PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

ASCO: MD Anderson’s Christopher Flowers honored for teaching and mentorship

2025-05-27
(Press-News.org) CHICAGO, MAY 27, 2025 ― Christopher Flowers, M.D., division head of Cancer Medicine and chair of Lymphoma/Myeloma at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, will be honored with the Jamie Von Roenn Excellence in Teaching and Mentorship Award at the 2025 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting in recognition of his leadership and commitment to mentoring young oncology professionals.

The ASCO Special Awards are the organization’s highest honors and highlight global oncology leaders, researchers, patient advocates, philanthropists and teachers for their roles reshaping cancer care around the world.

“We congratulate Dr. Flowers on this remarkable achievement, and we are grateful for his impactful work mentoring the next generation of cancer researchers,” said Peter WT Pisters, M.D., president of MD Anderson. “Chris’ leadership and contributions toward developing the careers of young oncologists are invaluable to advancing our mission to end cancer, now and in the future.”

Internationally recognized as a leader in lymphoma clinical research and population science, Flowers has advanced the development of multiple new treatments and helped to characterize disparities in outcomes among patients with lymphoma. Beyond his notable achievements as a clinician-scientist, he has been recognized as a leader committed to supporting the professional development of future generations of cancer investigators. Through involvement with professional societies and organizations including ASCO, American Society of Hematology (ASH), American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), Lymphoma Research Foundation (LRF), and Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, Flowers has dedicated over 20 years to supporting and advancing comprehensive oncology mentorship, career development and advocacy programs.

Flowers has mentored young oncologists and researchers both internally at MD Anderson and through his work in outside organizations. Notably, he co-developed important recruitment and workforce initiatives for ASCO and ASH. As evidence of Flowers’ commitment to mentorship, 15 of his mentees now are thriving as oncology faculty at U.S. academic medical centers. Under his leadership, MD Anderson has continued to garner recognition as an institution leading ASCO Young Investigator Awards, with 10 honorees from MD Anderson’s Division of Cancer Medicine in 2025.

Flowers has considerable experience mentoring and advising young oncologists in career development, including leading a National Cancer Institute K24 grant for mentored patient-oriented research in lymphoma, serving as co-chair for the LRF Scientific Research Mentorship Program, and in a mentoring role in the ASH Clinical Research Training Institute.

The Jamie Von Roenn Excellence in Teaching and Mentorship Award is the most recent in a series of acknowledgements for mentorship. Flowers previously received the 2016 Inaugural Emory School of Medicine Mentoring Award for his work supporting the careers of high school, undergraduate and medical students. He received the 2021 LRF Leadership Award, recognizing his mentorship of early career lymphoma investigators. Flowers also received the 2022 ASH Mentor Award for providing mentorship to trainees and junior faculty through the Clinical Research Training Institute and multiple ASH award programs. Finally, he received the 2025 AACR Jane Cooke Wright Award for his impact on the next generation of cancer investigators. 

“We applaud Dr. Flowers for this tremendous honor, which recognizes his deep commitment to training and his continued leadership in the hematology and oncology communities,” said Giulio Draetta, M.D., Ph.D., chief scientific officer at MD Anderson. “His scientific excellence and dedication to mentorship are invaluable strengths for us as an institution, bolstering our efforts to advance transformational cancer research.” 

Most notable among his contributions is directing clinical research that resulted in refined treatment strategies for lymphomas. Marking a major milestone in the field of lymphoma research, Flowers co-led the first comprehensive assessment of incidence and outcomes by World Health Organization lymphoma subtypes. This work also includes guiding the development cohort studies that have enhanced the understanding of risk models, outcomes and survivorship for understudied populations of patients. These findings informed Flowers’ emphasis on the importance of personalized treatment approaches based on genetic and molecular profiling of tumors.

Flowers’ work has resulted in over 300 peer-reviewed publications. His work has also earned peer-reviewed funding awards from numerous foundations as well as The University of Texas System Science and Technology Acquisition and Retention program, and the National Institutes of Health, including leading two U01 awards and two multi-institutional team science grants. 

More information on all MD Anderson ASCO Annual Meeting content can be found at MDAnderson.org/ASCO. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study: Emotional responses crucial to attitudes about self-driving cars

2025-05-27
PULLMAN, Wash. -- When it comes to public attitudes toward using self-driving cars, understanding how the vehicles work is important—but so are less obvious characteristics like feelings of excitement or pleasure and a belief in technology’s social benefits. Those are key insights of a new study from researchers at Washington State University, who are examining attitudes toward self-driving cars as the technology creeps toward the commercial market—and as questions persist about whether people will readily adopt them. The study, published in the journal Transportation Research, ...

NCSA shapes students’ computing dreams

2025-05-27
Students Pushing Innovation (SPIN) participant Mankeerat Singh Sidhu and National Center for Supercomputing Applications graduate student researcher Hetarth Chopra won first place in the 2025 Cozad New Venture Challenge for Tandemn, an innovative software solution designed to help democratize artificial intelligence computing resources. Tandemn links idle graphics processing units (GPUs) into unified, high-performance networks designed for AI computing. The goal is to lower costs and barriers to GPU access while providing owners with possible users for their underutilized resources. “While everyone talks about ‘democratizing ...

Can AI analogize?

2025-05-27
Can large language models (LLMs) reason by analogy? Some outputs suggest that they can, but it has been argued that these results reflect mimicry of the results of analogical reasoning in the models’ training data. To test this claim, LLM’s have been asked to solve counterfactual problems that are unlikely to be  similar to problems in training data sets. Here is an example: Let’s solve a puzzle problem involving the following fictional alphabet: [x y l k w b f z t n j r q a h v g m u o p d i c s e] Here is the ...

