Premio
The Fondo Elena Moroni for Oncology
is pleased to announce
the 2024 WINNERS of
The Enrico Anglesio Prize
and
Special Prizes
Elvo Tempia
and
Harald zur Hausen
The Enrico Anglesio Prize. Offered by the Fondo Elena Moroni, Turin, Italy. This prize goes to the best absolute scoring.
Here, in the linked video, a profile of Enrico Anglesio and the history the Prize from its definition and through the first 17 years: https://youtu.be/b5XZok-m50o
The Enrico Anglesio Prize
Enrico Anglesio (1908 – 2003)
Graduated in medicine in 1933, was a pioneer of modern oncology and chemotherapy in Italy. He contributed to research on lymphomas and founded one of the first Cancer Registries in the Southern European region, directing the coordination bodies of descriptive epidemiology. Enrico Anglesio had an active role in the UICC and was National Councillor and President of the Turin branch of the Italian League Against Cancer. He wrote several scientific publications, a digest of practical oncology and a brief history of oncology.
The Enrico Anglesio Prize 2024
Offered by the Fondo Elena Moroni
went to:
Ellis Slotman, Department of Research and Development- IKNL, Utrecht, The Netherlands for her work on:
«Guidelines versus real-world data in metastatic bladder cancer: a population-based study on first-line chemotherapy treatment
patterns«
The Elvo Tempia Special Prize. Offered by the Fondazione Tempia, Biella, Italy. The Prize goes to the youngest best scoring candidate in the first third of the ranking after the absolute winner.
The Elvo Tempia Special Prize
Elvo Tempia Valenta (1920 – 2004)
A young men during World War II, Mr Tempia joined the Italian patriotic troops that flanked the Allied armies in fighting the Nazis.
After the end of the war, he committed himself as a local politician and trade union leader. His long political and civil engagement culminated with the election as a member of the Italian National Parliament.
A family tragedy that happened during the eighties, the death due to cancer of a young son, stimulated Mr Tempia to establish The Fondo Edo Tempia, an advocacy organization based in Biella, Piedmont. The organization rapidly expanded as one of the largest in its country, with activities in health education, in primary cancer prevention and screening, and in assuring support to research laboratories and hospital departments.
The Elvo Tempia Special Prize 2024
Offered by the Tempia Foundation
went to:
Flurina Suter, Division of Chronic Disease Epidemiology –Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute, Zurich, Switzerland, for her work:
«Effect of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown on cancer stage distribution and time to treatment initiation using Swiss cantonal cancer registry data»
A NEW SPECIAL PRIZE FOR LMIC’s COMPETITORS
Starting from the 2024 edition, a new Special Prize has been established within the EAP System and intended for competitors from LMICs. It replaces the Sharon Whelan Special Prize, and it is dedicated to the memory of Professor Harald zur Hausen (1936 – 2023), Nobel Prize laureate for medicine in 2008
The HARALD zur HAUSEN SPECIAL PRIZE FOR LMIC’s COMPETITORS
Dr. Roberto Zanetti, FEM President, introduces the dedicatee of the new Special Prize
» I met Professor zur Hausen in Geneva in 2006 at a meeting of the Board of Directors of the UICC, Union for International Cancer Control, to which I was freshly elected, and that zur Hausen attended as the Editor in Chief of the International Journal of Cancer, the official journal of the UICC. That meeting happened a couple of years before zur Hausen was awarded the Nobel Prize, and some years after the appearance of the papers by Nubia Munoz and colleagues providing the final epidemiological demonstration that HPV infection is the cause of cervical cancer. During the meeting, Professor zur Hausen shortly reported about the IJC, and I have a precise memory of the clarity of his summary and the modesty of his attitude. Who was this man, and why short later he was he awarded the Nobel Prize? «
HARALD zur HAUSEN, 1936 – 2023
» Against the prevailing view during the 1970s, Harald zur Hausen postulated a role for human papillomavirus (HPV) in cervical cancer. He assumed that the tumour cells if they contained an oncologic virus, should harbour viral DNA integrated into their genomes. The HPV genes promoting cell proliferation should therefore be detectable by specifically searching tumour cells for such viral DNA. Harald zur Hausen pursued this idea over 10 years by searching for different HPV types, a search made difficult by the fact that only parts of the viral DNA were integrated into the host genome. He found novel HPV-DNA in cervix cancer biopsies and then discovered the new, tumorigenic HPV 16 type in 1983. In 1984 he cloned HPV 16 and 18 from patients with cervical cancer. The HPV types 16 and 18 were consistently found in about 70% of cervical cancer biopsies throughout the world.
