
Is the Truth Out There? Space Offers Hematology Insights
MILAN — An unexpected highlight here at this year's European Hematology Association (EHA) Congress came from beyond planet Earth. In a packed session titled Space Hematology , researchers and clinicians explored how frontier science intersects with practical medicine. Although the International Space Station and spaceflight might seem distant from the clinic, space offers a uniquely revealing experimental environment for hematology and for medicine more broadly.
Microgravity, radiation exposure, circadian disruption, isolation, and other extreme conditions challenge human physiology in ways that are both scientifically illuminating and clinically relevant. Insights from experiments under these conditions can offer new perspectives for both treating and understanding the underlying mechanisms of hemoglobinopathies, coagulation disorders, or white blood cell dysfunction.
Joseph Borg, PhD
Perhaps most compelling, however, is this: Research conducted in space is no longer an expensive, distant aspiration — it is becoming a practical extension of the terrestrial laboratory. 'The technical and economic accessibility of space research has dramatically improved, and it will likely continue to do so, just as we saw with whole genome sequencing (WGS),' said Joseph Borg, PhD, professor and principal investigator at the University of Malta and investigator at NASA GeneLab, in an interview with Medscape Medical News . 'Regarding WGS, what once cost millions is now affordable for a large number of laboratories.'
Space as a Lab: New Data From Far Away
During the session, Borg presented findings showing that adult astronauts exhibit elevated levels of fetal hemoglobin (HbF), a molecule typically absent after infancy. His team, which has conducted annual experiments in space since 2021, analyzed peripheral blood using advanced omics technologies. Samples were collected pre-flight, during missions, and post-return. One study, published in Nature Communications , reported significant overexpression of gamma-globin genes ( HBG1 , HBG2 ), suggesting reactivation of fetal erythropoiesis during spaceflight. This pattern was consistent across different missions, including a polar orbit flight.
Borg highlighted that the clinical relevance of these findings is that — in disorders like sickle cell disease or beta-thalassemia — increased HbF can reduce symptoms and improve quality of life. While gene-editing approaches like CRISPR-Cas9 aim to achieve this, they remain complex and costly. Inducing HbF through environmental triggers akin to those in space might offer a simpler alternative.
Roopen Arya, MD
Thrombosis risk in space has also transitioned from theoretical concern to real issue. 'Until 2019, there were no reported cases of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in astronauts,' noted Roopen Arya, MD, professor of thrombosis and hemostasis and clinical director for hematological medicine at King's College Hospital, UK. That changed with a case of jugular vein thrombosis described in JAMA Network Open . NASA's VTE working group subsequently developed in-flight diagnostic and treatment protocols.
Another study on the secretome of civilians participating in a short-duration mission showed transient changes in coagulation and inflammatory markers. 'Very interesting data, even if we currently don't know what they mean,' Arya commented.
Finally, white blood cell function is also altered in space. Judith-Irina Buchheim, MD, anesthesiologist at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) München, Germany, presented evidence that spaceflight can reduce NK cell cytotoxicity, affect T-cell activation, and trigger a state resembling inflammaging.
'If you're interested in aging research, space is probably the right choice for your experiments,' she said. 'You can see the effects prospectively very quickly, as early as 6 months.' Buchheim is also a member of the European Space Agency Medical Board and is leading its expert group for studying the effects of isolation, confinement, and extreme environments on the human body.
Down to Earth: Why Space Medicine Matters
Are these findings clinically applicable to Earth-based medicine or are they just curiosities from an elite group of astronauts and space agencies? According to the speakers, the implications are far-reaching.
Astronauts offer ideal study subjects; they are healthy, highly monitored, and highly motivated individuals.
Space acts as a physiological accelerator, revealing stress-response patterns and disease models that could take years to emerge on Earth.
Insights into HbF reactivation could inspire pharmacologic mimicry.
Coagulation changes may refine risk stratification for hospitalized or immobilized patients.
And immune dysregulation observed in space could help clarify mechanisms of aging, vaccine response, and infection susceptibility.
Space-based research also drives technological innovation. Devices miniaturized for orbit — blood analyzers, sequencing platforms — can be reengineered for bedside diagnostics in rural or low-resource settings, improving access to care.
Why Space Hematology and Why Now?
