Sancho-Shimizu was made a
Medical Research Council Senior Research Fellow in 2014. She was appointed lecturer and
UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellow in 2021, and made associate professor in 2023. Her research considers the genetic basis of infections. Sancho-Shimizu uncovered the genetic aetiology of
herpes encephalitis in childhood, critical
COVID-19 disease and
invasive meningococcal disease. She studies the rare genetic variants (that can be identified by
whole exome sequencing) that affect a response to
interferons, the
TLR signalling pathway,
autophagy and pathogen recognition pathways. To help in this endeavour and recruit patients, Sancho-Shimizu established a
Biomedical Research Center Paediatric Infectious Disease Clinic at
St Mary's Hospital. She developed patient cell-based assays to identify inborn immune system errors. Sancho-Shimizu was named a
UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellow in 2019. During the
COVID-19 pandemic Sancho-Shimizu was appointed to the International COVID Human Genetic Effort. She found that 3.5% of patients who suffered from
COVID-19-induced
pneumonia have genetic defects, and over 10% of people with severe
COVID-19 have antibodies that attacked their own immune system. == Select publications ==