The global public health burden attributable to HPV is considerable. More than 5% of all cancers worldwide are caused by persistent infection with this virus. Infection by HPV is the most common sexually transmitted agent, afflicting 50-80 % of the population. Of the more than 100 HPV types known, about 40 infect the genital tract and 15 of these put women at high risk for cervical cancer. In addition, HPV is found in some vulval, penile, oral and other cancers. HPV can be detected in 99,7% of women with histologically confirmed cervical cancer, afflicting some 500.000 women per year.
Harald zur Hausen demonstrated novel properties of HPV that led to an understanding of mechanisms for papillomavirus-induced carcinogenesis and the predisposing factors for viral persistence and cellular transformation. He made HPV 16 and 18 available to the scientific community. Vaccines were ultimately developed that provide > 95% protection from infection by the high-risk HPV 16 and 18 types. The vaccines may also reduce the need for surgery and the global burden of cervical cancer. » *
* from the Nobel Prize official website
Harald zur Hausen was born in 1936 in Gersenkirchen. He graduated in medicine in 1960 and started a career as a virologist. From 1983 to 2003 he chaired the Scientific Board of the German Cancer Institute, the DKFZ. He passed away in Heidelberg in March 2023.
The Harald zur Hausen Prize 2024
went to:
Natalia Godoy Casabuenas, Department of Clinical Epidemiology – Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Bogotà, Colombia for her work:
«Age-period-cohort effects on incidence of childhood leukaemia from four population-based cancer registries in Colombia «
Recorded Video of the AWARD CEREMONY 2024
The Winners of the Enrico Anglesio Prize 2023
The Enrico Anglesio Prize. Offered by the Fondo Elena Moroni, Turin, Italy. This prize goes to the best absolute scoring.
Here, in the linked video, a profile of Enrico Anglesio and the history the Prize from its definition and through the first 17 years: https://youtu.be/b5XZok-m50o
The Enrico Anglesio Prize
Enrico Anglesio (1908 – 2003)
Graduated in medicine in 1933, was a pioneer of modern oncology and chemotherapy in Italy. He contributed to research on lymphomas and founded one of the first Cancer Registries in the Southern European region, directing the coordination bodies of descriptive epidemiology. Enrico Anglesio had an active role in the UICC and was National Councillor and President of the Turin branch of the Italian League Against Cancer. He wrote several scientific publications, a digest of practical oncology and a brief history of oncology.
The Enrico Anglesio Prize 2023
Offered by the Fondo Elena Moroni
went to:
Alice Bernasconi, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milan, Italy for her work on:
«Artificial Intelligence and Cancer Registry Data to predict Rare Events in Cancer Survivors»
The Elvo Tempia Special Prize. Offered by the Fondazione Tempia, Biella, Italy. The Prize goes to the youngest best scoring candidate in the first third of the ranking after the absolute winner.
The Elvo Tempia Special Prize
Elvo Tempia Valenta (1920 – 2004)
A young men during World War II, Mr Tempia joined the Italian patriotic troops that flanked the Allied armies in fighting the Nazis.
After the end of the war, he committed himself as a local politician and trade union leader. His long political and civil engagement culminated with the election as a member of the Italian National Parliament.
A family tragedy that happened during the eighties, the death due to cancer of a young son, stimulated Mr Tempia to establish The Fondo Edo Tempia, an advocacy organization based in Biella, Piedmont. The organization rapidly expanded as one of the largest in its country, with activities in health education, in primary cancer prevention and screening, and in assuring support to research laboratories and hospital departments.
