Nobel Prize for medicine awarded to hepatitis C researchers

British researcher Michael Houghton and US-born Harvey Alter and Charles Rice honoured for “seminal discoveries” connected to novel virus

October 5, 2020
Nobel Prize illustrating news article about Abdulrazak Gurnah, winner of 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature
Source: iStock

Three virologists who helped identify the virus hepatitis C, paving the way for treatments that have saved millions of lives, have been awarded the Nobel Prize for medicine.

At a ceremony at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm on 5 October, Harvey Alter, Michael Houghton and Charles Rice were named the first recipients of the 2020 Nobel Prizes, sharing this year’s prize for physiology or medicine.

The three scientists were judged by the Nobel panel to have “made a decisive contribution to the fight against blood-borne hepatitis, a major global health problem that causes cirrhosis and liver cancer in people around the world”.

“The discovery of the hepatitis C virus revealed the cause of the remaining cases of chronic hepatitis and made possible blood tests and new medicines that have saved millions of lives,” said the judging panel.

ADVERTISEMENT

Professor Houghton is a British-born virologist who took his PhD at King’s College London after studying at the University of East Anglia. He is currently Canada Excellence research chair in virology and Li Ka Shing professor of virology at the University of Alberta.

Dr Alter, a University of Rochester-educated virologist, is currently the chief of the infectious disease section at the Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center, part of the US National Institutes of Health.

ADVERTISEMENT

Professor Rice is professor of virology at Rockefeller University in New York, and was educated at the University of California, Davis and California Institute of Technology.

Their work was deemed to have made “seminal discoveries that led to the discovery of a novel virus, hepatitis C”, building on research done into the hepatitis A and B viruses, the Nobel committee said.

Nonetheless, the “majority of blood-borne hepatitis cases remained unexplained [and the] discovery of hepatitis C virus revealed the cause of the remaining cases of chronic hepatitis and made possible blood tests and new medicines that have saved millions of lives”, it added.

jack.grove@timeshigheducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Register
Please Login or Register to read this article.

Related articles

‘Every young student of science has had a fantasy about winning a Nobel prize,’ says one laureate – and ever more rival prizes are being established. But with a cast of thousands currently pursuing the holy grail of a vaccine for Covid-19, might awards committees finally jettison their problematic focus on lone genius, asks Jack Grove

6 August

Sponsored

ADVERTISEMENT