Marquee Sessions and Lectures
The following contains information pertaining to the 2024 ASH Annual Meeting. Preliminary session information for the 2025 ASH Annual Meeting will be available in June.
These signature sessions are designed to be of interest to a broad and diverse audience and include the prestigious Plenary Scientific Session, Best of ASH, and the Presidential Symposium. Many of the General Sessions also honor distinguished leaders in the field through awards and special lectures.
Unless otherwise noted, all sessions will take place in person and stream simultaneously on the virtual platform. Session recordings will be available on demand on the virtual platform.
Announcement of Awards: Wallace H. Coulter Award for Lifetime Achievement in Hematology, ASH Mentor Awards, and ASH Award for Leadership in Promoting Diversity
WALLACE H. COULTER AWARD FOR LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT IN HEMATOLOGY
ASH will recognize Rainer Storb, MD, of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, with the Wallace H. Coulter Award for Lifetime Achievement in Hematology, the Society's highest honor. For more than 60 years, he has made groundbreaking achievements in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), a hallmark treatment for multiple blood disorders. He was instrumental in the creation and refinement of HSCT, as well as in advancing the understanding and treatment of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease.?His research has helped establish more effective and less toxic transplant approaches. ?
Dr. Storb’s interest in bone marrow led him to the lab of past ASH President and Nobel Laureate E. Donnall Thomas, MD, at the University of Washington, where he contributed to the development of HSCT and its subsequent translation to humans. They led the development of HSCT as a cure for aplastic anemia and other blood disorders, and, with Dr. Paul Weiden, they were the first to recognize the graft-versus-leukemia effect. This mechanism is responsible for decreasing the likelihood of leukemia relapse following transplant and has paved the way for modern immunotherapies.??
One of Dr. Storb’s most notable accomplishments is the development of the non-myeloablative conditioning regimen and transplant, sometimes called the “mini-transplant.” It involves minimal pre-transplant radiation, is less intense than standard transplantation, and depends on the graft-versus-tumor effect. These innovations expanded access to transplants, enabling older and medically frail patients to undergo the procedure.??
ASH MENTOR AWARDS
ASH will recognize Jorge Di Paola, MD, of the Washington University in St. Louis, for his role in helping teach and inspire the next generation of pediatric classical hematologists. Dr. Di Paola leads his trainees with an inclusive and nurturing spirit. He credits his mentors for shaping and supporting him on his journey from medical school in Argentina to residency, fellowship, and research in the United States, and he brings that experience to his mentees. Dr. Di Paola’s genuine investment in his trainees’ professional and personal success, coupled with a commitment to scientific excellence, has propelled dozens of young clinician-scientists on the path to success.
ASH will recognize Sophie Lanzkron, MD, MHS, of Thomas Jefferson University, for providing hands-on, lifelong mentorship to physician-scientists passionate about improving care for patients, especially those living with sickle cell disease. Her guidance is tailored, academically challenging, and validating, with many trainees crediting her for helping them navigate imposter syndrome. Dr. Lanzkron has served as a vital role model to a pool of mentees from numerous backgrounds and specialties. Her emphasis on taking risks, pivoting from failure, pursuing new opportunities, and prioritizing work-life balance has helped her mentees realize and act on their potential, establish fulfilling careers, and lead change in the field.
ASH ADVANCING INCLUSIVE EXCELLENCE AWARD
ASH will recognize Diane Krause, MD, PhD, of Yale School of Medicine, for her commitment to removing barriers that prevent the full participation of all who are interested in hematology. She has made meaningful contributions at the individual, institutional, and systemic levels by recruiting, supporting, and championing individuals from a wide range of backgrounds, including - but not limited to - those identifying as LGBTQ+ and those facing social or economic disadvantage. Dr. Krause leverages her own experiences to create an environment where all trainees feel safe, valued, and respected, better enabling the next generation of hematologists. She believes that scientific innovation depends on creativity, which is enhanced when people of different backgrounds and viewpoints work together.
Chair:
Belinda Avalos
Atrium Health
Charlotte, NC, United States
Announcement of Awards: William Dameshek Prize and Henry M. Stratton Medals
Chair:
Belinda Avalos
Atrium Health
Charlotte, NC, United States
ASH-EHA Joint Symposium - Menin Inhibitors: Novel targeted agents for treatment of AML
The ASH-EHA Joint Symposium is intended to address global issues in hematology and provide insight on how international collaboration can help address these issues. This year marks the 20th anniversary of this shared symposia.
