Emrah Can | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Prof. Dr. Emrah Can | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Prof. Dr. Emrah Can | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award | Professor| Istanbul University | Turkey

Prof. Dr. Emrah Can is a highly accomplished pediatrician and neonatology-focused clinician-scientist recognized for his extensive contributions to neonatal health, pediatric infectious diseases, neonatal sepsis, retinopathy of prematurity, and pediatric critical care. Prof. Dr. Emrah Can completed his medical training at Istanbul University Faculty of Medicine, followed by his medical specialization in Child Health and Diseases at Health Sciences University, İstanbul Bağcılar Training and Research Hospital, where he developed strong clinical expertise in neonatal nutrition, early sepsis biomarkers, high-risk neonatal monitoring, and pediatric intensive care. He progressed academically to the ranks of Associate Professor and Professor through consistent research productivity, clinical excellence, and mentorship. Throughout his career, Prof. Dr. Emrah Can has supervised numerous pediatric specialization theses focused on neonatal sepsis biomarkers, MRSA carriage among hospitalized children, melatonin levels in early sepsis, prognostic tools for pediatric traumatic brain injury, differentiation of lower respiratory tract infection and colonization in tracheostomized children, fetal malnutrition indicators, and hyperbilirubinemia-related risk factors, demonstrating his commitment to developing evidence-based pediatric protocols and training the next generation of pediatric specialists. His research interests include neonatal immunology, inflammation markers, nutritional interventions for premature infants, oxygen affinity biomarkers, neonatal thrombosis, and innovative hypothesis-driven models for predicting neonatal morbidity. His research skills include statistical analysis, advanced clinical data interpretation, hypothesis modeling, neonatal diagnostic model development, and interdisciplinary collaboration. Prof. Dr. Emrah Can has authored impactful publications in reputable journals such as Medical Hypotheses, International Ophthalmology, European Journal of Pediatrics, Pediatric Cardiology, and Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, contributing significantly to early detection strategies for NEC, ROP, neonatal thrombosis, and hematologic alterations in neonates. His scientific memberships reflect his professional commitment, including active participation in the Pediatric Allergy and Asthma Academy Association, Turkish National Pediatric Association, Child Friends Association, and Turkish Neonatology Association. He has also served in academic administrative roles, including program head positions that highlight his leadership in medical education. Prof. Dr. Emrah Can has received recognition for his academic achievements, research contributions, and involvement in pediatric healthcare improvement initiatives. Overall, Prof. Dr. Emrah Can demonstrates exceptional clinical acumen, research innovation, collaborative engagement, and leadership in pediatric and neonatal medicine, positioning him as a scholar whose contributions continue to shape evidence-based neonatal care, advance scientific understanding of pediatric diseases, and improve health outcomes for vulnerable newborn populations.

Profile:  scopus | ORCID

Featured Publications

  1. Can, E. (2025). Development of a scoring model integrating inflammatory markers for predicting ROP in preterm neonates. International Ophthalmology.

  2. Can, E. (2025). Postnatal hemoglobin P50 as a surrogate marker for hypoxia-driven NEC in preterm infants: A mechanistic hypothesis. Medical Hypotheses.

  3. Can, E. (2025). Phototherapy modifies hematologic markers without inducing inflammation in neonates: A retrospective observational study. European Journal of Pediatrics.

  4. Can, E. (2025). Could parabiotics safely enhance immune maturation and mitigate NEC/sepsis in preterm neonates? Medical Hypotheses.

  5. Can, E. (2025). Early haemoglobin oxygen affinity as a hypothesis-generating marker for retinopathy of prematurity risk in preterm infants. Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health.

  6. Can, E. (2025). Neonatal portal vein thrombosis: A case series from a tertiary NICU. Pediatric Cardiology.

 

Denise Faustman | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Denise Faustman | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Direcotr of immunobiology laboratory | washington university school of medicine | United States

Dr. Denise Faustman is a physician-scientist whose career exquisitely bridges clinical medicine, immunology, and translational research. She earned her Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Biology along with her M.D. in Medicine from Washington University School of Medicine, and she holds a bachelor’s degree in Zoology & Chemistry from the University of Michigan. Over her professional journey, Dr. Faustman has held roles such as Director of the Immunobiology Laboratory at Massachusetts General Hospital and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and she continues to lead efforts in immunotherapy, autoimmunity, and metabolic modulation. Her research interests center on autoimmune disease mechanisms, autoreactive T cells, the immunoregulatory role of TNF/TNFR2, use of Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccine in type 1 diabetes, epigenetic modulation of immune cells, and the intersection of immunometabolism and regenerative therapies. Her technical and methodological skills span immunology assays (flow cytometry, T-cell functional assays, cytokine profiling), epigenetic and methylation analyses, transcriptomics, metabolomics, clinical trial design, and translational biomarker development. In her career she has authored 115 documents, has accrued 5,972 citations, and holds an h-index of 42, attesting to her sustained academic influence. Professionally, Dr. Faustman has led multiple NIH-funded and translational projects, engaged in global advisory committees (including in immunology, diabetes, and regulatory policy), and established collaborations across institutions in North America and Europe. She has served on scientific advisory boards, chaired expert panels, participated in FDA and NIH review committees, and mentored many early-career scientists. Her honors include recognition for contributions to autoimmune disease research, invitations as plenary or keynote speaker at international conferences, and appointments to leadership roles in professional societies and advisory bodies. In summary, Dr. Denise Faustman combines deep scientific insight, rigorous methodological skill, leadership in translational immunology, and a track record of high-impact publications to make significant contributions both to fundamental immunology and to treatments for type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases. She is well positioned to continue driving innovation in immunotherapy, to mentor the next generation of biomedical scientists, and to lead large-scale international collaborative projects that translate immunological discoveries into patient benefit.

Profile: ORCID | Scopus

Featured Publications

  1. Faustman, D. L. (2001). Reversal of established autoimmune diabetes by restoration of endogenous beta cell function. Journal of Clinical Investigation.

  2. Kodama, S., Kuhtreiber, W., Fujimura, S., Dale, E. A., & Faustman, D. L. (2003). Islet regeneration during the reversal of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice. Science.

  3. Kühtreiber, W. M., Tran, L., Kim, T., Dybala, M., Nguyen, B., Plager, S., Huang, D., Janes, S., Defusco, A., Baum, D., Zheng, H., & Faustman, D. L. (2018). Long-term reduction in hyperglycemia in advanced type 1 diabetes: the value of induced aerobic glycolysis with BCG vaccinations.

  4. Kuhtreiber, W. M., et al. (2023). BCG clinical trial programs in advanced type 1 diabetes.

  5. Faustman, D. L., Davis, M. (2013). TNF receptor 2 and disease: autoimmunity and regenerative medicine.