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Welcome to the family! Get to know the Young EHA Committee and learn how you can make a difference. Join Young EHA through a junior membership.
Read moreSWG Educational Activities
EICMLThe 2023 EICML meeting took place in Naples in May 2023. Fifty-five physicians and scientists met at the Palazzo Alabardieri in central Naples to spend two days discussing emerging data and developing collaborations.
Read moreHighlights of Past EHA (HOPE) Latin America (LA) 2019
Dates: October 4-5, 2019
Location: Mendoza, Argentina
Chairs:
Prof Dorotea Fantl, President, Sociedad Argentina de Hematología (SAH)
Prof Marivi Mateos, EHA Executive Board Member, European Hematology Association (EHA)
EHA, in partnership with the Sociedad Argentina de Hematología (SAH), is bringing the key messages from the…
EU projects
Creating a better world requires teamwork, partnerships, and collaboration. #bigdataforbloodcancer: Accelerating Better and Faster Treatment for Patients with Hematologic Malignancies.
Read moreHematopoietic stem cells: New results to be presented at the 18th Congress of the EHA
During ageing, this fine-tuned regulatory network may become altered, leading to abnormal HSC regulation. The functional quality of HSCs decreases with age partly due to an accumulation of damaged DNA, leading to an increased incidence of hematological malignancies.
Read moreWide Consensus Reached at Irish Presidency Conference on ‘Innovation and Patient Access to Personalised Medicine'
DUBLIN, March 25: Wide consensus emerged at the Irish Presidency Conference on ‘Innovation and Patient Access to Personalised Medicine’ on the need for radical change if Europe's approach to healthcare is to benefit from the potential of personalised medicine.
Read moreMore than science: the European Affairs program at EHA2023
To develop and administer safe, innovative and effective treatments for patients with blood diseases, hematologists need an effective and enabling regulatory environment.
Read moreUptake of CAR T cell therapy in Europe
Gene (editing) therapy continues to break ground in hematology, showing promising results in tackling severe blood cancers. Yet, its uptake in the European Union is slow, with few patients benefiting from it so far.
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