About Amin Aalipour

Raised in Southern California, Amin Aalipour is the son of Iranian Muslim immigrants who came to the United States in pursuit of higher education. Inspired by his parents' struggles with financial hardship and his Muslim faith, Amin learned early on about the values of simplicity, fearlessness, and sacrifice.

As an undergraduate at Stanford, Amin studied how engineered nanomaterials interact with living cells. He completed his bachelor's and master's degrees in a combined four years, graduating first in his major and earning a Goldwater Scholarship for his work in the lab.

Amin’s work in a lymphoma clinic and as an HIV counselor inspired him to think about the medical applications of his research, and he went on to complete an MD/PhD in Bioengineering at Stanford University. Working with the late Dr. Sanjiv Gambhir, he developed early cancer detection technologies and immunotherapies that yielded 4 patent applications as well as articles in Nature Biotechnology and Nature Biomedical Engineering. He was named a Weintraub Awardee, STAT Wunderkind, and Forbes 30 under 30 in Science.

Amin is currently a resident in Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and plans to pursue further training in oncology. He is excited by the potential of synthetic biology to rewire the immune system to detect and treat cancer, and he looks forward to translating technologies from the lab to the clinic as a physician-scientist.

Education

  • MD, Stanford University
  • PhD in Bioengineering, Stanford University
  • MS in Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University
  • BS in Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford University

Professional Fields

Milestones and Recognition

  • Molecular Imaging Young Investigator Prize Runner-Up (2017)
  • Welton J. Crook Award (2014)
  • Terman Award for Scholastic Achievement in Engineering (2014)
  • Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship (2013)

Amin's Links

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