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New hand on the Cancer Center
tiller
New appointments place science
in the spotlight
A legend returns, in person
and on canvas
Notes
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New
hand on the Cancer Center tiller
Richard Edelson sees growth ahead for one of the country’s oldest
and proudest cancer research facilities.
When Richard L. Edelson, M.D. ’70, came to Yale in 1986
as professor and chair of the Department of Dermatology, the Yale Cancer
Center (YCC) was just a dozen years old and had fewer than 185 faculty
members in its ranks. Edelson, a physician-scientist who had developed
a treatment for a rare form of lymphoma, was one of them. By July 1 of
this year, when Edelson took office as its fifth director, the Cancer
Center had grown enormously. It now has 342 members from more than a dozen
medical school departments and oversees 18 core facilities funded by a
$2.1 million annual grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI). It
helps draw $118 million in cancer-related research funding to Yale investigators
yearly, making it one of the more vigorous cancer research engines in
the country.
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Richard Edelson is heading the Yale Cancer Center as the university and
Yale New-Haven Hospital enter a new era of collaboration and growth.
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Edelson, 58, credits that progress to two of his predecessors in the director’s
office, pharmacology pioneer Alan C. Sartorelli, Ph.D., and former NCI
Director Vincent T. DeVita Jr., M.D., HS ’66, as well as current
YCC Deputy Director José Costa, M.D. “They did the heavy
lifting,” Edelson said during an interview in mid-July. “Alan
built the reputation the center enjoys today as a powerhouse in basic
science and cancer pharmacology. And Vince, who is credited with having
cured Hodgkin’s disease and is essentially the father of combination
chemotherapy, has really laid out the framework for developing the center
into a clinical powerhouse.”

Therein lies Edelson’s main challenge. Despite a worldwide reputation
and key contributions to cancer research, Yale historically has not been
able to draw the desired volume of cancer patients, especially for all-important
clinical trials of new therapies. It was among the first centers designated
a Comprehensive Cancer Center by the NCI, but until recently has not had
the resources to meet all of its clinical goals. As a result, rumors abounded
last year that the center might even lose its NCI comprehensive designation
when the most recent five-year grant expired on June 30.

Instead, the NCI agreed to extend funding for a year. The university has
agreed to fund the core facilities for two additional years, if necessary,
while the center builds up steam and overcomes some of its growing pains.

Edelson said that is already happening. Both the university and Yale-New
Haven Hospital have pledged resources, and the director predicted a new
era of collaboration, cooperation and growth.

“I’m convinced we have the opportunity to develop field-shaping
programs in every important area of cancer care,” said Edelson,
who will remain chair of dermatology but is stepping down as deputy dean
for clinical affairs, a position he has held for the past three years.
“We have the people, we have the setting and we have the science.”

To solve a nagging space crunch in its patient areas, Edelson negotiated
the immediate renovation of 25,000 square feet of clinical space in the
Yale Physicians Building and elsewhere on campus, close to doubling the
existing clinical facility. The long-term solution to the space problem,
he said, will take the shape of a new Cancer Center building of approximately
170,000 square feet, to be open by 2007. Several possible locations around
the medical center are under discussion.

One key to growth, Edelson believes, is rebuilding the Section of Medical
Oncology, which is down in ranks but now has a new structure for appointments
and promotions and a commitment to hiring new faculty. As part of his
recruitment, Edelson gained approval to hire 18 to 24 new faculty members
in cancer-related fields, about half of whom will be medical oncologists.
“This will be the clinical engine that drives cancer care, and it
is one of the best routes for new patients into trials,” he said.
Edelson is also exploring arrangements with cancer facilities outside
Connecticut that would bring Yale discoveries to a wider public while
increasing the number of patients available for Yale trials.

“I don’t have the slightest doubt that we’re going to
quickly succeed here. If I did, I wouldn’t have taken this job,”
Edelson said.

—Michael Fitzsousa 
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New appointments
in provost’s office place science in the spotlight
New appointments in the office of Yale Provost Susan Hockfield, Ph.D.,
leave science and the medical side of campus well-represented in the upper
echelons of the university.

Andrew D. Hamilton, Ph.D., the Irénee duPont Professor of Chemistry
and professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry, has been named
the deputy provost for science and technology. Bruce F. Carmichael, M.S.N.,
Sc.D., former associate dean for resources and management at the School
of Nursing and former executive director for major projects and facilities
at the School of Medicine, is the new interim assistant provost for science
and technology. Barbara A. Shailor, Ph.D., director of the Beinecke Rare
Book and Manuscript Library, has been named deputy provost for the arts.

