The International Prize – Arrigo Recordati

how to apply

Prize Regulations

Apply until

January 31, 2026

ELIGIBLE PROJECTS

Projects we’re looking for

Recordati recognises the value of basic research to elucidate the pathophysiology and the etiology of paediatric sarcomas and of translational research to develop new diagnostic therapies for early intervention and novel therapeutic strategies. Such research projects are sought for this competition. 

Proposals should be based on sound preliminary results which support the project rationale. If a proposed experimental treatment is based on a pre-existing treatment, the project is eligible only if the treatment is being repurposed from another indication or if its formulation, or administration is changed in a major way, in order to improve treatment quality, compliance, efficacy, safety, or any other significant patient benefit.

Intellectual Property Rights, when relevant, will be safeguarded.

Applicants who submit scientific research data, which may include health and other special categories of personal data, are required to ensure that such data is fully anonymized so that individuals cannot be identified directly or indirectly.

Previous research activity and publications will be a major component for the assessment of proposals.

Eligibility criteria

Eligibility

Applicants are independent junior faculty who are leading their own research group and are not more than 10 years from their terminal degree or 8 years from the end of their fellowship.

Principal Investigator Role

The Applicant must be the Principal Investigator of the research project and her/his role in the project must be clearly delineated.

Employment restrictions

Applicants must not be employed full-time with a pharmaceutical company.

Application requirements

The Applicants must comply with all instructions described in ‘How to Apply’.

Exclusion criteria

Projects sponsored

Projects sponsored by pharmaceutical companies.

Incomplete applications

Incomplete applications and those received after the deadline (email receipt date) will not be considered.

Application review principles

The Review Committee will assess and select the winning project based on the quality of the proposed research.
The Review Committee will follow this principles in reviewing:

Code of conduct

The Review Committee will follow the “code of conduct” guidance to ensure that reviews are conducted in a fair and equitable manner.

Confidentiality

The members of the Review Committee are bound by the confidentiality rules generally applicable to such committees.

Final decision

The Review Committee’s decision is final and there is no appeal mechanism. Review Committee summary statements will not be provided.

Conflict of interest

Applications from the Review Committee members or from faculty of their respective institutions will not be considered.

Next Step: putting the regulation into practice

Now that you are familiar with the Prize regulations, follow carefully the application steps and prepare all documents required to submit your application.

Where research receives recognition

This young investigator award is granted every two years to a scientist in recognition for outstanding work in a particular area of research.

Prof Sandra Strauss, MD PhD FRCP

Sandra Strauss is Professor of Medical and Teenage Young Adult (TYA) Oncology and a Consultant Medical Oncologist. She specialises in the systemic treatment of bone and soft tissue sarcoma and leads the clinical service at University College London Hospital, part of the London Sarcoma Service, one of the largest sarcoma services in Europe.

Her academic post is based within University College London and is focused on translational and clinical research to develop novel therapies for sarcoma patients. She has over 15 years’ experience as a chief and principal investigator for international and national clinical trials. She chairs the executive committee of the EuroEwing consortium (EEC), a pan-European collaboration that has brought together clinicians, scientists and patient advocates to improve outcome for patients with Ewing sarcoma, conducting practice-changing clinical trials with focused translational research. She chairs the UK NCRI Sarcoma Clinical Studies Group Bone Subgroup and is the current sarcoma track chair of European Society of Medical Oncology (ESMO).

She is an executive Committee member of FOSTER (Fight Osteosarcoma through European Research), a scientific committee member of SIOPE, the European Society of paediatric oncology, and ESMO rare cancer and sarcoma annual meeting.

She is an executive member of the Hibiscus Harmonization International Bone Sarcoma Consortium (HIBiSCus), a member of European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) and Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC) consortium.

Dr. Alice L. Yu, M.D., Ph.D

Alice L. Yu, M.D., Ph.D. is an Academician of Academia Sinica in Taiwan. She has been a Distinguished Chair Professor of the Institute of Stem Cell & Translational Cancer Research at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital & Chang Gung University since 2013 and Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics at the University of California in San Diego.

From 2003 to May 2013, Dr. Yu served as a Distinguished Research Fellow and Associate Director at the Genomics Research Center, Academia Sinica, in Taiwan. Prior to this, she was the Chief of Pediatric Hematology Oncology at the University of California in San Diego. She has been a long-time member of the Children’s Oncology Group in the United States, serving on the Steering Committee of Neuroblastoma. She is also a member of various scientific committees and associations.

