Veronica Kinsler

Principal Group Leader - Assistant Research Director

Professor Veronica Kinsler is a clinician scientist, working in the field of serious and untreatable children’s skin diseases, many of which involve other organ systems, and carry a predisposition to cancer. Her research aims to find the causes of these diseases and to develop novel targeted therapies, whilst expanding knowledge of the biology of somatic mutagenesis and human embryogenesis.

Veronica Kinsler studied Medical Sciences at Cambridge University, doing a degree in Neurophysiology followed by Medicine and Surgery, and then trained in Paediatric Dermatology. She had a career break of six years to look after her children and worked part time for another nine years. She undertook a PhD in Molecular Genetics and then post-doctoral positions at the UCL Institute of Child Health under Wellcome Trust personal fellowships.

She was appointed Associate Professor and Principal Investigator in the Genetics and Genomics programme at the UCL GOS Institute of Child Health in 2012, and Consultant Paediatric Dermatologist at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children (GOSH) in 2015.  Veronica was elected Fellow of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health in 2016 and appointed Chair of Paediatric Dermatology and Dermatogenetics at GOSH and UCL in 2019. She moved her laboratory to the Crick in 2019.  She was awarded a NIHR Research Professorship 2021-2026.

Veronica established and directs the GOSH Rare Dermatology Diseases Resource, an HTA tissue bank project involving over 1000 families which has led to her lab’s discovery of the genetic causes of many untreatable diseases. These include congenital melanocytic naevi, and sporadic arteriovenous malformations.  She has pioneered the use of novel therapies in many conditions, both repurposed and precision-designed, on the basis of the underlying genetic defects.  Her work also continues to lead to new insights into both tumourigenesis and developmental biology.

The Kinsler Lab works closely with patient groups, particularly Caring Matters Now, the AVM Butterfly charity, and the Sturge-Weber Foundation.  She established and directs the cross-disciplinary worldwide initiative Naevus International, to optimise dissemination of research information and patient care.  She holds many international positions in her field, including Senior Editor of the Harper textbook of paediatric dermatology, President of the European Society of Pediatric Dermatology 2020-2022, and President of the World Congress of Pediatric Dermatology 2021.

Qualifications and history

1992
University of Cambridge, UK
MA Neurophysiology
1994
University of Cambridge, UK
MB BChir (Medicine and Surgery)
1997
Membership of the Royal College of Physicians (Paediatrics)
2008
Wellcome Trust Research Training Fellowship
2012
University College, London, UK
PhD (Molecular Genetics)
2012
University College, London, UK
Associate Professor and Principal Investigator
2014
Specialist Registration Paediatric Dermatology
2015
Wellcome Trust Intermediate Clinical Fellowship
2015
Great Ormond Street Hospital, UK
Consultant in Paediatric Dermatology
2016
Fellowship of Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health
2019
UCL GOSH Institute of Child Health
Chair of Paediatric Dermatology and Dermatogenetics
2019
The Francis Crick Institute, London, UK
Senior Group Leader
2021
NIHR Research Professorship
2023
The Francis Crick Institute, London, UK
Assistant Research Director

Year published

Publication type

Crick Pre-Crick

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Last updated : 28 March 2024 02:40