LEO Foundation Fellows Coaching Program

Grantee: For Dr Abildgaard Fellows Ann-Marie Schoos, Xiang Zheng, Sigrun Schmidt and Hans Christian Ring

Amount: DKK 352,000

Grant category: LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellowships

Year: 2025

Geography: Denmark

The LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellows received a two-year leadership coaching program as an add-on grant to their existing fellowship.

The LEO Foundation Fellows Leadership Coaching Program (LCP) will help identifying the fellow’s key strengths as well as their potential key leadership obstacles and situations they find most challenging within leadership – and how to handle these situations. During the coaching sessions they will identify and train new leadership skills going forward which can help them perform even better.

Potential themes for the leadership coaching sessions could be elements from the following sections:

  • Learn more about your leadership style and get the best out of it
  • Setting up – and leading the team
  • Stakeholder Management
  • Mentoring

Dr Abildgaard Fellowship 2025

Grantee: Sigrún Alba Jóhannesdóttir Schmidt, MD, PhD, Researcher and Resident Physician, Department of Dermatology, Aarhus University and Aarhus University Hospital

Amount: DKK 12,000,000

Grant category: LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellowships

Year: 2025

Geography: Denmark

Project: Leveraging Real-World Data for Dermato-Epidemiological Research of Bullous Pemphigoid and Lichen Planus in Denmark

Bullous pemphigoid and lichen planus are inflammatory diseases of the skin and mucosa causing significant discomfort and reduced quality of life. Still, their causes, treatments, and long-term effects are poorly understood. The project will use Denmark’s unique health registries to explore how common these diseases are, what triggers them, how they are managed, and their broader health impact. Findings will support data-driven healthcare, ensuring better resource allocation and equitable access to specialized care. Improved understanding of the diseases and their complications will also highlight gaps in care, improve disease awareness, and empower shared decision-making for patients and doctors. The project will be conducted within ARISE (the Aarhus University Research group for Investigating Skin disease Epidemiology), a new research initiative aimed at establishing a lasting foundation for this novel type of skin disease research and better patient care.

Dr Abildgaard Fellowship 2025

Grantee: Hans-Christian Ring, MD, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Dermatology, Zealand University Hospital

Amount: DKK 12,000,000

Grant category: LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellowships

Year: 2025

Geography: Denmark

Project: The unraveling of the cutaneous microbiome in the pathogenesis of Hidradenitis Suppurativa: A potential treatment option

Millions of humans worldwide suffer from Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS), a chronic, auto-inflammatory skin disease, causing recurrent and painful boils in sweaty places. The foul-smelling nodules are often infected by anaerobic bacteria, but it is not yet known what role bacteria play in the development and worsening of the disease. With the often-used antibiotic treatment comes antibiotic resistance, a serious threat to the individual and global health. This project aims to decipher the functionality of the skin bacteria in HS and reveal their dynamics during antibiotic treatment by using advanced molecular methods. The final goal is to develop and test a non-antibiotic treatment based on bacteria from healthy skin. The outcome is an insight into the interplay between the bacteria and human cells and a step towards a better treatment strategy in HS.

Dr Abildgaard Fellowship 2025

Grantee: Xiang Zheng, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Biomedicine, Aarhus University

Amount: DKK 12,000,000

Grant category: LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellowships

Year: 2025

Geography: Denmark

Project title: Multiplexed Imaging-Powered Deep Visual Proteomics for Precision Dermatology

Skin diseases like mycosis fungoides (a type of skin cancer), psoriasis and eczema, are often hard to diagnose and treat, leading to years of suffering for patients. This project uses cutting-edge technology to map the proteins and immune cells in skin samples at a microscopic level. By combining this with artificial intelligence, the goal is to develop tools for earlier and more accurate diagnosis. The project also explores how the skin’s microbiome (the community of microbes living on the skin) influences these diseases, paving the way for new treatments. This research will enable faster personalized diagnoses, facilitate targeted treatments, and enhance patients’ quality of life.

Dr Abildgaard Fellowship 2025

Grantee: Ann-Marie Schoos, MD, PhD, Clinical Research Associate Professor, Herlev and Gentofte Hospital/COPSAC

Amount: DKK 12,000,000

Grant category: LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellowships

Year: 2025

Geography: Denmark

Project title: Unraveling the Gut-Skin-Epigenome Axis: A Multi-Omics Approach to Early-Life Atopic Dermatitis

This project aims to uncover how gut health, immune responses, and environmental factors contribute to the development of atopic dermatitis (AD) in early life. By integrating data from the microbiome, proteins, and epigenetic changes, we will investigate how gut bacteria and their metabolites influence skin inflammation and immune regulation. We will also study how environmental exposures, like diet, stress, and pollution, leave lasting molecular “imprints” that may increase AD risk. Using data from the extensive COPSAC2010 birth cohort, we will track children from infancy to uncover early signs of AD and explore new targets for prevention and treatment. This research could pave the way for personalized, microbiome-based therapies to stop AD before it starts — shifting from managing symptoms to preventing the disease altogether.

LEO Foundation Fellows Coaching Program

Grantee: For Dr Abildgaard Fellows Stine Rønholt, Terkild Brink Buus, Aida Hansen, Rune Andersen, Stinne Ravn Greisen, Nikolai Loft, and Wenning Zheng

Amount: DKK 469,000

Grant category: LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellowships

Year: 2025

Geography: Denmark

The LEO Foundation Dr Abildgaard Fellows received a two-year leadership coaching program as an add-on grant to their existing fellowship.

The LEO Foundation Fellows Leadership Coaching Program (LCP) will help identifying the fellow’s key strengths as well as their potential key leadership obstacles and situations they find most challenging within leadership – and how to handle these situations. During the coaching sessions they will identify and train new leadership skills going forward which can help them perform even better.

Potential themes for the leadership coaching sessions could be elements from the following sections:

  • Learn more about your leadership style and get the best out of it
  • Setting up – and leading the team
  • Stakeholder Management
  • Mentoring