CUIMC Update - April 16, 2025

CUIMC Update is a weekly e-newsletter featuring medical center news and the accomplishments of our faculty, staff, and trainees. Please send your news, honors, and awards to cuimc_update@cumc.columbia.edu. Grants are provided by the Sponsored Projects Administration office.

News

Virginia Kneeland Frantz Society Honors Anne Taylor
During her talk, “A Century of Women at VP&S: Historical Perspectives,” Anne L. Taylor lauded the contributions of the first women trailblazers at VP&S.

Columbia Scientists Win Canada Gairdner Award for Fundamental Research
Columbia developmental biologists Gary Struhl and Iva Greenwald each received the Canada Gairdner International Award for research that helped yield critical insights on how cells communicate with their neighbors during animal development.

Bronx Middle Schoolers Visit School of Nursing
Students in Nursing’s Anesthesia Program introduced South Bronx middle schoolers to careers in nursing and nurse anesthesia and gave them hands-on experience performing CPR, using a stethoscope, and taking a pulse.

Meet the Patients Who Received Life-Changing Treatments
Patients are the heart of everything that happens at an academic medical center. At Columbia, we are thankful to the patients who entrust their care to us, and we celebrate their successes, including these stories.


Events


Grants

College of Dental Medicine

  • James Fine
    $300,000 over two years from ZimVie for "2024-26 Fellowship."

Mailman School of Public Health

Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons

  • Matteo Porotto, Pediatrics
    $1,422,472 over two years from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for "Fusion inhibitors that block host-to-host transmission of SARS-CoV-2."
  • Scott Small, Taub Institute
    $472,364 over two years from the Alzheimer's Association for "Understanding the neurodegenerative atrophy of Alzheimer’s Disease."
  • Robert Wechsler-Reya, HICCC
    $500,000 over one year from Team Jack Foundation for "Development of a Brain-Restricted MYC Inhibitor for Medulloblastoma."

Honors

Mailman School of Public Health

Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons


Social Media Snapshot


In the News Highlights

Eye on America: How Far-UVC Light Could Be Key in Curbing the Next Airborne Pandemic
Apr 8, 2025
CBS News (video)
Far-UVC light is a form of ultraviolet light that can kill viruses and bacteria in the air without harming humans. Researchers say it could be instrumental in stopping the spread of illnesses like the flu and possibly future pandemics. Dr. Jon LaPook has more.

David Brenner, interviewed for this story, is director of the Center for Radiological Research at the Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.

America Is Backsliding Toward Its Most Polluted Era
Apr 9, 2025
The Atlantic
When I called Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou, an epidemiologist at Columbia University, she had just learned that the Trump administration had canceled her grant to study how impacts of climate change, including air pollution, alter cognitive function in aging people. (Earlier this year, too, she was dismissed from her appointment to the EPA’s Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, along with the rest of the panel.) Even so, the basics on air pollution have been studied enough that Kioumourtzoglou knows how current rollbacks will affect Americans: There will be “more heart attacks, more respiratory adverse health outcomes for sure,” she told me.

The Return of the Dire Wolf
Apr 7, 2025
TIME
Nearly 30 years after Dolly the sheep was cloned, the technology still produces problems in cloned animals, such as large birth size, organ defects, premature aging, and immune-system problems. What’s more, cloning can be hard on the surrogate mother that gestates the cloned embryo. “There’s a risk of death. There’s a risk of side effects that are severe,” says Robert Klitzman, professor of psychiatry and director of the bioethics master's program at Columbia University. “There’s a lot of suffering involved in that. There are going to be miscarriages.”