Our Stories
Toward Infinite possibility
December 18, 2024
Share:
After storied career, KU Pharmacy Professor Emeritus Valentino Stella is focused on the impact his work has on others
Emily Becker
Senior Digital Media Strategist | KU Endowment

The research and teaching career of Dr. Valentino Stella has spanned over four decades. He holds 59 U.S. patents and is the inventor or co-inventor of seven drugs that are currently on the market, three of which were developed while he was a faculty member at the KU School of Pharmacy. 

Stella believes that his greatest accomplishment is the impact he’s made on the lives of others; an impact that ranges from the global to the personal. He estimates his work on one of the earliest drugs to treat AIDS has saved 5-10 million people. 

However, it’s a more personal story of the implication of his work that has stuck with him the most. When Rob Myers’ daughter was rushed to a hospital after a fall, she was treated with an anti-seizure drug. Myers was an undergraduate Pharmacy student at KU, and he helped Stella develop the drug that eventually helped his daughter.

“Thinking about the forever is so important,” Stella said. “If you want to have your name on a building, remember that building will be torn down. When you give a scholarship to a kid and they go on and save millions of lives, that’s forever.” 

Supporting researchers and fueling innovation are two of the School of Pharmacy’s priorities in the current campus fundraising campaign. Learn more and make a gift to the KU School of Pharmacy. 

MORE STORIES

KU Athletics receives historic $300 million gift from longtime donor and alumnus David Booth 
Longtime donor, investing pioneer and KU alumnus provides fuel for Gateway District’s Phase II and ignites next era of excellence across KU Athletics programs in perpetuity
Paul and Linda DeBruce provide $25 million gift for KU Gateway District 
KU alumni’s generous gift sparked by fond game-day memories, a passion for giving back and an eye for economic growth opportunities 
Fueling futures: How scholarships helped a KU Ph.D. candidate research rocket engines
For aerospace engineering Ph.D. candidate Brody Gatza, coming to the University of Kansas was an easy decision. Gatza, a native Kansan, said he was drawn to KU for both his undergraduate and graduate studies because of its great aerospace engineering program and generous scholarships.