• Awards

5 scientists among the most cited researchers

Issue 55 - December 2025

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Every year, Web of Science, Clarivate's scientific information platform, publishes its list of researchers who are among the top 1% of scientists most cited in scientific journals. Five researchers from the Faculty of Medicine are included in the 2025 list: Mikaël Pittet, Olivier Michielin, Camilla Jandus, Giovanni Frisoni and Massimo Andreatta.

Mikaël Pittet is a professor in the Department of Pathology and Immunology, holder of the ISREC Foundation Chair in Immuno-Oncology, coordinator of the Translational Research Centre in Onco-Haematology (CRTOH) and member of the Geneva Centre for Inflammation Research (GCIR). His research aims to discover how the immune system controls cancer and other diseases, and how it can be exploited for therapeutic purposes.

Olivier Michielin is a professor in the Department of Medicine, vice-coordinator of the CRTOH, member of the GCIR, chief physician of the Division of Precision Oncology and head of the Oncology Department at the HUG. He combines fundamental and clinical research to integrate multi-omic data in order to determine the optimal treatment for each patient and develop new immunotherapies.

Camilla Jandus, professor in the Department of Pathology and Immunology, member of the CRTOH and of the GCIR, works on immune mechanisms and, in particular, how to harness the immune system for therapeutic purposes in the fight against cancer and in other contexts.

Giovanni Frisoni is a professor in the Department of Rehabilitation and Geriatrics at the Faculty of Medicine and director of the HUG Memory Centre. His research focuses on the use of biomarkers for earlier and more accurate diagnosis and prognosis of Alzheimer's disease and related disorders, as well as for the prevention of dementia and memory disorders.

Massimo Andreatta is a researcher in Santiago Carmona's laboratory in the Department of Pathology and Immunology. He works on developing new computational and statistical methods to facilitate the analysis of single-cell and spatial sequencing data, particularly in the field of cancer immunology.

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