Search

EHA Congratulates the 2021 Bilateral Collaborative Grant Winners

The Hague, April 25, 2022 –EHA congratulates four talented researchers in Hematology on their receipt of the inaugural EHA Bilateral Collaborative Grants 2021 after a rigorous selection process.

Read more

Educational Travel Grants

EHA wants to facilitate participation in the Annual Congress for hematologists, researchers and practitioners from lower and middle-income countries.

Read more

TARGETING THE JAK-STAT PATHWAY IN MALIGNANT AND NON-MALIGNANT CELLS IN MYELOPROLIFERATIVE NEOPLASMS

Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) are clonal blood disorders characterized by excessive production of mature blood cells. Patients present with large spleens, systemic symptoms, and high levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines.

Read more

EHA-AHA Tutorial on Biology and Management of Myeloid Malignancies

In collaboration with the Armenian Hematology Association. Dates: October 20-21, 2017
Location: Yerevan, Armenia
Chairs: S Daghbashyan, JJ Kiladjian & P Fenaux
Language: English (with simultaneous translation to Russian)

Online registration is closed.

Read more

EHA Pediatric Hemato-Oncology Course 2024

Join us in Sorrento to develop your problem-solving skills and exchange ideas in a friendly and supportive environment. DatesApril 10–13, 2024. LocationGrand Hotel Riviera, Sorrento, Italy.

Read more

EHA-AHA Hematology Tutorial on Lymphoid Malignancies

Dates: October 18-20, 2019
Location: Yerevan, Armenia
Chairs: G Gaidano, S Danielyan, Y Hakobyan

2019 marks the 3rd time EHA is organizing a tutorial in collaboration with the Armenian Hematology Association (AHA), this time on “Lymphoid Malignancies”.

Read more

Nikolai Klimko 1956-2023

Professor Nikolai Klimko 

Professor Nikolai Klimko, MD PhD, FECMM
March 22, 1956 - March 30, 2023

With deepest sorrow we learned that on March 30, 2023, Professor Nikolai Nikolaevich Klimko passed at age 68.

Read more

Novel 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.

Read more

First randomized evidence for kinase inhibitor activity in acute myeloid leukemia

Despite the success of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in some forms of leukemias such as chronic myeloid leukemia and acute lymphoblastic leukemia, until now a kinase inhibitor had yet to demonstrate activity in acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Read more

EHA Pediatric Hemato-Oncology Course programme

April 10, 202414:00–17:30: Red Cell and ConsultativeWelcome and presentation of the course.  Aims, expectations, and a brief look back. Presenters and topics
M. de Montalembert: Difficult management problems in sickle cell disease
M. D.

Read more