William Kaelin was recognized with the Stanley P. Reimann Honor Award – Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute posted on LinkedIn:
“William Kaelin Jr., MD, physician, scientist, and Nobel laureate, was recognized this spring at Fox Chase Cancer Center with the Stanley P. Reimann Honor Award, the center’s highest distinction. The award was presented to Kaelin while he was visiting Fox Chase to deliver a scheduled lecture.
‘In light of Dr. Kaelin’s enormous contributions to the way we understand tumor suppressor genes and his illustrious career in cancer research, it is only fitting that we present him with the highest honor we can offer,’ said Cancer Center Director Jonathan Chernoff, MD, PhD, who bestowed the award. ‘His research, which has transformed the lives of patients with Von-Hippel Lindau disease, embodies the mission of Fox Chase to prevail over cancer through scientific discovery and pioneering prevention.’
Kaelin, along with Gregg Semenza, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University, and Peter J. Ratcliffe, MD, of Oxford University, identified a molecular pathway that regulates the activity of genes in response to varying levels of oxygen. As a result of their work, drugs have been developed to help patients not only with cancer, but with anemia and kidney failure. Their research earned them the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Stanley P. Reimann, MD, for whom the award is named, was the founder of the Institute for Cancer Research, which merged with the American Oncologic Hospital in 1974 to form Fox Chase Cancer Center.
Reimann fulfilled a personal dream when he founded the Institute for Cancer Research to create an institution dedicated to studying the functions of normal cells in order to determine what goes wrong when cells become cancerous. Because his aspirations led to numerous milestones in advancing understanding of cancer, the award named in his honor is given to recipients whose efforts are similarly directed.
Over the years, Fox Chase has bestowed the Reimann Award to humanitarians, advocates for public health, philanthropists, researchers, and business professionals. Despite their varied backgrounds and chosen professions, all had one thing in common: a desire to understand, prevent, treat, and eradicate cancer. Kaelin now joins a list of 17 individuals since 1974 to receive the award.
Kaelin’s career began with a residency at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine after completing both his bachelor’s and medical degree at Duke University. He went on to complete a fellowship in oncology at Dana-Farber, where he began studying tumor suppressor proteins in the lab of renowned cancer researcher David Livingston, MD.
While in Livingston’s lab, Kaelin studied tumor suppressor genes. When he launched his own lab, he decided to study how mutations affecting specific genes cause cancer, with a particular focus on the Von-Hippel Lindau (VHL) gene. Von-Hippel Lindau syndrome is an inherited disorder that causes the formation of tumors and cysts throughout the body.”
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