The American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) has released the names of the recipients of several annual professional awards. These awards recognize outstanding accomplishments and achievements in cancer research, therapy development, education, mentorship, and more. The honorees, listed below, will give lectures during this year’s meeting, which is being held in San Diego, CA. This year’s meeting runs from April 17-22.
AACR Lifetime Achievement in Cancer Research Award
James P. Allison, PhD, FAACR
This award honors individuals who have made fundamental contributions to cancer research through a single scientific discovery or a body of work. Allison is being recognized for his contributions to cancer research and patient care. Most notably, he is being celebrated for his identification of CTLA-4 as a negative regulator of T-cell activation, an insight that has since been translated into a first-in-class therapy that revitalized the field of cancer immunology and led to a revolution in cancer immunotherapies. Allison is a fellow of the AACR Academy, a professor and chair of the department of immunology, vice president for immunobiology, and the founding director of the James P. Allison Institute at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
AACR Outstanding Achievement in Basic Cancer Research Award
Housheng Hansen He, PhD
This award recognizes early-career investigators for meritorious achievements in basic cancer research. He is a professor in the department of medical biophysics at the University of Toronto and a senior scientist in the Princess Margaret Cancer Center. He is recognized for contributions to cancer epigenetics and RNA medicine, particularly in revealing how chromatin accessibility and epigenomic landscapes govern oncogenic transcription. His studies of FOXA1-androgen receptor networks, noncoding RNAs, and RNA modifications have improved scientists’ understanding of tumor progression, plasticity, and therapeutic resistance.
AACR Outstanding Achievement in Blood Cancer Research Award
John F. DiPersio, MD, PhD
This award recognizes individuals with meritorious achievements and contributions to blood cancer research. DiPersio is this year’s recipient for his work in leukemia and stem cell biology, including essential contributions to the development of the hematopoietic stem cell mobilizing agents plerixafor and motixafortide. DiPersio identified AK1/2 signaling in graft-versus-host disease, which led to the identification and approval of JAK inhibitors, including ruxolitinib (Jakafi). DiPersio is the Virginia E. and Sam J. Golman professor of medicine and a professor of medicine, immunology, and pathology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. He is also director of the Center for Gene and Cellular Immunotherapy at Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and WashU Medicine.
AACR Outstanding Achievement in Chemistry in Cancer Research Award
Cheryl H. Arrowsmith, PhD
This award honors individuals who have done novel and significant chemistry research that has led to important contributions in basic and translational cancer research, cancer diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. Arrowsmith is being recognized for foundational studies defining the structure and function of chromatin-associated proteins that regulate gene expression in cancer. Her work enabled the development of chemical probes that target epigenetic regulators. She is a senior scientist at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network and chief scientist of the Structural Genomics Consortium. She is also a professor in the department of medical biophysics at the University of Toronto.
AACR Daniel D. Von Hoff Award for Outstanding Contributions to Education and Training in Cancer Research
Charles W.M. Roberts, MD, PhD, FAACR
This award recognizes significant contributions to education and training for cancer scientists and physicians at any career level. Roberts is a fellow of the AACR Academy and the executive vice president and director of the St. Jude Comprehensive Cancer Center. He is also a member in the department of oncology and the Lillian R. Cannon Comprehensive Cancer Center Director Endowed Chair at the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. This award recognizes his leadership and dedication to the education and training of cancer researchers across the spectrum of childhood cancer research, including basic, translational, clinical, and population science.
AACR James S. Ewing-Thelma B. Dunn Award for Outstanding Achievement in Pathology in Cancer Research
David L. Rimm, MD, PhD
The award celebrates pathologists who have contributed to advancing cancer research, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention. Rimm is recognized this year for innovations in quantitative biomarker science that transformed cancer diagnostics and treatment. His invention of the fluorescence-based Automated Quantitative Analysis platform improved immunohistochemistry by enabling precise, reproducible protein quantification in tissue specimens. Rimm is the Anthony N. Brady professor of pathology, a professor of medicine in oncology, director of quantitative diagnostics in the anatomic pathology lab, director of Yale Pathology Tissues Services, and director of the physician scientist training program in pathology at Yale University School of Medicine. He is also a member of Yale Cancer Center and director of the Yale Cancer Center Tissue Microarray Facility.
