Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care, Science

New approaches to blood and liver cancer therapies recognised with $2.5 million CSL Centenary Fellowships

CSL 3 mins read

Boosting exhausted T cells: Dr Daniel Utzschneider, Melbourne and
On the path to a liver cancer vaccine: Dr Ankur Sharma, Perth are the two research programs selected as a part of the global biotechnology company’s long-standing promise to support scientists in Australia

MELBOURNE – 12 October 2023 – Two Australian scientists have each been awarded CSL Centenary Fellowships, valued at $1.25 million over five years. They are each developing new kinds of potential cancer therapies, based on their fundamental research into cancer biology.

The Fellowships were presented at the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences Annual Meeting on Thursday 12 October 2023 in Brisbane.

Dr Ankur Sharma has discovered how liver cancer cells grow together in a similar way to the rapidly dividing cells of a human embryo. This behaviour allows them to resist treatment. He is now trialling ways to analyse these cells and determine which liver cancers may respond to immunotherapy.

The $1.25 million CSL Centenary Fellowship will support his next bold steps at the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research in Perth including the development of anti-cancer vaccines, which could one day allow us to manage cancer as a chronic disease.

Dr Daniel Utzschneider has identified how T cells can become exhausted from the constant battle against cancer, reducing the effectiveness of immunotherapy. These white blood cells are a key component of our adaptive immune systems.

He will use his $1.25 million CSL Centenary Fellowship to accelerate his research at The Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Melbourne. He will investigate these exhausted T cells from different angles, to understand their biology, why they become exhausted, and how to boost their numbers and their ability to fight cancer.

CSL Head of Research and Chief Scientific Officer Dr Andrew Nash said, “Dr Sharma and Dr Utzschneider, have both made fundamental research discoveries that could transform cancer treatment in the coming decades.”

“We have seen significant advances in the way cancer is treated, yet Ankur and Daniel have demonstrated that there is still much to learn in this complex area of science. With the support of the CSL Centenary Fellowships, their research will provide a deeper understanding of the specific areas of cancer research they are both so dedicated to advancing,” he said. 

“The CSL Centenary Fellowships aim to support leading mid-career Australian researchers like Ankur and Daniel by providing funding stability to enable the delivery of innovations that could transform medicine for patients living with rare and serious diseases and protect public health.”

About the CSL Centenary Fellowships

The Fellowships are competitively selected, high-value grants available to mid-career Australians who wish to continue a career in medical research in Australia.

They are open to medical researchers working on discovery or translational research with a focus on rare or serious diseases, immunology or inflammation and are overseen by a selection committee comprising three independent members and two CSL representatives. The 2024 committee was chaired by Dr Andrew Nash.

The Fellowships were established to mark 100 years since the establishment of CSL in 1916. Two individual, five-year A$1.25 million fellowships are awarded each calendar year.

For further information, visit www.cslfellowships.com.au

About CSL

CSL (ASX:CSL; USOTC:CSLLY) is a leading global biotechnology company with a dynamic portfolio of lifesaving medicines, including those that treat haemophilia and immune deficiencies, vaccines to prevent influenza, and therapies in iron deficiency, dialysis and nephrology. Since our start in 1916, we have been driven by our promise to save lives using the latest technologies. Today, CSL – including our three businesses, CSL Behring, CSL Seqirus and CSL Vifor – provides lifesaving products to patients in more than 100 countries and employs 30,000 people. Our unique combination of commercial strength, R&D focus and operational excellence enables us to identify, develop and deliver innovations so our patients can live life to the fullest. For inspiring stories about the promise of biotechnology, visit CSLBehring.com/Vita and follow us on Twitter.com/CSL.

For more information about CSL, visit www.CSL.com.

# # #

 

Media Contact

Name: Kim O’Donohue

Mobile: +61 449 884 603

Email: Kim.O’[email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/03/2026
  • 10:41
Samsung Bioepis Co., Ltd.

Samsung Bioepis and Epis NexLab Sign Research Collaboration and License Agreement with G2GBIO to Develop Novel Assets Including Long-acting Semaglutide

Samsung Bioepis to receive exclusive license to develop and commercialize two novel assets including long-acting semaglutide using G2GBIO’s proprietary microsphere technology Epis NexLab, a…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/03/2026
  • 10:00
Dementia Australia

Dementia carers funding commitment welcomed

Dementia Australia welcomes theSouth Australian Labor Party’s electioncommitmentto fund the delivery of a Dementia Carers Wellbeing and Education Programand calls upon all South Australian parties and independents to offer bi-partisan support. Dementia Australia CEO Professor TanyaBuchanansaid the 12-month South Australian program would support unpaid carers with evidence-based wellbeing and education interventions, aimed at improving carer health, reducing stress and strengthening carers capacity to sustain their caring role. “With dementia now the leading cause of death for Australians, and with an estimated 35,800 people living with all forms of dementia in South Australia, support for carers is vital,” Professor Buchanan said.…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/03/2026
  • 09:44
Children's Cancer CoLab

Surviving childhood cancer is not enough – 20+ national organisations call for lifelong support for survivors

Key Facts: Around 20,000 Australians are living with lifelong effects of childhood and adolescent cancer, with numbers expected to grow 20% in the next decade Eight in 10 childhood cancer survivors experience at least one long-term health problem, with mortality rates up to 10 times higher than their peers Current survivorship care plans are often limited to clinical perspectives and lack holistic, whole-family support More than 21 organisations have united to demand lifelong, comprehensive care for childhood cancer survivors through a nationally endorsed position statement National health, research and advocacy organisations have united to demand lifelong care for childhood and…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.