The Career Development Program (CDP) grants support researchers early and at different stages of their career: from those with less than two years of postdoctoral research to those who hold independent faculty-level positions.
To acknowledge the most impressive contributions, the CDP Achievement Awards recognize awardees in each subcategory – Scholar or Scholar in Clinical Research, Special Fellow, and Fellow – who have the most significant publication(s) and are on a clear trajectory to become leaders in blood cancer research and/or treatment.
Our 2021 winners
Omar Abdel-Wahab, M.D.
Member, Human Oncology and Pathogenesis Program
Director, MSK Center for Hematologic Malignancies
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
2021 LLS-CDP SCHOLAR/SCHOLAR IN CLINICAL RESEARCH ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Read more about Dr. Abdel-Wahab
Courtney Jones, Ph.D.
postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Craig Jordan's lab
University of Colorado, Denver
current position: Assistant Professor and Scientist
University Health Network (Toronto, Canada)
2021 LLS-CDP SPECIAL FELLOW ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Linde Miles, Ph.D.
postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Ross Levine's lab
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
current position: Assistant Professor
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
2021 LLS-CDP FELLOW ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Our 2020 winners
Ravi Majeti M.D., Ph.D.
Professor of Medicine and Chief of the Division of Hematology
Member of the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine
Stanford University School of Medicine
2020 LLS-CDP SCHOLAR ACHIEVEMENT AWARD, co-awardee
Daniel Starczynowski, Ph.D.
Professor, UC Department of Pediatrics
Member, Division of Experimental Hematology & Cancer Biology
Co-Leader, Hematologic Malignancies Program, Cancer and Blood Diseases Institute
Katherine Stewart Waters Endowed Chair of Hematologic Malignancies
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
2020 LLS-CDP SCHOLAR ACHIEVEMENT AWARD, co-awardee
Read more about Dr. Starczynowski
Akihide Yoshimi, M.D., Ph.D.
Section Head, Cancer RNA Research Unit
National Cancer Center Research Institute
Tokyo, Japan
2020 LLS-CDP SPECIAL FELLOW ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Matthew Witkowski, Ph.D.
Post-Doctoral Fellow, Iannis Aifantis Lab
NYU Langone Medical Center
2020 LLS-CDP FELLOW ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Our 2020 winners
Ulrich G. Steidl, M.D., Ph.D.
Professor,
Director of Ruth L. and David S. Gottesman Institute for Stem Cell Research & Regenerative Medicine
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
2019 LLS-CDP SCHOLAR ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
I cannot overstate the impact that the LLS Scholar Award has had on my career and the research directions that my laboratory has engaged in. The award came at an absolutely critical time in my career and enabled me to significantly further develop and elevate my research program. The LLS Scholar funding allowed me to pursue several more ambitious ‘out of the box’ ideas that have led to important novel mechanistic insights, as well as preclinical and clinical drug development efforts targeting disease-driving stem cell compartments in myeloid malignancies, several of which are now being tested in the clinic.
Shannon Elisabeth Elf, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Ben May Department of Cancer Research
The University of Chicago
2019 LLS-CDP SPECIAL FELLOW ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
CDP has provided me time, funds, and support to study questions central to how mutant calreticulin (CALR) causes MPN. With this information, I have been able to build upon the CDP-funded work I did as a postdoctoral fellow studying the central mechanism of mutant CALR in MPN to studying the “Achilles heels” of CALR-mutated MPN cells in my own lab at the University of Chicago. CDP has been a critical component of my transitioning to this independent position and kick-starting the projects currently on-going in my independent laboratory.
Peter van Galen, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor,
Harvard Medical School
2019 LLS-CDP FELLOW ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Being awarded the Career Development Award from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society has been transformative for my postdoctoral work and early career. The CDP Award gave me the freedom to apply single-cell technologies to better understand the different cell types that contribute to acute myeloid leukemia progression. It also allowed me to hire a research technician and gain laboratory management skills. All these aspects jump-started my career at a critical stage and led to my current position as an Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School.