AI aversion in social interactions

2025-05-27
An experimental study suggests that people are less likely to behave in a trusting and cooperative manner when interacting with AI than when interacting with other humans.  Scientists use experimental games to probe how humans make social decisions requiring both rational and moral thinking. Fabian Dvorak and colleagues compared how humans act in classic two-player games when playing with another human to how humans act when playing with a large-language model acting on behalf of another human. Participants played the Ultimatum ...

In dry conditions, locust babies are born with their first lunch

2025-05-27
Locusts have undersized babies—with their first lunch already in their guts—in dry conditions. Desert locusts have two distinct modes—solitary and gregarious—that are behaviorally and visibly different. The insects also live in the Sahara desert, an environment with frequent dry conditions. Koutaro Ould Maeno and colleagues explored how a lack of moisture and the presence of other locusts shift reproductive resource allocation in the insects. In lab experiments, the authors raised locusts in crowds and in isolation. Crowd-reared females produced fewer, larger eggs than females raised in ...

Feedback loops between disease and human behavior can produce epidemic waves

2025-05-27
Epidemics of infectious disease often come in waves, but the causes of these waves aren’t clear, frustrating efforts to predict or mitigate them. Are waves of infection caused by transmission seasonality, viral mutations, implementation of public health interventions, or something else? Claus Kadelka and colleagues model how human behavior, in response to information about disease risk, can create waves. There is frequently a lag between infection prevalence and the information about that prevalence reaching the public. Once ...

How Japan’s older adults adapted to healthcare challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic

2025-05-27
Public healthcare emergencies, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, can drastically disrupt healthcare systems with long-term repercussions. The effects of such healthcare crises are more pronounced in the aging population, who are particularly vulnerable to chronic infections and sudden disruptions in healthcare. The COVID-19 outbreak that emerged in December 2019 quickly spread worldwide, and several emergency measures were urgently implemented to curb its transmission. During the initial phase of the pandemic, stringent measures like social distancing, isolation, and mandatory wearing of masks were implemented. Unfortunately, ...

Chronic renal failure: Discovery of a crucial biomarker

2025-05-27
In a world first, Canadian scientists at the CRCHUM, the hospital research centre affiliated with Université de Montréal, have identified microRNA able to protect small blood vessels and support kidney function after severe injury. For the four million people diagnosed with chronic renal failure in Canada—and millions more abroad—this scientific advancement could have a major impact on early diagnosis and prevention of the disease. Previously, there was no known reliable biomarker for evaluating the health of these capillaries and for developing ...

Study quantifies the sleep loss and disruption experienced by new mothers

2025-05-27
DARIEN, IL – A new study to be presented at the SLEEP 2025 annual meeting quantifies the amount of sleep loss experienced by first-time mothers in the weeks after giving birth and is the first to identify the unique type of sleep disruption that persists throughout the first months of motherhood. Results show that the average daily sleep duration of new mothers was 4.4 hours during the first week after giving birth compared with a pre-pregnancy sleep duration of 7.8 hours. Their longest stretch of uninterrupted sleep also fell from 5.6 hours at pre-pregnancy to 2.2 hours in the first week after delivery. Nearly one-third of participants (31.7%) went more than 24 hours without sleep ...

Location matters: Belly fat compared to overall body fat more strongly linked to psoriasis risk

2025-05-27
Philadelphia, May 27, 2025 – Researchers have found that central body fat, especially around the abdomen, is more strongly linked to psoriasis risk than total body fat, particularly in women. This link between central fat and psoriasis remained consistent regardless of genetic predisposition, indicating that abdominal fat is an independent risk factor. The study in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology, published by Elsevier, provides insights that could help improve early risk prediction and guide personalized prevention strategies. Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin condition that can have a significant impact on quality of life. Many individuals with psoriasis also ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Advancing regenerative agriculture: TUdi unveils new digital tools for soil health monitoring

More staff addressing mental health in schools buffers toll of growing up in disadvantaged communities

Still top cause of death, the types of heart disease people are dying from is changing

Scientists detect deep Earth pulses beneath Africa

As fewer Americans die from heart attacks, more succumb to chronic heart disease

Guidance issued for GPs managing weight-loss injection patients

Low-cost carbon capture? Bury wood debris in managed forests

Scientists unravel mystery of Mycetoma grain formation

Exposure to particulate matter during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of childhood obesity

How a propolis compound with health benefits interacts with cell membranes: Study reveals nymphaeol a in action

Flawed impact metrics jeopardize EU deregulation plans, study finds

New study calls for rethink on alcohol policy

New Danish research centre to make designed proteins with vast potential

Thin-film research enters new era with innovative AI approach

Smart amplifier enabler for more qubits in future quantum computers

Following the tracks of an extremely adaptive bacterium

New ‘designer drugs’ pose growing threat to road safety in the US

Tackling depressive symptoms in high school students by honing emotional and social skills

One in five US foods and drinks contain synthetic dyes, study shows

One in five packaged foods and drinks sold in the United States contains synthetic dyes, study shows

Large global study links severe bleeding after childbirth to increased risk of cardiovascular disease

Breaking the silence about men breaking bones

More sex, less pain and irritation for perimenopausal and postmenopausal women

New review highlights histone and non-histone lysine lactylation: From molecular mechanisms to therapeutic frontiers

Boson sampling finds first practical applications in quantum AI

Add a twist to π-molecules! A new design strategy for organic semiconductor materials

Bushfire evacuation simulator wins prestigious US prize

Desert lichen offers new evidence for the possibility of life on other planets

Researchers reveal how brain amplifies perception of pain from multiple sources

The first “SpongeBooster of the Year” award celebrates efforts in wetland restoration

[Press-News.org] ASCO: MD Anderson’s Christopher Flowers honored for teaching and mentorship