This year's topic is Menin Inhibitors: Novel targeted agents for treatment of AML. AML is an aggressive heterogeneous disease with limited treatment options. Although most patients with AML receiving intensive chemotherapy can achieve a CR, the majority will relapse with 5-year OS (without HCT) being 25%. Between 1973 and 2017, no new drugs were approved for treatment of AML. The identification of unique gene expression profiles in AML has spurred significant advances in our understanding of AML and led to development and FDA approval of 12 novel agents since 2017 that target key genetic drivers of specific subtypes of AML. Menin is a member of the KMT2A (lysine methyl transferase 2A, formerly known as MLL1) complex that occupies a broad region around the promoters of a small subset of genes involved in development and cell cycle control. Menin target genes can be essential dependencies for solid and hematopoietic malignancies, especially in rearranged KMT2A (KMT2Ar) and NPM1-mutated AML, in which a stemness transcriptional program involving HOXA/MEIS1 is activated to induce malignant transformation. Small molecule inhibitors of menin have emerged as promising new agents for KMT2Ar or NPM1-mutated AML, and more recently for NUP98 fusions. A total of 7 different menin inhibitors have been developed with 2 already granted breakthrough therapy designation by the FDA. However, the mechanisms that determine menin-KMT2A occupancy and sensitivity to menin inhibition remain unknown. This session will focus on the rational design and development of menin inhibitors, their mechanisms of action and resistance mechanisms, clinical efficacy, safety, use in combination therapies, biomarkers of response, and appropriate molecular tests to detect MRD. It will also highlight the application of integrated multiomic platforms including CRISPR screens, proteogenomics, transcriptomics, and single cell analyses.
Co-Chairs:
Belinda Avalos
Atrium Health
Charlotte, NC, United States
Konstanze Döhner
Scott Armstrong
Marc Raaijmakers
E. Donnall Thomas Lecture and Prize
Dr. Nancy Speck, a renowned researcher, is being honored for her pivotal work in hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis. Her discovery of the transcription factor complex “core binding factor” has enabled significant conceptual insights into embryonic blood cell formation. One subunit of core binding factor is the transcription factor RUNX1, encoded by a gene responsible for blood cell creation. This factor is mutated in individuals with familial platelet disorder with associated myeloid malignancy - a condition that predisposes patients to developing myelodysplastic syndromes and leukemia. Dr. Speck is a first-generation college graduate whose decades of research have had a profound impact on both classical and malignant hematology.
Co-Chairs:
Belinda Avalos
Atrium Health
Charlotte, NC, United States
Nancy Speck
Speaker:
Nancy Speck
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA, United States
Paradigm-Shifting RUNX1 Science
Ernest Beutler Lecture and Prize
This lecture and prize recognizes the exceptional contributions of Drs. Radek Skoda and Ruben Mesa to the understanding and treatment of myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs). Dr. Skoda was instrumental in identifying the genetic basis for MPNs, while Dr. Mesa significantly advanced the development and evaluation of several MPN therapies.??
Co-Chairs:
Belinda Avalos
Atrium Health
Charlotte, NC, United States
Radek Skoda
Ruben A. Mesa, MD
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Comprehensive Cancer Center
Charlotte, North Carolina, United States
Speaker:
Radek Skoda
University Hospital Basel
Basel, Switzerland
Basic Science
Ham-Wasserman Lecture
The Ham-Wasserman Lecture was named in honor of two past presidents of ASH, Thomas Hale Ham and Louis R. Wasserman, distinguished hematologists who contributed extensively to the Society. The Ham-Wasserman lecture is traditionally given by an individual from outside the United States who has made a major contribution to our understanding of an area that relates to hematology.
Chair:
Belinda Avalos
Atrium Health
Charlotte, NC, United States
Speaker:
Chiara Bonini
OSPEDALE SAN RAFFAELE
Milano, Italy
Gene Transfer and Genome Editing of T Cells for Cancer Immunotherapy
Presidential Symposium
Chair:
Belinda Avalos
Atrium Health
Charlotte, NC, United States
Speakers:
Jane Churpek
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Madison, WI, United States
Germline Predisposition for Myeloid Neoplasms
Eric Pietras
University of Colorado
Aurora, CO, United States
Role of the Microenvironment in Leukemogenesis
John DiPersio
Washington University School of Medicine
Saint Louis, MO, United States
Novel Therapeutic Approaches