Hamilton’s area of focus includes the Faculty of Arts and Sciences
departments in the natural sciences.

Carmichael will oversee the natural science and engineering departments.
At the School of Medicine his major task was to oversee the initial stages
of construction at the new Anlyan Center for Medical Research and Education.

Shailor will help to shape and implement policies for the Schools of Art,
Architecture, Drama, Music and Divinity; the Institute of Sacred Music;
the Departments of History of Art, Classics and Music; the Yale University
Art Gallery; and the Center for British Art.

—John Curtis 
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Nine physicians who began their residencies at Yale under the tutelage
of Paul Beeson returned to the medical school in May to honor their mentor.
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A legend
in the annals of Yale medicine returns, in person and on canvas
When new interns in the Department of Internal Medicine arrived in July
1964, little did they know that they would be the last group to be trained
at Yale by Paul B. Beeson, M.D., then chair of the Department of Internal
Medicine. A year and three months into their training, Beeson left for
Oxford University. In May, nine of that last cadre of house staff gathered
with Beeson, his family and members of the Department of Internal Medicine
in the Historical Library for the unveiling of a portrait of the legendary
physician. Beeson, who served as department chair from 1952 to 1965, specialized
in infectious disease and discovered a class of proteins known as cytokines.
In 1996 the medical service at Yale was named “The Beeson Medical
Service” in his honor.

“No contemporary figure has had more influence on the way Western-trained
doctors practice medicine than Paul Beeson,” said John N. Forrest
Jr., M.D., HS ’67, who heads the Office of Student Research. “Paul
Beeson was revered in medicine because he promoted those around him rather
than himself, valued patients and the vocation of medicine rather than
reputation and never forgot that treating sick people and training young
physicians was a precious gift and responsibility.”

“In his presence we all felt greatness,” said Lewis Landsberg,
M.D. ’64, HS ’70, now dean of the medical school at Northwestern
University. “His humbleness stood as a sharp rebuke to the hubris
of lesser men.”

The portrait was accepted for the Department of Medicine by David Coleman,
M.D., the interim chair of the Department of Internal Medicine. “The
Beeson tradition and values continue to play a major role in the training
of students and house staff,” Coleman said. “This portrait
will be a constant reminder of that influence.” The portrait, painted
by Vermont artist Richard Whitney, will hang in Fitkin Amphitheater.

—John Curtis
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Notes
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Researchers at the School of Medicine have
received 13 grants from The National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia
and Depression (NARSAD) totaling almost $780,000. NARSAD is a leading
donor-supported organization funding worldwide research on brain disorders.
The following researchers will each receive a two-year Young Investigator
Award of approximately $60,000: Patrick B. Allen, Ph.D., assistant
professor of psychiatry; Vladimir Coric, M.D., assistant clinical
professor of psychiatry; Carrol M. D’Sa, Ph.D., associate
research scientist in psychiatry; Naomi R. Driesen, Ph.D., associate
research scientist in diagnostic radiology; Wen-Jun Gao, M.D.,
Ph.D., associate research scientist in neurobiology; Xingguang Luo,
M.D., postdoctoral associate in psychiatry; Snezana M. Milanovic,
M.D., hospital resident; Maria Mouratidis, Psy.D., postdoctoral
fellow in psychiatry; Edward B. Perry, M.D., assistant professor
of psychiatry; Samuel N. Sathyanesan, Ph.D., associate research
scientist in psychiatry; Gilles D. Tamagnan, Ph.D., assistant professor
of psychiatry adjunct; Christopher P. Turner, Ph.D., associate
research scientist in pediatrics (endocrinology); and Pieter Joost
van Wattum, M.D., Ph.D., assistant clinical professor in the Child
Study Center.

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Baron
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Roland E. Baron, D.D.S.,
Ph.D., professor of orthopaedics and cell biology, received the Louis
V. Avioli Founders Award from the American Society for Bone and Mineral
Research at its 24th annual meeting in San Antonio in September 2002.
This award is given for “fundamental contributions to bone and
mineral basic research.” Baron also received a Docteur Honoris
Causa from the Université René Descartes in Paris in December
2002. |
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Bradley
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Elizabeth H. Bradley, M.B.A., Ph.D. ’97, associate professor
in public health, is the first Yale researcher to be awarded the John
D. Thompson Prize for Young Investigators by the Association of University
Programs in Health Administration (AUPHA). The award, presented in June
at the AUPHA national meeting, recognizes investigators for their contributions
to research literature in the health services field. Bradley’s
work focuses on the quality of care provided to the elderly population.

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Caprio
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A researcher who studies metabolic
changes associated with obesity and type 2 diabetes has received the first
fellowship at Yale from the newly established Bayer Endowment for Scholars
in Medicine and Management.