The inclusion of space hematology in the EHA Congress was deliberate. 'Most hematologists are not experts in space medicine, but this is already in the news and may become part of our clinical routine in 10-15 years,' Martin Dreyling, MD, professor of medicine and head of the lymphoma program at the Department of Medicine III, LMU Hospital Munich, told Medscape Medical News . He is the chair of the of the Scientific Program Committee for the EHA 2025 Congress, the group of experts in charge of selecting the topics to be presented at the event. Young investigators are especially drawn to the field, he added, attracted by its novelty, data richness, and interdisciplinary collaborations. Attendance by many early-career hematologists at the Milan session confirmed this growing interest.
Martin Dreyling, MD
With private companies offering logistical support, space is also now an optional arm in experimental design. 'It's about adding a new layer to your research and going deeper into biological mechanisms,' Borg explained to Medscape Medical News . He also emphasized the need for ethical oversight. Astronauts provide informed consent for biological sampling, and some opt to receive personal results. Nowadays, great attention to these issues is also needed for the 'new astronauts': that is, people who will be able to access commercial spaceflight and who are not as trained and risk-aware as traditional astronauts.
It's tempting to ask whether data obtained from such a small and selected group of individuals are really significant for the population on Earth. Yet, despite small sample sizes, insights are accumulating. As more samples and subjects are sent into space and as repositories like the Space Omics and Medical Atlas grow, the potential for clinical translation increases. The long-term vision is a broader pool of space travelers, including commercial passengers, undergoing real-time health monitoring to yield diverse datasets.
'This is not a diversion from medicine's mission; it's an extension,' Borg told Medscape Medical News . 'Every doctor seeks better tools, new therapeutics, and deeper understanding. Space provides an extraordinary testbed that may reveal what Earth conceals.'
From hemoglobin switching and thrombotic risk to immunosenescence and real-time drug testing, space hematology is no longer just a scientific curiosity. It's a fast-evolving frontier of translational research, he concluded.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
an hour ago
- Axios
California could get hit hardest by Trump's NASA budget cuts
NASA spends an average of $3 billion annually in California on scientific missions — the highest of any state, per data from The Planetary Society, a pro-space nonprofit. Why it matters: NASA's science efforts bear the brunt of cuts to the agency in the Trump administration's proposed budget, which would slash science funding by nearly 50% to $3.9 billion. State of play: Science represents roughly 30% of NASA's budget, supporting missions like space telescopes, robotic probes and satellites that gather data about Earth's changing climate. While not always as headline-grabbing as human spaceflight, NASA's science activity has greatly enhanced our scientific understanding of both Earth and our celestial neighborhood. Threat level: Trump's proposed cuts could lead to 13,975 job losses, $1.4 billion less in science spending for California and $3.9 billion of lost economic activity. By the numbers: NASA supported 33,600 jobs in California and generated $8.3 billion per year in economic output between fiscal years 2022-2024, per a recent report. Zoom in: Missions on the chopping block include the Mars Sample Return, an ambitious joint American-European plan to collect Martian soil samples and bring them to Earth for further study. Nearly 20 active science missions would be canceled in total, representing more than $12 billion in sunk taxpayer costs, per the Planetary Society. Zoom out: Besides California, Maryland ($2 billion) and Texas ($614 million) saw the most average annual NASA science spending across fiscal 2022-24, the data shows. The big picture: Trump's proposed NASA cuts fit into a broader pattern of pulling resources away from scientific endeavors and data collection, especially involving climate change.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Scientists use satellites to mimic a total solar eclipse in space
Two European satellites have successfully manufactured artificial solar eclipses by maintaining a precise formation in space. This innovative technique offers scientists extended periods of totality on demand. The European Space Agency unveiled images from these eclipses at the Paris Air Show on Monday. The pair of satellites, launched in late 2023, have been creating simulated solar eclipses since March, while orbiting thousands of miles above the Earth. The satellites fly 492 feet (150 meters) apart. One satellite blocks the sun, mimicking the moon's role in a natural solar eclipse. The other satellite then focuses its telescope on the corona, the sun's outer atmosphere, which appears as a halo of light. It's an intricate, prolonged dance requiring extreme precision by the cube-shaped spacecraft, less than 5 feet (1.5 meters) in size. Their flying accuracy needs to be within a mere millimeter, the thickness of a fingernail. This meticulous positioning is achieved autonomously through GPS navigation, star trackers, lasers and radio links. Dubbed Proba-3, the $210 million mission has generated 10 successful solar eclipses so far during the ongoing checkout phase. The longest eclipse lasted five hours, said the Royal Observatory of Belgium's Andrei Zhukov, the lead scientist for the orbiting corona-observing telescope. He and his team are aiming for a wondrous six hours of totality per eclipse once scientific observations begin. Scientists already are thrilled by the preliminary results that show the corona without the need for any special image processing, said Zhukov. "We almost couldn't believe our eyes,' Zhukov said in an email. 