The Elvo Tempia Special Prize 2023
Offered by the Tempia Foundation
went to:
Giulia Capitoli, Bicocca, Bioinformatics Biostatistics and Bioimaging Center, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy for her work:
«Complete Blood Count Test in children and adolescent with Trisomy 21: definition of syndrome-specific reference intervals to detect evolution into onco-hematologic pathology»
The Sharon Whelan Special Prize. Offered by the International Association of Cancer registries, Lyon, France. This prize goes to the best scoring candidate coming from a Low-Middle Income Country
The Sharon Whelan Special Prize
Sharon L Whelan (1948 – 2016)
Sharon Whelan joined the staff of the Descriptive Epidemiology Unit at the International Agency for Research on Cancer few years after the establishment of that Institution in Lyon. There she spent her whole career, in the position of research assistant. Sharon’s main tasks have been two.
First, she was, beside the chief of the Unit, the person behind the planning, the collection of the data, and the editing of the well known international compendium Cancer Incidence in Five Continents.
Second, she assured for decades the organization of the activities of the International Association of Cancer Registries, the IACR, whose office is hosted at the IARC premise in Lyon. After retiring from the Agency, Sharon remained active with the Association, and in particular she authored the first contribution on its history, a long journal article appeared on the Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
The Sharon Whelan Special Prize 2023
Offered by the International Association of Cancer Registries
went to:
Adriana Valdemar-Jiménez, Instituto Nacional de Cancerologia, Bogota, Colombia for her work:
«Factors associated with Loneliness in Colombian Cancer Patients»
SPECIAL WAIVER: The five best competitors in the category Methods & Originality have been granted a waiver to publish their articles free of charge in a Special issue of Cancers.
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/cancers/about
The SPECIAL WAIVER PRIZE 2023
went to:
Alice Bernasconi, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milan, Italy:
«Artificial Intelligence and Cancer Registry Data to predict Rare Events in Cancer Survivors
Giulia Capitoli, Bicocca, Bioinformatics Biostatistics and Bioimaging Center, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy: «Complete Blood Count Test in children and adolescent with Trisomy 21: definition of syndrome-specific reference intervals to detect evolution into onco-hematologic pathology»
Dafina Petrova, Andalusian School of Public Health – Cancer Registry of Granada, Spain: «Socio-economic inequalities in adherence to clinical practice guidelines for breast cancer diagnosis and treatment: using registry data to evaluate equity in cancer care»
Laura Schumann, Insitute of Socialmedicine and Epidemiology, University of Luebeck, Germany: «Lead-Time Corrected Effect on Breast Cancer Survival in Germany by Mode of Detection»
Karianne Svendsen, The Cancer Registry of Norway, Oslo, Norway: «How did Breast Cancer Patients fare during and after the Covid-19 pandemic compared to controls?»
Results of the past editions
IACR Round 2022
Enrico Anglesio Prize
Mojca Birk, Institute of Oncology Ljubljana, Slovenia: «Impact of Indoor Radon exposure on Lung Cancer Incidence in Slovenia«
Elvo Tempia Special Prize
Irmina Maria Michalek, Polish National Cancer Registry, Poland: «Risk of suicidal death in cancer patients aged 75 years and older in Poland, 2009-2019«
Sharon Whelan Special Prize
Thilagavathi Ramamoorthy, Indian Council of Medical Research – National Centre for Disease Informatics and Research, Bengaluru, India: «Utilization and adherence to clinical practice guidelines in cancer care: A study among physicians from Hospital Based Cancer Registries in India«
Here are the recorded videos of the year 2022 Award Ceremony
and Finalists’ Video Presentations
IACR Round 2021
Enrico Anglesio Prize
Marissa Corine van Maaren, Comprehensive Cancer Organisation (IKNL), The Netherlands: “Socioeconomic inequalities in young breast cancer patients: jointly modelling recurrences
and mortality using registry data”
Elvo Tempia Special Prize
Federica Zamagni, Istituto Scientifico Romagnolo per lo Studio e la Cura dei Tumori (IRST), IRCCS Epidemiology Unit and Emilia-Romagna Cancer Registry, section of Romagna University, Italy : “Decreasing thickness and enhanced therapy have both contributed to the 2010s increase in survival from melanoma in Italy”
