Dr Yiping Chen
Yiping Chen
MBBS, DPhil
Senior Research Fellow
Yiping Chen is a senior research fellow at the Clinical Trial Service Unit & Epidemiological Studies Unit (CTSU), University of Oxford. She joined the unit in 1998 and has worked as study coordinator and senior research fellow in several CTSU-led large clinical trials such as COMMIT/CCS2, SHARP, HPS2-THRIVE, REVEAL.
She is currently leading a multi-disciplinary team in the China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB) of 0.5 million people, responsible for developing strategies and procedures related to validation of electronically reported clinical events and for conducting disease validation and adjudication in collaboration with clinical specialists in China for CKB. Her main research interests are in the fields of clinical epidemiology of cardiovascular diseases, major depression, and sleeping disorders.
During 2006-2016 Yiping also played a leading role in running Oxford-China Fellowship programmes which provided residence training in epidemiology, medical statistics and clinical trials methodology for the clinical doctors, public health workers from China.
Yiping qualified in clinical medicine in 1985 at Shanghai Medical University (now Fudan University) and then worked as junior neurologist in University affiliated teaching hospital, Hua-shan hospital in Shanghai. In 1988 she was awarded Sino-British Friendship Scholarship to study in the UK and gained her PhD at the University of Oxford in 1993.
Recent publications
Trends in 10th Revision of the International Classification of Diseases-Coded CKD Incidence Among Chinese Adults.
Journal article
Zeng Z. et al, (2026), Kidney Int Rep, 11
Burden and Correlates of Multiple Chronic Infections and Their Associations With Cancer Incidence in Chinese Adults: A Large Case-Cohort Study.
Journal article
Yang L. et al, (2026), Int J Cancer
Abdominal adiposity and accelerated biological ageing in relation to general and cardiovascular ageing in Chinese adults.
Journal article
Wu Z. et al, (2026), Heart
Young adulthood adiposity in relation to all-cause and cause-specific mortality: a prospective study of 0.5 million Chinese adults.
Journal article
Fan L. et al, (2026), Sci Bull (Beijing), 71, 1760 - 1770
Dairy Consumption and Risk of Cardiometabolic Diseases: A Prospective Cohort Study of the China Kadoorie Biobank.
Journal article
Kakkoura MG. et al, (2026), J Nutr, 156