'This was the first try, and it worked. It was so incredible.' Zhukov anticipates an average of two solar eclipses per week being produced for a total of nearly 200 during the two-year mission, yielding more than 1,000 hours of totality. That will be a scientific bonanza since full solar eclipses produce just a few minutes of totality when the moon lines up perfectly between Earth and the sun — on average just once every 18 months. The sun continues to mystify scientists, especially its corona, which is hotter than the solar surface. Coronal mass ejections result in billions of tons of plasma and magnetic fields being hurled out into space. Geomagnetic storms can result, disrupting power and communication while lighting up the night sky with auroras in unexpected locales. While previous satellites have generated imitation solar eclipses — including the European Space Agency and NASA's Solar Orbiter and Soho observatory — the sun-blocking disk was always on the same spacecraft as the corona-observing telescope. What makes this mission unique, Zhukov said, is that the sun-shrouding disk and telescope are on two different satellites and therefore far apart. The distance between these two satellites will give scientists a better look at the part of the corona closest to the limb of the sun. "We are extremely satisfied by the quality of these images, and again this is really thanks to formation flying' with unprecedented accuracy, ESA's mission manager Damien Galano said from the Paris Air Show.

4 hours ago
Summer solstice 2025: When is the 1st day of summer?
Get ready for sun-soaked days and warmer weather, as the summer solstice 2025 is just around the corner. The astronomical event marks the official start of summer and the beginning of an extended period of daylight in the northern hemisphere as we transition out of the darker, colder months. The solstice occurs twice a year when one of Earth's poles reaches its maximum tilt toward the sun, according to NASA. The word "solstice" comes from the Latin solstitium, meaning "sun stands still," referring to the moment when the sun's apparent path pauses before reversing direction, according to Royal Museums Greenwich. Across the globe, cultures have long celebrated the summer solstice with unique traditions from watching the sunrise align with Stonehenge in England to dancing around maypoles in Sweden and lighting bonfires in Norway. Here's everything you need to know about the 2025 summer solstice. When is the 2025 summer solstice? The 2025 summer solstice falls on Friday, June 20, at 10:42 p.m. ET, according to NASA and the Old Farmer's Almanac. This marks the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere, when the Earth's tilt positions it closest to the Sun. "The situation is reversed for the southern hemisphere, where it's the shortest day of the year," NASA states. What is the summer solstice? The summer solstice occurs at the point in Earth's orbit when the sun shines most directly on the northern hemisphere, according to NASA. "Astronomers consider this the beginning of the Summer in the northern hemisphere," NASA states. While it marks the start of summer in the north, the event marks the winter solstice in the southern hemisphere, where sunlight is at its lowest angle. When is the longest day of the year in 2025? The longest day of the year in 2025 will occur on Friday, June 20, for those in the northern hemisphere. On this day, the sun reaches its highest point in the sky, resulting in the most daylight hours of the year. NASA notes this happens when "the sun is directly over the Tropic of Cancer," located at 23.5 degrees north latitude. Is the summer solstice the first day of summer? Yes, astronomers recognize the summer solstice as the official first day of summer in the northern hemisphere, according to NASA. The National Centers for Environmental Information explains that solstices and equinoxes mark the start of the astronomical seasons. These events occur when the sun reaches its most extreme position relative to the equator, either directly overhead or crossing it. Meteorological seasons split the year into three-month groups based on temperature cycles and "are more closely tied to our monthly civil calendar than the astronomical seasons are," according to the agency. Does the summer solstice always fall on the same day? According to the Old Farmer's Almanac, the summer solstice doesn't always occur on the same date. It can fall on June 20, 21, or 22, depending on the year. This is because the timing of the solstice isn't tied to a fixed calendar date. Instead, it's determined by the exact moment the sun reaches its northernmost point from the celestial equator during Earth's orbit. What happens on the summer solstice? On the day of the summer solstice, the sun reaches its highest point in the sky at noon, and its position changes very little for several days before and after, according to the National Weather Service. This results in the longest day of the year and the shortest night. While the term "longest day" doesn't refer to the number of hours in the day, it does mean the day with the most sunlight.