Cancer
Grantee spotlight
Nobel Prize Winner Charles M. Rice: Saving Millions of Lives Around the World
Maurice R. and Corinne P. Greenberg Chair in Virology, The Rockefeller University
More than 70 million people worldwide live with hepatitis C, an aggressive viral infection that causes severe liver inflammation and can lead to liver scarring or cancer. Transmitted by blood, hepatitis C can be extremely difficult to treat, often requiring a liver transplant. In 1997, Dr. Charles M. Rice, whose work at the Rockefeller University is supported by a Starr Foundation endowment,
helped identify and characterize the virus responsible for hepatitis C. Dr. Rice’s research paved the way for highly accurate blood tests for the virus and the creation of three new classes of curative drugs. For his game-changing work, Dr. Rice and two of his colleagues won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. The Nobel Committee said Dr. Rice’s breakthroughs have saved millions of lives around the world.
In 2016, Dr. Rice also shared in the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award, the United States’ most prestigious science prize, for developing a system to study the replication of the hepatitis C virus and using it to revolutionize treatment.