NARRATIVE REVIEW OF MUSIC THERAPY IN THE BIOMEDICAL LITERATURE, European Geriatric Medicine, 2025, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI  URL
Sara Solis-López, Dafne Estefania Durón Reyes, Raquel Gutierrez Zuniga, Joaquin Migeot, Brian Lawlor, Roman Romero-Ortuno, Creating Dementia-Friendly Travel: Enhancing Accessibility and Inclusion, Age and Ageing, 2025, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI  URL
Fiona Kennedy, Deirdre Murray, Clíona Ní Cheallaigh, Roman Romero-Ortuno, Julie Broderick, Evaluation of a Low-threshold Exercise And Protein supplementation intervention for Women (LEAP-W) experiencing homelessness and addiction: Protocol for a single-arm mixed methods feasibility study, PLOS ONE, 2025, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Rachel Madden, Ciara P. Rice, Amanda Lavan, Desmond O'Donnell, Conal Cunningham, Roman Romero-Ortuno, Susan O'Callaghan, Rose Anne Kenny, Robert Briggs, Can Ambulatory Blood Pressure Biomarkers Predict Future Falls amongst Older People?, Age and Ageing, 2025, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Elodia Teresa Bernabeu-Serrano, Eoin Duggan, Román Romero-Ortuño, RELACIÓN ENTRE EL ÁNGULO DE FASE MEDIDO POR BIOIMPEDANCIOMETRÍA ELÉCTRICA CON LA FRAGILIDAD FÍSICA, SARCOPENIA Y COMORBILIDAD EN PACIENTES MAYORES, Revista Española de Geriatría y Gerontología, 2025, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Roman Romero-Ortuno, Victoria Keevil, Advancing Frailty Identification in UK Primary Care with eFI2: Are We There Yet?, Age and Ageing, 2025, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Nicolás Martínez Gómez, Nicolás Martínez Velilla, Eoin Duggan, Roman Romero-Ortuno, Bioimpedance-Estimated Metabolic Age in a Falls Clinic: Associations with Multimorbidity and Physical Frailty, Journal of Frailty, Sarcopenia and Falls, 2025, Journal Article, IN_PRESS
Research using Big Data from Longitudinal Studies and Clinical Sources in, editor(s)Finbarr C. Martin Tan Maw Pin , The Oxford Textbook of Geriatric Medicine, 2024, [Silvin Knight, Roman Romero-Ortuno], Book Chapter, IN_PRESS
Frailty in Primary Care: Interventions and Opportunities in, editor(s)Jorge G. Ruiz, Olga Theou , Frailty: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Assessment, Management, and Prevention, 2024, [John Travers, Marie Therese Cooney & Roman Romero-Ortuno], Book Chapter, PUBLISHED  DOI
  

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Silvin P. Knight, Jose Refojo, Louise Newman, Rossella Rizzo, Hugh Tinney, Roman Romero-Ortuno, "Dancing with Atoms": A tribute to Sheila Tinney, Research Square, 2023, Journal Article, PUBLISHED
Eoin Duggan, Glenn Jennings, Ann Monaghan, Lisa Byrne, Feng Xue, Roman Romero-Ortuno, Characterising the Blood Pressure Response to Physical Counterpressure Manoeuvres Using Surface Electromyography in Adults with Long Covid, TechRxiv, 2023, Journal Article, PUBLISHED
Ann Monaghan, Nollaig Bourke, Aisling O'Halloran, Mark Ward, Feng Xue, Glenn Jennings, Rose Anne Kenny and Roman Romero-Ortuno, New self-reported exhaustion during the COVID-19 Pandemic, TILDA Report, 2021, Report, PUBLISHED
Aisling O'Halloran, Roman Romero-Ortuno, How can frailty impact access to health and social care services?, HRB Open Research Blog, November, 2021, Report, PUBLISHED
Oscanoa TJ, Vidal X, Carvajal A, Romero-Ortuno R, Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors and severity of SARS-CoV-2 infection: a meta-analysis, Research Square (Preprint), 2020, Journal Article, PUBLISHED
Aisling O'Halloran, Christine McGarrigle, Siobhan Scarlett, Lorna Roe, Roman Romero-Ortuno and Rose Anne Kenny, TILDA Report on Population Estimates of Physical Frailty in Ireland to Inform Demographics for Over 50s in Ireland during the COVID-19 Pandemic, Dublin, The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing, Trinity College Dublin, 2020, Report, PUBLISHED
Roman Romero-Ortuno, Peter May, Minjuan Wang, Siobhan Scarlett, Ann Hever, Rose Anne Kenny, TILDA Nursing Home Data: A short report to inform COVID-19 responses for our most vulnerable, The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing, 2020, Report, PUBLISHED
Romero-Ortuño R and Kennelly SP, COVID-19 deaths in Irish Nursing Homes: exploring variation and association with the adherence to national regulatory quality standards, LTCcovid.org, International Long-Term Care Policy Network,, CPEC-LSE, June, 2020, Report, PUBLISHED
Aisling O'Halloran, Christine McGarrigle, Siobhán Scarlett, Lorna Roe, Mary O'Shea, Roman Romero-Ortuno and Rose Anne Kenny, Living with Frailty in Ireland 2018, TILDA, Trinity College Dublin, 2020, Report, PUBLISHED
Roman Romero-Ortuno, Peter May, Minjuan Wang, Siobhán Scarlett, Ann Hever and Rose Anne Kenny, TILDA Participants in Nursing Homes, TILDA, Trinity College Dublin, 2020, Report, PUBLISHED

  


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Award Date
School Award for Teaching Excellence 2024
Fellowship of Trinity College Dublin 24 April 2023
Master in Arts (jure officii), Trinity College Dublin 2022
President of Ireland Future Research Leaders Award 2018
Count of Cartagena Award of the Royal National Academy of Medicine of Spain 2017
First Prize of the Catalan Society of Geriatrics and Gerontology 2016
British Geriatrics Society Rising Star Award 2015
Elizabeth Brown Prize of the British Geriatrics Society 2010
Trainee Prize, Royal Society of Medicine (Geriatrics and Gerontology Section) 2008
Presidential Medal of the Irish Gerontological Society 2008
Loch Exhibition, University of London 2003
Titmuss Examination Prize (Department of Social Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science) 2003