Sharon Whelan Special Prize
Rym Mallekh, National Institute of Health, Tunisia, for her work:
“Burden of cancer attributable to excess body weight in Tunisia in 2019“
Here are the recorded videos of the year 2021 Award Ceremony
and Finalists’ Video Presentations
IACR Round 2020
Enrico Anglesio Prize
Diana R. Withrow, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, USA: “Trends in non-malignant brain tumors incidence by source of diagnosis in USA, 2004-17”
Elvo Tempia Special Prize
Christiane Rudolph, University of Lubeck, Germany: “Breast cancer survival in German-Danish border regions”
Sharon Whelan Special Prize
Wilmer Tarupi, UTE University, Quito, Ecuador: “Educational inequalities in gastric cancer incidence and mortality, Quito 1996-2015”
Here are the recorded videos of the year 2020 Award Ceremony
and Finalists’ Video Presentations
PALMARES
Round 2010-2024, participants by country
Edition | Winner | Countries | Total number of participants |
---|---|---|---|
Yokohama 2010 | Japan | Japan (2), Korea, Netherlands, Spain, UK (2) | 7 |
Mauritius 2011 | Indonesia | Indonesia, Nigeria, South Korea | 3 |
Cork 2012 | Ireland | Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, UK | 6 |
Buenos Aires 2013 | Morocco | Brazil, Italy, Morocco, Portugal | 4 |
Ottawa 2014 | Portugal | Canada(2), Colombia, Portugal, USA | 5 |
Mumbai 2015 | Australia | Australia, Canada, India(3), Kenya(2), Nigeria, Slovakia | 9 |
Marrakesh 2016 | Italy | Argentina, France, Greece, Italy, Japan, Morocco, UK(3), USA | 10 |
Utrecht 2017 | Netherlands | Belgium, France (2), Germany, India, Italy, Netherlands(4), Russia | 11 |
Arequipa 2018 | Estonia | Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Estonia, Japan (2), France, South Africa | 8 |
Vancouver 2019 | USA | Brazil, Canada (2), Japan (2), Libya, Mauritius, Nepal, UK (2), USA (9) | 19 |
2020 Virtual | USA | Colombia, Ecuador, Germany, Italy, Japan (2), Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Tunisia, UK (2), USA (2) | 15 |
2021 Virtual | Netherlands | Canada (2), China (2), Colombia (2), Germany, India (3), Italy (6), Kenia, Mexico, Netherlands (8), Portugal, Slovenia (2), Spain, Tanzania, Thailand, Tunisia (2), USA | 35 |
2022 Virtual | Slovenia | Belgium, China, Germany, India (2), Iran(2), Italy(4), Netherland, Poland, Slovenia (2), Togo, Vietnam | 17 |
Granada 2023 | Italy | Brazil, Bulgaria, Colombia, Dominican Republic, France, Germany, Greece, Italy (2), Japan (2), Kenia, Norway, Portugal, Rwanda, Slovenia | 16 |
2024 Virtual | Netherlands | Belgium, Brazil, China, Colombia, Ecuador, Germany (3), India, Iran, Italy (6), Netherlands, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan, USA | 23 |
Special Prize Elvo Tempia
Edition | Winner |
---|---|
2020 Virtual | Germany |
2021 Virtual | Italy |
2022 Virtual | Poland |
Granada 2023 | Italy |
2024 Virtual | Switzerland |
Special Prize Harald zur Hausen
Edition | Winner |
---|---|
2024 Virtual | Colombia |
Special Prize Sharon Whelan
Edition | Winner |
---|---|
2020 Virtual | Ecuador |
2021 Virtual | Tunisia |
2022 Virtual | India |
Granada 2023 | Colombia |
Round GRELL, participants by country
Country of the Candidates | Edition | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mallorca 2006 | Montreal 2007 | Parma 2008 | Lugano 2009 | Toledo 2010 | Caen 2011 | Porto 2012 | Siracusa 2013 | Genève 2014 | Reus 2015 | Albi 2016 | Total | Winner | |
Belgium | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Brazil | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Colombia | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
France | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 19 | 5 |
Italy | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 22 | 2 |
Portugal | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 1 |
Romania | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Spain | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 8 | 0 |
Switzerland | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 2 |
Total | 4 | 5 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 4 | 9 | 7 | 7 | 4 | 9 | 67 | 12 |
The number of winners is different from the number of editions, due to the duplication of the prize in 2008.
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Vancouver (Canadá) el 13 de junio de 2019 a Quinn Ostrom de Houston, Texas por su presentación del estudio “Relative survival after diagnosis with a primary brain or other CNS tumor in the National Program of Cancer Registries, 2001-2014.
