Awards & Winners

Johannes Fibiger

Date of Birth 23-April-1867
Place of Birth Silkeborg
(Denmark, Silkeborg Municipality)
Nationality Denmark
Also know as Dr. Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger
Profession Physician, Scientist
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger was a Danish scientist, physician, and professor of pathological anatomy who won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Fibiger had claimed to find an organism he called Spiroptera carcinoma that caused cancer in mice and rats. He received a Nobel prize for this discovery. Later, it was shown that this specific organism was not the primary cause of the tumors. Moreover, Katsusaburo Yamagiwa, only two years later in 1915 successfully induced squamous cell carcinoma by painting crude coal tar on the inner surface of rabbits' ears. Yamagiwa's work has become the primary basis for this line of research. Because of this, some consider Fibiger's Nobel Prize to be undeserved particularly because Yamagiwa did not receive the prize. Encyclopædia Britannica's guide to Nobel Prizes in cancer research mentions Yamagiwa's work as a milestone without mentioning Fibiger.

Awards by Johannes Fibiger

Check all the awards nominated and won by Johannes Fibiger.

1926


Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
(for his discovery of the Spiroptera carcinoma)