MILAN—Two United States scientists, whose work has contributed to creating immunological treatments for cancer, are among the winners of this year’s Balzan Prizes, announced on Monday, recognizing scholarly and scientific achievements.
James Allison of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Robert Schreiber of the Washington University School of Medicine were cited for their work on antibody treatments that has increased the survival of patients with metastatic melanoma.
The Balzan Foundation awards two prizes in the sciences and two in the humanities each year, rotating specialties to highlight new or emerging areas of research and sustain fields that might be overlooked elsewhere.
Recipients receive 750,000 Swiss francs ($790,000), half of which must be used for research, preferably by young scholars or scientists.
Nobel Prize-winner Jules Hoffman, a presenter of the awards, said the work focusing on using the immune system to fight cancer, expanding from the traditional treatments of removal, radiation and chemotherapy, has already had success in 25 percent to 30 percent of melanoma patients in a study who had previously gone through the traditional battery of treatments.
It is now being developed for small-cell lung cancer and rectal cancer.
Other winners are Belgian astrophysicist Michael Gillon, Germans Aleida and Jan Assmann and Indian economist Bina Agarwal.
Gillon was cited for his work that has helped map new solar systems from the comfort of planet Earth, using robotic telescopes instead of much more costly satellites.
The Assmanns are a married couple recognized for their work presenting collective memory “as a requirement for the formation of the identity of religious and political communities”.
Agarwal, a professor at the University of Manchester, was recognized in the gender-studies category for her “heroic” work studying women’s contributions to agriculture in India.
This year the Balzan Foundation also awarded a fifth prize, in international relations, which was deferred from last year after the committee failed to reach agreement on a winner.
It went to Robert O. Keohane of the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University, best known for his influential 1984 book, After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy.
Prizes will be awarded in Bern, Switzerland, on November 17.