El estudio fue publicado en la revista, con revisión de pares, Neuro-Oncology Practice (XX, 1-7, 2019 doi: 10.1093 / nop / npz059) con el título “Relative survival after diagnosis with a primary brain or other central nervous system tumor in the National Program of Cancer Registries, 2004 to 2014”.
Ganador 2018
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio se otorgó el Arequipa (Perú) el 15 de noviembre de 2018 a Keiu Paapsi de Tallin, Estonia, por su presentación del estudio “Population based survival trends in childhood cancer in Estonia, 1970–2014”.
Ganador 2017
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Utrecht (Holanda), el 19 de Octubre a Simone Versteeg, de Utrecht por la presentación del estudio: “Centralisation of cancer surgery and the impact on patients’ travel burden”.
Este trabajo fue luego publicado en la revista Health Policy con il título “Centralisation of cancer surgery and the impact on patients’ travel burden”, y por lo tanto el Premio fue duplicado.
Ganadores 2016
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Marrakech (Marruecos) el 21 de octubre de 2016 a Lidia Sacchetto de Turín, Italia, por su presentación del estudio “In situ, thin and thick melanoma in Europe: how and where are they increasing?”.
El estudio ha sido publicado en el European Journal of Cancer, revisado por pares, con el título: “Trends in incidence of thick, thin and in situ melanoma in Europe”.
Edición GRELL
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Albi (Francia) el 6 de mayo de 2016 a Daniel Jurado de Pasto, Colombia, por su presentación del estudio “Exploring social causal pathways for cervical cancer survival in low and middle income settings”.
Ganadores 2015
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Mumbai (India) el 10 de octubre de 2015 a Hanna Tervonen de Adelaide, Australia por su presentación del estudio: “Cancer survival and summary stage among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in NSW”.
Edición GRELL
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Reus (España) el 15 de mayo de 2015 a David Jegou, de Bruselas, Bélgica, por su presentación del estudio “Trends in Incidence: a proposal to automatically check the linearity assumption for calculation of EAPC.”
Ganadores 2014
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Ottawa, Canadá, el 28 de Junio 2014, a Clara Castro, de Porto, Portugal, por la presentación del trabajo: “Predicting cancer incidence in the north of Portugal for the years 2013, 2015 and 2020”
Edición GRELL
El Premio Enrico Anglesio ha sido otorgado en Ginebra, Suiza, el 30 de Mayo 2014, a Robin Schaffar, de Ginebra, por la presentación del trabajo: “Estimation of net survival in Geneva using both, cause specific and relative survival settings”.
Ganadores 2013
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Buenos Aires, Argentina, el 24 de Octubre 2013, a Man Méziane, de Casablanca (Marruecos), por la presentación del trabajo: “The Moroccan Breast Cancer Registry (MBCR): Assessment of Breast Cancer Risk in Morocco”.
Edición GRELL
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Siracusa, Italia, el 10 de Mayo 2013 a Morgane Mounier de Dijon, Francia, por la presentación del trabajo: “ Changes in therapeutic management of follicular lymphoma: which impact on the excess mortality in the general population”.
Ganadores 2012
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Cork, Irlanda, el 17 de Setiembre 2012 a Susan Spillane, de Dublin, por la presentación del trabajo: “Use of the antidiabetic drug meteormin and disease spread at diagnosis in colorectal cancer”.
El estudio ha sido después publicado en la revista Cancer Epidemiology con el titulo «Metformin exposure and disseminated disease in patients with colorectal cancer».
Edición GRELL
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Porto, Portugal, el 18 de Mayo 2012 a Jérémie Jégu, de Estrasburgo (Francia), por la presentación del trabajo: “Trends over three decades of the risk of second primary cancer among patients with head and neck cancer in Bas-Rhin”.
Este trabajo ha sido después publicado en la revista “Oral Oncology” y por lo tanto el premio ha sido duplicado.
Ganadores 2011
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Balaclava, Mauritius, el 13 de Octubre 2011, a Mugi Wahidin de Yakarta, Indonesia, por la presentación del trabajo: “Method of Population-Based Cancer Registry in Indonesia”.
Edición GRELL
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Caen (Francia) el 3 de Junio 2011 a Carole Pornet por su trabajo: «Socio-geographic determinants for compliance to organised colorectal and breast cancer screening programmes».
