At the age of 17 I was paying attention in college, but still  enjoying the student life as much as studying towards my career goals.  What I wasn’t doing was working at the cutting edge of cancer treatment  and developing a potential cure.
 Angela Zhang is, and she’s just been awarded the $100,000 Grand Prize  in the Individual category of the Siemens Competition in Math, Science  & Technology. Her project was entitled “Design of Image-guided,  Photo-thermal Controlled Drug Releasing Multifunctional Nanosystem for  the Treatment of Cancer Stem Cells.”
 Her creation is being heralded as a “Swiss army knife of cancer  treatment.” Zhang managed to develop a nanoparticle that can be  delivered to the site of a tumor through the drug salinomycin. Once  there it kills the cancer stem cells. However, Zhang went further and  included both gold and iron-oxide components, which allow for  non-invasive imaging of the site through MRI and Photoacoustics.
 As to why she chose this as her project, Zhang explains that she was  surprised when looking at the survival rates of patients receiving  cancer treatment. As cancer stem cells are resistant to many forms of  cancer treatment, it seemed like an area worth focusing on. Her  nanoparticle is award-winning due to the fact it has the potential to  overcome cancer resistance while offering up the ability to monitor the  effects of the treatment in real-time using existing imaging techniques.
 Zhang’s achievement is impressive considering she is only 17 years  old, but also due to the level of understanding required to create such a  nanoparticle in the first place. She has spent over 1,000 hours since  2009 researching and developing the particle, and wants to go on to  study chemical engineering, biomedical engineering, or physics. Her  dream job is to be a research professor.
 The Siemens Competition is in its 13th year and aims to highlight talent at the high school  level for those interested in science research. Last year 15-year-old  Benjamin Clark won the Individual category for his work into how stars  are born. In 2009 Ruoyi Jiang won for his research into chemotherapy  drug resistance.
 I think we can all agree this is a very worthwhile competition, and  long may it continue if it pushes young minds to create solutions to  some of our biggest problems.
 
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