AACR Margaret Foti Award for Leadership and Extraordinary Achievements in Cancer Research
Antoni Ribas, MD, PhD, FAACR
This award recognizes individuals whose leadership and achievements contributed to the acceleration of progress against cancer, raising national or international awareness of the importance of cancer research, among other achievements. Ribas is being recognized for contributions to melanoma biology and cancer immunotherapy that were instrumental to the clinical development of pembrolizumab (Keytruda) and other transformative therapies. His research helped define mechanisms of immunotherapy response and resistance, which guided the design of innovative combination therapy approaches. Ribas is a fellow of the AACR Academy and AACR Past President. He is also a professor of medicine, surgery, and molecular and medical pharmacology at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), as well as director of the tumor immunology program at the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center. He also serves as the director of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy Center at UCLA.
AACR Team Science Award
The Cancer Dependency Map (DepMap) team
This award recognizes interdisciplinary research teams for science that advances or is likely to advance our fundamental knowledge of cancer, or a team that has applied existing knowledge to advance the detection, diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of cancer. The Broad Institute Cancer Dependency Map (DepMap) team is recognized this year for systematically mapping genetic dependencies across cancer cells and creating a comprehensive resource that reveals genes and pathways essential for tumor survival. By combining large-scale CRISPR functional genomic screens, drug response data, and multiomic profiling, the team uncovered lineage- and genotype-specific cancer vulnerabilities, including synthetic lethal dependencies such as WRN in microsatellite instability cancers and PRMT5 dependencies in cancers with MTAP deletions.
AACR American Cancer Society Award for Research Excellence in Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention
Elizabeth A. Platz, ScD, MPH
This award recognizes research accomplishments in cancer epidemiology, biomarkers, and prevention. Platz is the Martin D. Abeloff, MD Scholar in Cancer Prevention in the epidemiology department at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She is also the associate director of population sciences at the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins. This award recognizes her contributions to scientists’ understanding of prostate cancer development, progression, and prevention. Her research linked intraprostatic inflammation to prostate cancer risk, identified telomere length patterns as prognostic biomarkers, and demonstrated protective associations between statin use, cholesterol, and disease lethality.
AACR Cancer Research Institute Lloyd J. Old Award in Cancer Immunology
Kenneth M. Murphy, MD, PhD
This award recognizes scientists whose research has had a major impact on the cancer field and has the potential to stimulate new directions in cancer immunology. Murphy is the Eugene Opie First Centennial Professor in pathology and immunology at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. This award recognizes his work on discoveries related to the development and functional specialization of dendritic cell subsets that regulate adaptive immune responses. His work elucidated the transcriptional programs that control dendritic cell lineage commitment, including the role of transcription factors such as BATF3 in the development of cross-presenting dendritic cells required to prime cytotoxic T-cell responses.
AACR G.H.A. Clowes Award for Outstanding Basic Cancer Research
Andrew P. Feinberg, MD, MPH
This award, which has the distinction of being AACR’s oldest award, recognizes individuals who have made outstanding recent accomplishments in basic cancer research. Feinberg is recognized this year for discoveries about the fundamental role of epigenetic alterations in cancer, including the identification of early, widespread DNA methylation abnormalities and the role of genomic imprinting in tumor development. His research demonstrated that large-scale epigenomic alterations contribute to tumor initiation, progression, and cellular heterogeneity, leading to the concept of epigenetic plasticity as a driver of cancer evolution. Feinberg is the Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins University Schools of Medicine, Engineering, and Public Health. He also serves as director of the Center for Epigenetics of the Institute for Basic Biomedical Sciences.
AACR Irving Weinstein Foundation Distinguished Lectureship Award
Dennis Lo, DM, DPhil
The recipient for this award is selected by the AACR president, and acknowledges individuals whose personal innovation in science and whose position as a thought leader in fields relevant to cancer research have the potential to inspire creative thinking and new directions in cancer research. Lo is the vice-chancellor and president of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, where he also serves as the Li Ka Shing Professor of Medicine and professor of chemical pathology. He is being recognized for his discovery of fetal DNA in maternal plasma. Lo was the first to identify cell-free fetal DNA and fetal epigenetic markers in maternal plasma, enabling safer and earlier prenatal diagnostics. He also demonstrated that DNA released by tumors may be used for cancer screening, an insight that led to the development of circulating DNA-based tools for early cancer detection and screening.
AACR Joseph H. Burchenal Award for Outstanding Achievement in Clinical Cancer Research
Luis A. Diaz Jr., MD, FAACR
This award recognizes outstanding achievements in clinical cancer research. Diaz, a fellow of the AACR Academy, heads the division of solid tumor oncology and is the Grayer Family Chair at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. This award recognizes his pioneering discoveries such as biomarker-driven immunotherapies and for demonstrating that tumors with mismatch repair deficiencies and microsatellite instability are highly responsive to immune checkpoint blockade. Diaz has also advanced the use of circulating tumor DNA to detect minimal residual disease and led clinical trials of PD-1 blockade in mismatch repair-deficient cancers.
