Scholarship in hand, UVA biomedical engineering student takes aim at cancer

The Astronaut Scholarship Foundation has added University of Virginia rising fourth-year student Micaiah Lee to its fold.

Scholars receive up to $15,000 in tuition support, plus exclusive mentorship and professional networking with astronauts, scholarship alumni and industry leaders. Six Mercury 7 astronauts founded the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation in 1984 to encourage the best STEM scholars in the United States. Each year, UVA nominates third-year students through a process facilitated by the Office of Citizen Scholar Development.

“I am proud to know Micaiah,” Andrus G. Ashoo, who directs the Office of Citizen Scholar Development, said. “He embodies our core virtues of honesty, humility, curiosity and courage in his life and research. Micaiah’s positive disposition and joy are infectious even amid rejection from other opportunities. It is a joy to work with a student for whom feedback is truly a gift and shortcomings are an opportunity to learn and grow.”

Lee, a biomedical engineering student, researches cancer treatments.

“When I was 6, I decided that I wanted to be a bioengineer or go into genomics,” he said. “When I was in high school, a pair of graduate students in my parents’ Bible study approached me about helping with a project studying cancer invasion in the brain.”

Cancer intruded into Lee’s consciousness at an early age when his paternal grandmother succumbed to the disease.

“Throughout my childhood, my family prayed together every night and found ourselves constantly praying for friends and coworkers battling cancer,” he said. “There truly were an overwhelming number of people we knew who were fighting the disease, and it rooted cancer in my mind as a looming shadow, which I now have the opportunity to help fight.”

Lee is an undergraduate researcher in the laboratory of biomedical engineering assistant professor Natasha Sheybani, who is also the research director of the UVA Focused Ultrasound Immuno-Oncology Center. There, researchers are developing new ways to use ultrasound and advanced imaging to help the immune system find and fight cancer.

Lee has studied how focused ultrasound can help deliver drugs to the brain and improve cancer treatments. His current research explores how ultrasound can enhance immunotherapy and improve the delivery of treatments to brain tumors.

He’s not taking the summer off. “I am headed to the University of California at Berkeley as an Amgen Scholar for the summer, during which I will work in assistant professor Derfogail Delcassian’s lab on T cells, a broad subset of immune cells which are important for fighting viral infections and cancer,” Lee said.

Berkeley is not Lee’s only destination this year. He will also travel to Houston in August for the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation’s Innovators Symposium and Gala. Lee is one of 79 Astronaut Scholars recognized this year.

“The financial resources and especially the networking opportunities which come with being an Astronaut Scholar are going to be a tremendous asset over the academic year and beyond as I apply to doctoral programs in bio/biomedical engineering,” Lee said. “Professional relationships and teamwork are key in the complex world of biomedical engineering, and the financial benefits will ensure I can spend my time focused on research and coursework.”

Follow Us On Social
Follow Us On Social

Lee said his deep religious faith gives him hope in his work.

“That purpose gives me motivation to sacrifice my time, energy and personal desires to work toward a better world around me,” he said. “With research specifically, I believe God created an amazing universe which we are free to explore and benefit from, and we are designed to build new things. I see science and engineering as ways to help others around us – maybe in the distant future, or maybe in the present.”

Lee says the people around him, lab colleagues, friends, family and his fiancée motivate him.

“When I was younger, my parents encouraged me to be curious and spent a lot of work cultivating that curiosity,” he said. “When I turned 7, my mom threw a DNA-themed birthday party for me, which is a core memory I’ll cherish for the rest of my life.”

Portrait of Micaiah Lee

Lee is a cancer treatment researcher who is continuing his work as an Astronaut Scholar. (Contributed photo by Matthew Cosner)

Lee spends much of his time researching and serving as a teaching assistant for biomedical engineering classes. He is also vice president of UVA’s Undergraduate Biomedical Engineering Society and a resident at the Center for Christian Study.

“I am also currently developing a chapter of the American Scientific Affiliation here in Charlottesville, which seeks to develop safe, humble and diverse dialogue about science and Christianity,” he said.

Lee plans a career in research and engineering to develop and optimize next-generation immunity-based therapies and treatment strategies for diseases such as metastatic cancer.

Media Contacts

Traci Hale

Managing Editor University Communications