Haydn T. Kissick and Suresh S. Ramalingam have been named the 2025 recipients of the Albert E. Levy Award for Excellence in Scientific Research.
The Levy Award recognizes one junior and one senior Emory faculty member each year that are considered to be outstanding in their respective fields of research. Each year, the University Research Committee (URC) accepts nominates from Emory faculty at large to determine the recipients. The award was created by civic and academic activist Edith Levy Elsas while she was a member of the Emory University Board of Visitors in memory of her father, Albert E. Levy.
Originally overseen by Emory University’s Sigma Xi, a scientific research honor society that encourages research communication across multiple scientific disciplines, the Levy Award program stopped for a period when the Emory chapter of Sigma Xi became inactive. In 2000, at the request of the benefactor, the Albert E. Levy Award was reinstated to be administered by the URC.
Each awardee receives a trophy and a contribution in research funds of $2,000.
Meet the 2025 award winners
Junior Faculty Award: Haydn T. Kissick
Haydn T. Kissick started his lab at Emory in 2014 and is an assistant professor of urology and microbiology and immunology in the Emory University School of Medicine. He is also a member of the Cancer Immunology Research Program at Winship Cancer Institute and a member of the Emory Vaccine Center.
Kissick’s research focuses on understanding the mechanisms of immune system responses to cancer and utilizing this knowledge to develop new cancer treatments. His team’s work has made seminal contributions to cancer immunotherapy through the identification of specific subsets of T-cells involved in immune responses to cancer, as well as the discovery of tumor-specific T-cell phenotypes.
Their findings have been published in leading journals including Immunity, Cancer Cell, Nature, Nature Cancer and Nature Communications. Even at this early career stage, Kissick’s work has had major scientific impacts and has already influenced clinical trial designs and treatment strategies.
His outstanding work was recognized by the 2023 Lloyd J. Old STAR Award from the Cancer Research Institute, which is among the highest honors in tumor immunology. His research has been supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense and the Prostate Cancer Foundation.
Senior Faculty Award: Suresh S. Ramalingam
Suresh S. Ramalingam holds the Roberto C. Goizueta Chair for Cancer Research and serves as professor of hematology and medical oncology and executive director of Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University’s Woodruff Health Sciences Center. He is among the nation’s leading physician-scientists in oncology.
His pioneering research on third-generation epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors, notably Osimertinib, has transformed clinical practice, establishing new standards of care for patients with early-stage and advanced lung cancer. Landmark trials led by Ramalingam, including the FLAURA and LAURA studies, demonstrated exceptional efficacy, significantly extending progression-free survival and resulting in multiple FDA approvals. Most notably, the LAURA trial showed a median progression-free survival of 39.1 months compared to just 5.6 months with placebo — a historic advancement for patients with unresectable stage III EGFR-mutated non-small cell lung cancer.
Additionally, his research has greatly enhanced our understanding of the molecular mechanisms driving cancer progression and therapeutic resistance, informing novel combination therapies and new therapeutic targets.
Ramalingam’s scholarly excellence is reflected in more than 340 peer-reviewed publications, more than 34,000 citations and an impressive h-index of 82. His contributions have earned numerous prestigious honors, including the Distinguished Cancer Scholar Award, the Clinical Investigator Team Leadership Award from the National Cancer Institute and the Paul Bunn Award for Scientific Merit.
Under his leadership, Winship Cancer Institute has significantly strengthened its international prominence in translational cancer research. He has led major NIH-funded initiatives, including Emory’s first Lung Cancer Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE), reinforcing Emory’s leadership in bench-to-bedside oncology research. He has also held more than 50 national leadership roles, including chair of the Thoracic Malignancies Committee at ECOG-ACRIN, chair of the Professional Development Committee at the American Society of Clinical Oncology and editor-in-chief of Cancer.
Ramalingam’s visionary approach to oncology, combined with his dedication to collaborative research and mentorship, exemplifies the scientific excellence Emory University seeks to foster, significantly enhancing its global reputation in biological and health sciences.