AACR Minorities in Cancer Research Jane Cooke Wright Lectureship
Ahmedin M. Jemal, DVM, PhD
This lectureship recognizes scientists with meritorious contributions to the field of cancer research and who have furthered the advancement of minority investigators in cancer research. This year’s awardee is recognized for research that quantified temporal and geographic trends in cancer burden using large-scale analysis of cancer registries, mortality rates, and risk factor data, and identified population-level determinants of cancer incidence, survival, and stage at diagnosis across demographic groups. Jemal’s work linked changes in risk factor exposure, screening uptake, and treatment advances to declines in cancer mortality and informed strategies for cancer prevention, early detection, and population-level cancer control. He is the senior vice president of the Surveillance, Prevention, & Health Services Research department at the American Cancer Society. He is also an adjunct professor in the department of epidemiology at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University.
AACR Princess Takamatsu Memorial Lectureship
David C. Lyden, MD, PhD
This award recognizes individual scientists whose work has had or may have a far-reaching impact on the detection, diagnosis, treatment, or prevention of cancer. Lyden is the Stavros S. Niarchos Professor in pediatric cardiology and professor of pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine. He is also director of the physician-scientist training program in pediatrics, a founding member of the Drukier Institute for Children’s Health and a member of the Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center. He is being recognized for describing how primary tumors systemically promote metastasis by forming pre-metastatic niches in distant organs. Lyden’s research demonstrated that tumor-derived extracellular vesicles and exomeres, together with bone marrow-derived progenitor cells, remodel distant microenvironments and determine organ-specific metastatic tropism.
AACR St. Baldrick’s Foundation Award for Outstanding Achievement in Pediatric Cancer Research
Kimberly Stegmaier, MD, FAACR
This award recognizes individuals who have contributed to pediatric cancer research, resulting in the fundamental improvement of the understanding and/or treatment of pediatric cancer. Stegmaier serves as chair in the department of pediatric oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the David G. Nathan professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. She is also the associate chief of the division of hematology/oncology at Boston Children’s Hospital and an institute member at the Broad Institute. This award recognizes her genomic discoveries that defined the molecular landscape of childhood cancers and led to the identification of key drivers of fusion oncoprotein positive malignancies. Her research used systematic functional genomic screening and chemical biology strategies to identify critical dependencies in high-risk acute leukemias and pediatric solid tumors.
AACR Waun Ki Hong Award for Outstanding Achievement in Translational and Clinical Cancer Research
Eliezer M. Van Allen, MD
This award recognizes cancer researchers under the age of 51 who have conducted meritorious translational and clinical cancer research anywhere in the world. Van Allen is the Chandra Nohria Family Chair for AI in Cancer Research and chief of the division of population sciences at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. He is also a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and an institute member at the Broad Institute. Through large-scale tumor sequencing and integrative genomic analyses, Van Allen’s research defined genomic mechanisms underlying resistance to targeted therapies, including BRAF inhibition in melanoma, and identified genomic features associated with response to immune checkpoint blockade. His work has advanced biomarker discovery and the use of genomic data to guide personalized cancer treatments, as well as bridged advances in artificial intelligence with translational cancer research.
AACR Women in Cancer Research Charlotte Friend Lectureship
Maryellen L. Giger, PhD
This award recognizes scientists’ contributions to the cancer research field and those who have furthered the advancement of women in science through leadership or by example. Giger is the A.N. Pritzker Distinguished Service Professor of Radiology at the University of Chicago. Giger’s research has established quantitative imaging and radiomics approaches that extract high-dimensional features from radiologic images to characterize tumor phenotype and predict cancer risk, diagnosis, and treatment response. She has also guided more than 120 trainees and consistently championed the careers of women scientists and clinicians.
Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Extraordinary Achievement in Cancer Research
Douglas R. Lowy, MD, FAACR and John T. Schiller, PhD, FAACR
This award is presented to international scientists who have made a scientific discovery in basic cancer research or who have made significant contributions to translational cancer research. Lowy is principal deputy director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and chief of the Laboratory of Cellular Oncology at NCI. Schiller is deputy chief of the Laboratory of Cellular Oncology at NCI and chief of the lab’s neoplastic disease section. Both awardees are also fellows of the AACR Academy and NIH Distinguished Investigators. They are being recognized for pioneering the molecular and immunologic foundations of human papillomavirus vaccines, engineering virus-like particles for safe and effective immunization, and driving their translation into global cancer prevention strategies that have dramatically reduced cervical and other HPV-related cancer incidence.


