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Ten trailblazers with ties to Johns Hopkins University who have become leaders in their fields have been named to the Forbes30 Under 30” list for 2019.

The list, now in its eighth year, celebrates leaders in 20 different industries who represent, according to the magazine’s editors, “a collection of bold risk-takers putting a new twist on the old tools of the trade.” This year, the magazine received more than 15,000 applications and consulted with journalists and industry experts to compile the list of 600 honorees.

Members of the list with connections to Johns Hopkins Engineering are:

Joshua Cohen

Category: Health care | Read Forbes profile

Cohen is pursuing his PhD at Johns Hopkins in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, where he is mentored by Bert Vogelstein and Ken Kinzler, co-directors of the Ludwig Center. Cohen works to develop diagnostics for the early detection of cancer.

Hasini Jayatilaka

Category: Science | Read Forbes profile

Jayatilaka received her bachelor’s degree in chemical and biomolecular engineering in 2013 from Johns Hopkins, where she discovered a signaling pathway that controls how cancer cells metastasize and developed therapeutics to block that signal.

Adegoke Olubusi

Category: Health care | Read Forbes profile

Olubusi received his master’s degree in engineering management from Johns Hopkins in 2016. He is part of the three-person team of Nigerian entrepreneurs who founded Helium Health, which aims to digitize patient records and hospital bills, even in resource-poor areas.

Luke Osborn

Category: Science | Read Forbes profile

Luke Osborn, who is pursuing his PhD at Johns Hopkins in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, developed an electronic “skin” that can be applied to prosthetic limbs to recreate the sense of pressure and pain.

Raja Srinivas

Category: Health care | Read Forbes profile

Srinivas received his bachelor’s degree in biomedical engineering in 2011. In 2017, Srinivas cofounded the synthetic biology startup Asimov, which aims to reprogram living cells using networks of DNA-encoded genes that can sense and respond to the environment.

David West and Nathan Buchbinder

Category: Health care | Read Forbes profile

West and Buchbinder both graduated from Johns Hopkins with their bachelor’s degrees in biomedical engineering. West, who graduated in 2016, recruited his childhood friend Coleman Stavish to join Buchbinder, who graduated in 2015, in an artificial intelligence venture that speeds up pathology tests for cancer patients.

Adapted from The Hub. Click here to read the full list.