The International Immunocompromised Host Society has awarded, for the second time, a Lifetime Achievement award and a Young Investigator award two highly qualified ICHS members. The awards were presented during the closing ceremony of the 21st ICHS Symposium on Friday, 19 February, 2021.
Congratulations to the recipients!
The International Immunocompromised Host Society Lifetime Achievement AwardDr Philip Pizzo, Stanford University, United States, Recipient of the ICHS Lifetime Achievement Award
The innovative protocol for empirical antifungal therapy in persistently febrile neutropenic patients provided a strategy for prevention of invasive fungal infection in high risk patients, as well as early treatment of deep mycoses before becoming clinically overt and potentially fatal. The strategy for empirical antifungal therapy has been utilized worldwide and later shown to be effective in a wide range of persistently febrile neutropenic patients with caspofungin (as a model echinocandin), liposomal amphotericin B (developed to reduce nephrotoxicity), and voriconazole (as a model mould-active triazole). This strategy for empirical antifungal therapy also established the foundation for pre-emptive therapy, where biomarkers and diagnostic imaging further defined patients who would benefit from antifungal therapy. Empirical antifungal therapy also provided broader anti-infective support to patients receiving antifungal prophylaxis complicated by breakthrough triazole-resistant yeast and mould infections. Dr. Pizzo also has made other key contributions to Medical Mycology in being the first to describe the natural history, clinical manifestations, diagnostic imaging, and therapeutic interventions of hepatosplenic candidiasis (chronic disseminated candidiasis). He also contributed to the establishment of novel animal models of disseminated candidiasis and pulmonary aspergillosis, as well as to development of innovative diagnostic methods for detection of these frequently lethal infections. Among Dr. Pizzo’s other key contributions was the pivotal study demonstrating that empirical monotherapy with a third generation cephalosporin (ceftazidime) versus combination therapy with beta-lactam plus aminoglycoside was equivalent but less toxic as empirical antibacterial therapy of febrile neutropenic patients at risk for life-threatening infections. This particular study revolutionized the management of empirical antibacterial therapy in febrile neutropenic patients from that of a dependency on beta-lactam plus aminoglycoside to that of a less toxic but equally effective third-generation cephalosporin. This seminal study and subsequent clinical trials provided the standard of care, which continues as an enduring contribution that has permitted tens of thousands of patients to avoid the nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity of aminoglycoside therapy during chemotherapy-induced neutropenia. Recognizing that many patients with solid tumors and some lymphomas had shorter durations of neutropenia with less risk for infectious complications, Dr. Pizzo also laid the foundation for oral antibacterial therapy for the treatment of relatively low risk febrile neutropenic patients in lieu of intravenous antibacterial therapy. Again, this strategy achieved widespread international usage as a cornerstone in managing relatively low risk febrile neutropenic patients. Dr. Pizzo also further addressed other critical gaps of knowledge in the infectious diseases supportive care of children with cancer. These studies included defining the role of lung biopsy versus empirical therapy in immunocompromised patients, as well as understanding the relative risks and benefits of antibacterial prophylaxis in pediatric oncology. With the advent of HIV/AIDS and the ensuing global epidemic of this tragic disease, Dr. Pizzo marshaled vast resources to rapidly develop antiretroviral therapies in HIV-infected children. Under his direction, the first clinical trial of antiretroviral therapy was conducted in HIV-infected children followed by important trials in the use of AZT, ddC, ddI, 3TC, as well as protease inhibitors and other novel agents in this vulnerable population. In further developing an understating of the pathogenesis of HIV infection in children, Dr. Pizzo and his staff developed new insights into the immunopathogenesis and neuropathogenesis of pediatric HIV/AIDS. Rising to the status of a world leader in pediatric HIV infection, Dr. Pizzo served as co-editor of three editions of the definitive textbook - Pediatric AIDS. Throughout his career, Dr. Pizzo has been a mentoring role model who epitomizes a compassionate patient caregiver guided by leading edge laboratory and clinical science. In addition to his groundbreaking research in infectious diseases supportive care, as well as in pediatric HIV/AIDS, Dr. Pizzo has contributed significantly to the education and mentoring of numerous trainees. He has mentored more than ninety postdoctoral fellows, as well as leading key training initiatives in pediatric oncology and pediatric AIDS at the National Institutes of Health, the pediatric residency program at Children’s Hospital in Boston, and the medical student education curriculum at Stanford University. Dr. Pizzo also has contributed fundamentally to the pillars of ICHS as one of its founding members. His dynamic leadership in its early development was critical to the current success of the society that we enjoy today. Dr. Pizzo’s lifetime career epitomizes the highest values espoused by the ICHS for patient care, teaching, and research that has profoundly improved survival, outcome, and quality of life for immunocompromised patients worldwide. In summary, Dr. Pizzo is unequivocally one of the foremost leaders in pediatric infectious diseases, oncology supportive care, pediatric HIV/AIDS, and medical education of our time. His creative vision, extraordinary productivity, heartfelt compassion, and inspiring leadership have saved and improved the lives of thousands of children as well as transforming our understanding of basic disease processes and implementation of novel therapeutic strategies. The International Immunocompromised Host Society Young Investigator AwardDr Mario Fernández Ruiz, University of Madrid, Spain, recipient of the ICHS Young Investigator Award
The main research interest of Dr Fernandez-Ruiz is the identification of the individual risk of infection by the assessment of novel biomarkers in the transplant population. In particular, he confirmed in several publications the role of hypogammaglobulinemia, lymphocyte subpopulations (including NK cells) and complement levels as robust markers for infection in this population. He additionally evaluated, using an original research approach, the performance of Torque Teno virus DNAemia as biomarker for determining the risk of opportunistic infections in solid-organ transplant recipients. Other important contributions of Dr Fernandez-Ruiz in the field include the evaluation of the role of cell-mediated immunity assays on the incidence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in transplant recipients. In addition, Dr Fernandez-Ruiz has also extensively published on the epidemiology, diagnosis and management of invasive fungal infection (and in particular invasive candidiasis) in the immunocompromised host. Recently, he has contributed with several publications to assess the risk of infection in patients receiving biological therapies. Finally, he is one of the most active researchers worldwide currently assessing the epidemiology and outcomes of Covid-19 in transplant recipients. The scientific output of Dr Fernandez-Ruiz is outstanding. He has published more than 250 articles in peer-reviewed journals, including original articles, editorials, review articles and letters of the editor; in a substantial number of these works Dr Fernandez-Ruiz acted as the first author. Some of these articles have been published in high-impact factor journals, such as Clinical Infectious Diseases or the American Journal of Transplantation. Thanks to these publications, Dr Fernandez-Ruiz has participated in the writing of national guidelines for the management of CMV, Aspergillus, Candida, donor-derived, and multidrug-resistant bacterial infection in transplant recipients. Overall, Dr Mario Fernandez-Ruiz is a talented, motivated, and enthusiastic clinician with a profound knowledge in clinical infectious diseases and in methodology of clinical research. Last, he has an open and easy personality, for which he is seen in great esteem by his pairs. He is undeniably recognized as one of the most promising transplant infectious diseases clinicians and scientists in Spain, and internationally. |