Grants, prizes and donations
Photo: Abraham Engelmark,MogrenstiftelsenHåkan Mogren Prize awarded to Caroline Nilsson
Paediatric allergist and KI researcher Caroline Nilsson has been awarded this year's Mogren Prize in Medicine, Sweden's largest prize for clinically active doctors. The prize money of SEK 250,000 is motivated by her work to link patient encounters directly to research, which has a life-changing effect on children with severe food allergies.
Photo: Martin StenmarkFredrik Lundberg donates SEK 30 million to colorectal cancer research
Businessman Fredrik Lundberg is donating SEK 30 million to Karolinska Institutet and a research project looking into how the immune system can combat colorectal cancer and prevent it spreading.
Photo: Melker DahlstrandSamir EL Andaloussi receives SSMF's Jubilee Prize for his gene therapy research
KI researcher Samir EL Andaloussi has been awarded the Swedish Society for Medical Research’s (SSMF) Jubilee Prize of SEK five million for his groundbreaking research in gene therapies that could revolutionise the treatment of hard-to-treat diseases.
Photo: Getty ImagesTwo KI researchers awarded prestigious ERC Starting Grant
Erik Benson och Arvid Guterstam, both assistant professors at Karolinska Institutet, have been awarded the prestigious ERC Starting Grant from the European Research Council.
The Nobel Prize 2025
Photo: cecilia odlindThe 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Mary E. Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell and Shimon Sakaguchi
The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet has decided to award the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine jointly to Mary E. Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell and Shimon Sakaguchi for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance.
Photo: Daniel LundqvistThis year’s Nobel prizes in Chemistry and Physics equally valuable to life science
The Conversation
Photo: Getty ImagesDo all heart attack patients need beta blockers? A cardiologist explains
Beta blockers have long been prescribed to almost everyone who has suffered a heart attack, but new research shows that their effect depends on the heart's pumping capacity. While some patients clearly benefit from the treatment, it appears to be unnecessary—or even risky—for others. Read the news article in The Conversation.
Photo: Getty ImagesGene therapy restores hearing in congenital deafness
Photo: B Henrique PixabayPopular weight-loss drugs linked to rare but serious eye conditions
Photo: Getty ImagesMore articles by KI researchers published in The Conversation
From cold-resistant genes to face masks, Karolinska Institutet researchers contribute to the global public discourse on a range of topics through our collaboration with the international news site The Conversation.
Selected top publications
Scientists reveal first high-resolution structure of key herpes virus protein
Hällberg et al, Nucleic Acids Research, October 2025
Fat tissue’s hidden role in ovarian cancer spread
Gonzalez Molina, Nature Communications, September 2025
Future Alzheimer's treatment: Study highlights controversies
Aho et al, The Lancet, September 2025
Cancer screening saves lives – without increasing the risk of dying from other diseases
Lei et al, JAMA Network Open, August 2025
A new way to map CRISPR DNA targets directly in human cells
Zheng et al, Nature Biomedical Engineering, August 2025
More high-impact publications
