Professor Nigel Stepto
- is notAvailable for media queries
- is notAvailable to supervise research students at VU

- is notAvailable for media queries
- is notAvailable to supervise research students at VU
Areas of expertise
- Polycystic Ovary syndrome
- Exercise is Medicine
- Molecular Mechanisms of Insulin Resistance
- Molecular and cellular mechanisms of adaptation to exercise
- Women's health
About
Vale Nigel Stepto
Nigel joined Victoria University in 2007, as a Lecturer in Exercise Physiology in the School of Sport and Exercise Science. He was promoted to Senior Lecturer in 2012, Associate Professor in 2014 and was appointed in 2018 as Professor of Clinical Exercise Science, thus attaining full Professorship after only 11 years. Nigel was most recently co-Deputy Director – Research Training, of the Institute for Health and Sport, and a vital member of the VU Research Executive Group, since their inception in 2018.
Nigel was a significant contributor to teaching in Exercise Physiology at VU over many years in the School of Sport and Exercise Science, later College of Sport and Exercise Science. Nigel was active in many leadership roles in the School/College including as the School’s Postgraduate Studies Coordinator, representative on the Faculty Graduate Studies Committee, College Director of Research Training, and on the College Leadership Team.
Nigel’s great passion was research and his research career was outstanding, with global impact. His research traversed exercise physiology, muscle metabolism, insulin sensitivity and over the past decade, he increasingly focussed on women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). He was a member of an international consortium that published guidelines for the assessment and treatment of PCOS, including recommendations for exercise interventions. He published over 84 journal articles, with strong citations and was an invited speaker at Australian and international conferences. He was recently awarded almost $1M in NH&MRC funding as first investigator.
Nigel’s research has been career-building and defining for many others, including three postdoctoral research fellows, 12 PhD graduates (6 as Principal Supervisor) and 16 Honours students as Principal supervisor. He was supervising two PhD students and one postdoctoral fellow. All have received exceptionally high quality training under Nigel’s guidance. This outstanding contribution to facilitating so many people’s careers was recognised in 2017 when Nigel was awarded the Vice-Chancellor’s Citation for Excellence in Research and Research Training (Supervision). His passionate support of Higher Degree by Research students at VU throughout his career culminated in his most recent leadership role where he impacted the careers of literally hundreds of students in the Institute. Nigel was a great contributor to leading research in our Institutes, initially in the Institute of Sport, Exercise and Active Living and recently in the Institute for Health and Sport, where he was Research Group Leader in Women’s Health and a vital member of the Institute Executive and Institute Leadership Team. Nigel was also a strong supporter of the national body, Exercise and Sport Science Australia (ESSA), including as member for six years and most recently, Chair, of the ESSA Research Committee; he will be awarded (posthumously) an ESSA Fellowship at their upcoming National Conference. Nigel was also a Project Director and valued member of the Australian Institute for Musculoskeletal Science (AIMSS), our joint Institute with Western Health and University of Melbourne.
Just 7 days before his death in 2020, over 50 staff and PhD students from the Institute for Health and Sport and VU Research were privileged to visit Nigel and pay respects to him and his family. There we announced the Institute’s Nigel Stepto Travel Award to support HDR student travel to international conferences, a Nigel Stepto PhD Student Scholarship, along with an Outstanding Service Award from the Institute for Health and Sport.
Nigel left us too soon and he will be greatly missed by his many colleagues and friends at VU. He is survived by his wife Fiona and his daughters Matilda and Harriet.
Portfolios
- College of Sport and Exercise Science
- Institute for Health & Sport
Qualification
Institute
Institute for Health & Sport
Publications
Nigel has over 104 publications, with a selection listed here.
A more comprehensive list of Nigel's publications is available in the VU Research Repository.
Research funding for the past 5 years
Please note:
- funding is ordered by the year the project commenced and may continue over several years
- funding amounts for contact research are not disclosed to maintain commercial confidentiality
- the order of investigators is not indicative of the role they played in the research project.
Supervising & teaching
Supervision of research students at VU
- Principal supervisor, one Masters by Research student
- Principal supervisor, two PhD students.
Completed supervision
- Principal supervisor, six PhD students
- Associate supervisor, one PhD student.
Other supervision of research students
Supervision of external students at Victoria University:
- one UROP student (AIMSS and IHES)
- one MDRP student (Melbourne University)
- two international visiting students.
Monash University:
- three PhD students (associate supervisor)
- three honours students (principal supervisor)
- three honours students (associate supervisor).
Teaching activities & experience
Undergraduate teaching
- AHE3100 - Advanced Exercise Physiology
- SCL3001 - Exercise Health and Disease
- HBM3104 - Exercise is Medicine
Postgraduate teaching
SCL6102 Exercise Assessments and Interventions for Metabolic and Respiratory Conditions
Career
Key academic roles
Dates | Role | Department / Organisation |
|---|---|---|
Jan 2018 - Dec 2019 | Co-Deputy Director - Research Training | Institute for Health and Sport (IHES), Victoria University |
Jan 2017 - Dec 2017 | Director Research Training | College of Sport and Exercise Science, Victoria University |
Key industry, community & government roles
Dates | Role | Department/Organisation |
|---|---|---|
Jan 2019 - Dec 2021 | Chair of Research Advisory Committee | Exercise and Sports Science Australia (ESSA) |
Jan 2016 - Dec 2020 | Committee/board member | Centre of Research Excellence for Polycystic Ovary Syndrome |
Jan 2016 - Dec 2018 | Committee Member – Position Statement and Research Committee | Exercise and Sports Science Australia (ESSA) |
Keynote & invited speeches
- Lifestyle Recommendations and the Role of the Exercise (and the Exercise Physiologist) in the Treatment of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome.
Australian Traditional Medicine Society Workshop on PCOS, Sydney Australia, 16 September 2018 - Exercise in PCOS - Evidence update.
The 8th Exercise and Sports Science Australia Conference, Research to Practice, Brisbane Exhibition Centre, Queensland, Australia, 27–29 March 2018 - Exercise and Insulin Action in PCOS
Melbourne Muscle and Exercise Meeting, Melbourne University, 16 November 2017 - Meet the Professor: Choosing the Exercise Program in Obese and Diabetic PCOS Patients
15th Annual AE-PCOS society meeting, San Antonio Texas USA, 26–28 October 2017 - Exercise and Physical Activity in PCOS: A Therapeutic Approach That Informs Aetiology
14th Annual AE-PCOS society meeting, Lorne Australia, 10–12 November 2016
Professional memberships
- AEP/AES and member, Exercise & Sports Science Australia
- Member, Australian and New Zealand Obesity Society
- Member, Australian Diabetes Society
- Member, Androgen Excess and PCO Society
Appearances in the media
- International Evidence Based Guideline for the Assessment and Management of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (8 August 2018), Magazine article – ESSA Move magazine
- Movement is Medicine [for PCOS] (11 July 2018), Podcast by fXmedicine
- Should women exercise during and after pregnancy? (26 January 2016), The Conversation article with Cheryce Harrison