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2018 USCACA-AFCR Young Investigator Award

The 2018 USCACA-AFCR Scholar Award Ceremony in Tianjin on November 17, 2018

The Asian Fund for Cancer Research and the US Chinese Anti-Cancer Association have jointly awarded six outstanding Chinese cancer researchers in the early stage of their careers with the 2018 USCACA-AFCR Young Investigator Award. Scholars will each receive a certificate for the Award and a cheque in the amount of U.S. $1,000 in a 17/11/2018 ceremony in Tianjin, being held during the Third International Convention on Cancer Translational Research.

Chinese researchers and physicians are being increasingly recognized for making significant contributions to advance biomedical science, including cancer research in China and throughout the world. This year, AFCR has joined with USCACA in selecting six outstanding young individuals being recognized and rewarded for excellence in basic or clinical cancer research. The two organizations are proud to introduce the winners of the 2018 USCACA-AFCR Young Investigator Award:

  • Xinjian Li, Ph.D., Chinese Academy of Sciences Key Laboratory of Infection and Immunity, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing
  • Dongsheng Yue, Ph.D., Principle Investigator—Translational Research, Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital
  • Yanru Wang, M.D., Ph.D., Resident of Oncological Radiation, Department of Radiation, Oncology Cancer Center, Zhujiang Hospital Southern Medical University, Guangzhou
  • Xingding Zhang, Ph.D., Professor of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou
  • Puyu Shi, M.D., Resident of Medical Oncology, Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. First Affiliated Hospital of Xi’An Jiaotong University
  • Wantong Song, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Cancer Immunology, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences

These six awardees have been invited to contribute short essays which summarize their achievements in cancer research. As illustrated in their writings, these outstanding young scholars have received excellent training under their mentors in the U.S., have made impressive discoveries in demonstrating mechanisms underlying the causes and progression of human cancers and are engaged in the search for new approaches to improve treatments for cancer patients.

The ultimate goal of the USCACA-AFCR Young Investigator Award is to expedite novel cancer drug development by stimulating the translation of lab discoveries to novel cancer treatments, fostering collaborations in clinical cancer drug development and sharing best practices and knowledge between China and United States.