The DKMS Foundation for Giving Life (Stiftung Leben
Spenden) invites young scientists worldwide to apply for the John Hansen Research Grant.
The application deadline is December 3, 2021.
The research grant is endowed with over
R4.2m (€240,000) each, paid over a period of three years. With this sum, the foundation
annually supports up to four international young scientists with promising research projects
in the field of blood stem cell transplantation and cell therapy.
Requirements for participation include a doctorate or comparable qualification dating back no
more than eight years. All information on the application modalities as well as further details
on the John Hansen Research Grant are available on the DKMS Professionals` Platform –
professional.dkms.org/research-grant. If you have any questions, you are also welcome to
contact DKMS by email: grant@dkms.org.
DKMS is known as an international non-profit organisation in the fight against blood cancer.
Over 11 million potential blood stem cell donors are registered there. In its 30-year history,
DKMS has already given more than 95,000 blood cancer patients a second chance at life. In
addition, the world’s leading blood stem cell donor center is also working intensively in the
medical and scientific field to further improve the survival and healing chances of blood
cancer patients.
“As long as there are still patients who suffer relapses or die from life-threatening
complications such as graft-versus-host disease, we are far from reaching our goal,” says
Marcel van den Brink, Chairman of the DKMS Foundation Board. “It is important to us to
drive scientific progress in this niche medical field. In this way, we contribute to the further
development of existing treatment options and the discovery of new ones.” Since 2015, an important pillar has been the funding of
outstanding young scientists with the John Hansen Research Grant (until 2019: Mechtild
Harf Research Grant).
One of them is Dr. Katarina Riesner, postdoctoral researcher at Charité Berlin and winner of
the John Hansen Research Grant 2019. With the support of the grant, she is looking for
answers to the question of how the life-threatening graft-versus-host disease can be
prevented or successfully treated in the future. To this end, she investigates certain genes of
human metabolism in endothelial cells – the cells that line all blood vessels. In the future,
these genes could be regulated by drugs to prevent the blood stem cell transplant from
attacking the patient’s own cells. Unfortunately, about 30 to 60 percent of all transplanted
patients still suffer this dangerous complication.
John A. Hansen, after whom the scholarship is named, was an outstanding oncologist and
distinguished immunogeneticist at the renowned Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
in Seattle. With his excellent achievements in the field of hematopoietic stem cell
transplantation, this dedicated and compassionate physician made a significant contribution
to increasing the efficacy and safety of blood stem cell and bone marrow transplants – and
thus gave numerous patients a new chance at life. As a long-standing member of the board
of the DKMS Foundation for Giving Life and a member of the DKMS Medical Advisory
Board, he was deeply connected to the DKMS family.
DKMS Professionals` Platform
Since the end of April, visitors of the DKMS Professionals` Platform professional.dkms.org
are able to find further information there on scholarships and on the medical and scientific
work of the international DKMS Group. For example, users can find out exciting news from
the DKMS Life Science Lab and the Clinical Trials Unit in Dresden, DKMS’ own research
unit. One scientific focus is the further optimization of donor selection for the perfect match:
In order for the blood stem cells of a foreign donor to settle in the patient’s body, the tissue
characteristics and several other parameters must match as closely as possible. The Clinical
Trials Unit systematically searches for additional immunogenetic factors that positively
influence the success of blood stem cell transplantation.