Milestones

The milestones that changed medicine

Discover some of the research firsts that WashU Medicine introduced to the world

WashU Medicine has been home to history-making discoveries for more than 13 decades. Today, our researchers continue to lead with determination, pushing the boundaries of science to unlock cures and transform patient care. 

1920s

First U.S. treatment for childhood diabetes 

By preparing insulin treatment for a child with diabetes, our researchers led the way in making a once-fatal diagnosis manageable. (1922)


1950s

Linked smoking to lung cancer

Smoking was rampant in midcentury America — even in hospitals. Our landmark studies shifted perceptions and sparked a global public health movement. (1950)


1970s

Revealed aspirin’s ability to prevent heart attacks

Physicians first showed how low-dose aspirin keeps clots at bay, helping prevent heart attacks — a discovery credited with saving thousands of lives each year. (1973)

Invented PET scanner  

This groundbreaking invention images the brain and shows organs at work, opening a scientific window into our bodies. (1974)


1980s

First transplant using donor nerve

Surgeons restored movement to a child using donor nerve tissue from a cadaver, opening a new era for patients with devastating nerve injuries and reshaping the treatment of peripheral nerve surgery. (1988)


1990s

Advanced the Human Genome Project 

Our scientists made pivotal contributions to the first-ever “human instruction manual,” paving the way for a bold new era of precision medicine. (1990)


2000s

Reshaping nutrition with landmark microbiome science

Medical teams pioneered microbiome-informed nutrition to improve growth and recovery for malnourished children. One major example, Project Peanut Butter, has delivered ready-to-use therapeutic foods to more than 1 million children — part of our larger effort to reshape global approaches to malnutrition. (2004)


2010s

Redefined mobility for kids with cerebral palsy

Over the course of more than 5,300 surgeries, our surgeons forever refined selective dorsal rhizotomy for children with cerebral palsy, helping thousands of kids walk, play and live more freely. (2017)

Invented blood test to diagnose Alzheimer’s  

A world-changing leap forward in early detection that allows earlier intervention and an opportunity to tailor targeted treatments to individual patients. (2017)

Radiation reimagined to heal the heart

Researchers used a single, targeted dose of radiation — long reserved for cancer — to stop ventricular tachycardia. This groundbreaking approach to a deadly heart rhythm defied convention, proved effective and is now moving through clinical trials as a potential new life-saving treatment. (2017)


2020s

Developed novel breast cancer vaccine clinical trials

The first-ever fully personalized vaccine — known as a neoantigen DNA vaccine — targeting hard-to-treat triple-negative breast cancer shows promise for patients. (2024)

Breakthrough therapy for preschool depression

Researchers first introduced a parent-child therapy approach to help young children feel better and stay better, changing the course of their mental health for years to come. (2025)

Advanced CAR T immunotherapy offers new hope

Scientists engineered a new CAR T-cell therapy that uses healthy donor cells to fight aggressive blood cancers. In early studies, most patients experienced full remission, offering hope for those who have little time and even fewer options. (2025)


Every medical discovery starts somewhere.

The next one could start with you.

Introducing the Imagine a World Fund — a new way for donors at any level to directly support the groundbreaking research happening at WashU Medicine. Join us in creating even more opportunities for patients to triumph over adversity by making a gift today.