As a pioneer in cancer immunotherapy, Dr. Yu has taken an anti-GD2 monoclonal antibody (Dinutuximab) from preclinical to phase III clinical trial, culminating in its FDA approval for the treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma in 2015. This marks the first immunotherapeutic agent to target carbohydrate antigen. Treatment with anti-GD2 has since become standard of care for high risk neuroblastoma. For another prevalent tumor-associated glycan, Globo H, her group has demonstrated the adverse impact of its expression on the clinical outcome of patients with hepatoma, cholangiocarcinoma and gallbladder cancer. She has also uncovered the roles of Globo H in cancer as an immune checkpoint molecule and an angiogenic factors, providing rationales for the development of Globo H-targeted immunotherapeutics.

She received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Advances in Neuroblastoma Research Association in 2025, Pediatric Oncology Award from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in 2020, Excellence in Technology Transfer Award from Federal Laboratory Consortium, USA in 2016, The 55th Academic Award from the Ministry of Education, The 19th Wang Min-Ning Memorial Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Development Medical Science and Technology, National Health and Society, Year 2000 “Key to Life” Award from Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, USA, etc.

Prof. Robert J. Desnick

Dean for Genetics and Genomic Medicine, Professor and Chairman Emeritus of the Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, NY, USA.

Robert J. Desnick is Dean for Genetic and Genomic Medicine and Professor and Chairman Emeritus of the Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

In 1977, he joined the Mount Sinai faculty as the Arthur J. and Nellie Z. Cohen Professor of Pediatrics and Genetics, and Chief of Medical and Molecular Genetics. From 1993-2011, he was the first Chairman of the Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences at Mount Sinai. In 2011 he became the Dean for Genetics and Genomic Medicine.

Dr. Desnick’s research interests include lysosomal storage diseases (LSDs) and the inborn errors of heme biosynthesis, the porphyrias, and in particular, their treatment.

His research efforts led to the Federal Drugs Administration (FDA) – and European Medicine Agency (EMA) – approval of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) for Fabry disease (Fabrazyme) and on-going ERT clinical trials (FDA “Breakthrough” status) for Niemann- Pick B disease, both in partnership with Genzyme. In addition, he was a scientific founder of Amicus Therapeutics (NASDAQ; FOLD), which is developing oral pharmacologic chaperone therapy for Fabry disease (EMA-approved in 2016), Pompe disease, and other disorders. Currently, his laboratory is using gene editing technology to engineer gene therapy in the mouse model of Fabry disease with Sangamo Therapeutics.

Arrigo Recordati

Arrigo Recordati believed research was the most powerful asset for the pharmaceutical industry. He became head of the family business in 1951, at the age of 23, and transformed the family pharmaceutical laboratory employing 325 people into an international company listed since 1984 on the Italian Stock Exchange.

Arrigo Recordati’s remarkable life came to a premature end at the age of 71, in 1999.

Under his direction, in 1953 the company’s headquarters and pharmaceutical plant moved from Correggio, a small town in the Emilia region of Italy, to Milan, the capital of Italian business. During this time Arrigo Recordati provided the company with a stronger competitive advantage by updating its research facilities with advanced pharmacological laboratories.

In the 1950s and 60s, Arrigo Recordati relied on two strong beliefs: scientific research and internationalization. To maximize the results of Recordati research, he established subsidiaries in Brazil and Mexico. Arrigo Recordati also fostered a close relationship with the United States, signing among other things a strategic partnership agreement with Syntex Corporation (acquired by Roche Corporation in 1990) – at that time a company involved in cutting-edge research on the synthesis of steroid hormones.

Arrigo Recordati strongly believed in the power of scientific research to drive the growth of the pharmaceutical industry and provide products beneficial to public health and individual well-being. Efloxate (1955), a coronary vasodilator for the treatment of cardiovascular disease, was the first compound to originate from Recordati’s research laboratories during Arrigo Recordati’s leadership. Other original molecules developed and marketed during his leadership include: dimefline (1958), a respiratory analeptic, flavoxate (1957), a urinary antispasmodic, tibezonium iodide (1971), an oral antiseptic, fenticonazole (1978), an antimycotic and lercanidipine (1984), a calcium channel blocker for the treatment of hypertension. In particular, flavoxate was the first original New Chemical Entity developed by an Italian company to be approved by FDA (Federal Drug Administration) in the United States.

Arrigo Recordati also believed that even small companies – if managed with vigor and imagination – can compete effectively in the pharmaceutical arena. In 1984 Recordati was listed on the Italian Stock Exchange, completing its transformation from a small, family-run operation to a modern, professional, publicly listed company.

After 48 years of intense and challenging leadership, Arrigo Recordati passed away, leaving a solid, international business projected into the future.