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EHA25 Virtual | News Room
Welcome to the news room of EHA25 Virtual where you can find the most relevant news items.
Read moreFor mentors of applicants
As part of your support for the candidate applying for CBTH, the following is required from you:
Supervision and mentorship to be provided to the applicant during the CBTH award year.
Highlights of Past EHA (HOPE) Asia 2023
EHA joined forces with the Indian Society of Hematology & Blood Transfusion (ISHBT) to organize the 5th edition of the Highlights of Past EHA (HOPE) Asia 2023 meeting.
Read moreEHA-HKSH Hematology Tutorial on Lymphoid Malignancies
Dates: April 25-26, 2020
Location: Hong Kong
Chairs: G Gaidano, J Gribben, MF Law
In 2020 EHA will co-organize the first Hematology Tutorial in Hong Kong, together with the Hong Kong Society of Haematology (HKSH).
PRESS RELEASE: The future of research in hematology is here
“For the first time, hematologists in Europe came together to develop a roadmap to guide hematology research in Europe” says Professor Andreas Engert, chair of the EHA Research Roadmap Task Force, “Hematology in Europe has achieved a lot, but the discipline must focus and…
Read moreMajor changes needed for patients to benefit from precision medicine
Precision medicine approaches the treatment of a disease via an individual’s genes, environment, and lifestyle.
Read moreHighlights from the SWG
Impactful activitiesSymposium at EHA2023The SWG held a symposium on ‘2. 0 diagnostics in hematology: the role of AI’ at the EHA2023 Congress. EHA2023 took place from June 8–11, 2023, in Frankfurt, Germany.
Read moreEHA-funded study in The Lancet Haematology: Economic Burden of Blood Disorders in EU is €23 billion
In Europe blood disorders affect around 80 million people. The total cost of blood disorders consists of healthcare expenditure (€15. 6 billion), productivity loss due to illness and mortality (€5. 6 billion), and the costs of informal care (€1.
Read moreNovel basis for chemoresistance in AML: DNMT3A R882 mutations promote chemoresistance and residual disease through impaired DNA damage sensing
Although most acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients initially respond to chemotherapy, the majority subsequently relapses and succumbs to refractory disease. Residual leukemic cells that survived chemotherapy may persist over time and later cause the disease to come back.
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