Ganadores 2010
Edición IACR
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Yokohama, Japón, el 12 de Octubre 2010, a Yuri Ito, de Osaka, Japón, por la presentación del trabajo: “Trends in cure fraction for colorectal cancer in Osaka, Japan, between 1975 and 2000”.
Edición GRELL
El Premio Enrico Anglesio ha sido otorgado en Toledo, España, el 14 de Mayo 2010, a Bárbara Peleteiro de Porto, Portugal, por la presentación del trabajo: “Salt intake and gastric cancer risk according to Helicobacter Pylori infection, tumor location and histological type”.
El trabajo ha sido luego publicado en la revista British Journal of Cancer (Br J Cancer, 2011 Jan 4; 104 (1): 198-207) , y el premio ha sido triplicado.
Ganadores de Ediciones GRELL anteriores
2009
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Lugano, el 22 de mayo de 2009, a Cyrille Delpierre, Toulouse (Francia) por la presentación del trabajo: “ Sur-diagnostique et sur-traitement: estimation de l’impart de l’utilisation du PSA comme dépistage du cancer prostatique dans la population française”.
2008
El Premio Enrico Anglesio, en ocasión de la tercera edición coincidente con el centenario del nacimiento de Anglesio, fue duplicado y otorgado a dos candidatos, resultando ganadores ex aequo. El Premio, otorgado en Parma el 2 de mayo 2008, ha sido para:
Claudia Allemanni, del Instituto de Tumores de Milán, por la comunicación intitulada “Breast cancer survival and alcohol consumption”. El trabajo ha sido luego publicado en la revista Tumori ( Tumori. 2001 Mar-Apr; 97 (2): 142-8.).
Alessandra Spitale del Registro de Tumores del Canton Ticino, por la comunicación de titulo: “Neo-adjuvant radiotherapy in locally advanced rectal cancers improvise survival: comparison between clinical trials findings and population-based observation. An analysis of Ticino Cancer Registry ( South of Switzerland) 1996-2003”
Además del premio en dinero, las dos ganadoras de la edición 2008 recibieron, como el ganador de la edición precedente, el espléndido trofeo recuerdo, ofrecido por Michèle y Pierre Band de Montreal.
2007
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Montreal, el 19 mayo de 2007, a Jérémie Rudant, Paris, Francia por la presentación de un trabajo de titulo “Household pesticides use and childhood hemopoietic malignancies: the ESCALE Study (SFCE)”.
El trabajo ha sido luego publicado en la revista Environmental Health Perspectives (Environ Health Perspect. 2007, Dec; 115 (12): 1787-93), y el premio ha sido triplicado.
Además del premio en dinero, el ganador recibió un espléndido trofeo recuerdo, ofrecido por el organizador del congreso, Dr. Pierre Band de Montreal y su esposa Michèle.
2006
El Premio Enrico Anglesio fue otorgado en Palma de Mallorca, el 26 mayo de 2006, a Fulvio Ricceri de Turín (Italia) por la presentación de un trabajo de titulo “Survival of Patients with Multiple Primary Tumors: an application to patient with a breast cancer from the Piedmont Cancer Registry”.
El trabajo ha sido luego publicado en la revista “Emerging themes in Epidemiol. 2009 Feb 27; 6:2)
The Jury
The President
Stefano Rosso (Italy)
The Vice-President
Vesna Zadnik (Slovenia)
The pool of Jurors
Jaume Galceran
(Spain)
Mohamed Hsairi
(Tunisia)
Alexander Katalinic
(Germany)
Betsy Kohler
(USA)
Anne Korir
(Uganda)
Guy Launoy
(France)
Dora I. Loria
(Argentina)
Tomohiro
Matsuda
(Japan)
Marion Piñeros
(France)
Sabine Siesling
(Netherlands)
The past editions also had as Jury Members:
- Luc Raymond (1935-2018) (President, Switzerland)
- Christine Bouchardy (Switzerland)
- Michel Camus (Canada)
- Jean Michel Lutz (Switzerland)
- Shyam Manraj (Mauritius)
- Ana Miranda (Portugal)
- Hideo Tanaka (Japan)
- Donna Turner (Canada)
- Hideaki Tsukuma (Japan)
- Charles Wiggins (USA)
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