Sonia Caprio, M.D., associate professor of pediatric endocrinology
and a graduate of the Universita di Medicina e Chirurgia in Naples, is
interested in the prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes among young
people. “There is a growing and serious epidemic of childhood diabetes,
especially among African-Americans and Hispanics,” she said.

The $2 million endowment from Bayer will fund a fellowship to be awarded
each year to a faculty member making significant contributions to advances
in medicine or health care management. In addition to supporting the work
of the Bayer Fellow, the Bayer Endowment will foster interaction between
Yale scientists and Bayer employees through lectures and conferences on
topics of shared interest.

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Cone
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David C. Cone, M.D., associate
professor of surgery (emergency medicine) and public health, was installed
in January as secretary/treasurer of the National Association of Emergency
Medical Service Physicians (NAEMSP). Cone has served on the NAEMSP board
of directors since 1996 and is deputy editor of Prehospital Emergency
Care, the organization’s journal. The NAEMSP provides medical
oversight and research leadership for out-of-hospital emergency care systems.

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Dardik |
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Alan Dardik, M.D., Ph.D.,
assistant professor of surgery (vascular) at Yale and assistant program
director of the department of surgery at St. Mary’s Hospital, was
awarded the Wylie Scholar Award in Academic Vascular Surgery by the Pacific
Vascular Research Foundation in San Francisco in 2002. The $150,000 multiyear
award is presented to productive scientists with independent research
programs in North America. Dardik studies the effects of the force of
flowing blood on cells in the blood vessels. |
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Jorge E. Galán,
Ph.D., D.V.M., chair and Lucille P. Markey Professor of Microbial Pathogenesis
and professor of cell biology, and Thomas A. Steitz, Ph.D., Sterling
Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, were elected in April
as fellows by the American Academy of Microbiology. Galán was honored
for his innovative use of microbial molecular genetics and molecular cell
biology to further the understanding of how microbial pathogens communicate
and interact with their animal hosts, and for his molecular genetic characterization
of the Salmonella pathogen. Steitz’s specialty is the study
of the structures of proteins and nucleic acids to determine their biological
function. His lab recently determined the atomic structure of a subunit
of the ribosome.
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Mark J. Gorman, M.D., assistant professor
of neurology, was appointed director of the Acute Brain Injury/Stroke
Program at Yale-New Haven Hospital in April. Gorman heads a coordinated
multidisciplinary stroke team, which is aimed at diagnosing and treating
stroke patients as rapidly as possible.

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Ickovics
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Jeannette R. Ickovics,
Ph.D., associate professor of epidemiology (chronic disease) and psychology,
was elected as a fellow by the American Psychological Association (APA)
for 2003. APA fellows are selected for exceptional and outstanding contributions
to the research, teaching or practice of psychology. The APA is the largest
scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the
United States and is the world’s largest association for psychologists.
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Iwasaki |
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Akiko Iwasaki, Ph.D.,
assistant professor of epidemiology and immunobiology, received the 2003
Wyeth-Lederle Vaccines Young Investigator Award in Vaccine Development
in October from the Infectious Diseases Society of America at its annual
meeting in San Diego. She also received the Ethel F. Donaghue Women’s
Health Investigator Program Award in July.
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Kickbusch |
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Ilona S. Kickbusch, Ph.D.,
professor of public health (global health) and political science, was
invited to be a member of the Hungarian Ministry of Health International
Advisory Board in January by the Republic of Hungary’s Ministry
of Health, Social and Family Affairs. This board was established to help
promote health, consolidate and modernize the health care system and reform
health care financing, as part of the government’s “Decade
of Health” initiative.
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Kitahata |
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Luke M. Kitahata, M.D.,
Ph.D., professor emeritus and former chair of anesthesiology, was honored
in November 2002 at the 50th anniversary celebration of the establishment
of the Department of Anesthesiology at Tokyo University, his alma mater.
He was the keynote speaker and received honorary membership in the Japanese
Society of Anesthesiologists. The celebration was organized by one of
his former Yale trainees, Kazuo Hanaoka, M.D., FW ’77, who is professor
and chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at Tokyo University.
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Merson |
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Michael H. Merson, M.D.,
the Anna M.R. Lauder Professor of Public Health, dean of public health
and chair of the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, was named
chair of the Global Health Committee, part of the Association of Schools
of Public Health executive committee, effective last January.
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Persing |
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John A. Persing, M.D.,
professor and chief of plastic surgery, is president-elect of the Association
of Academic Chairmen of Plastic Surgery and vice chair of the American
Board of Plastic Surgery. Both elections were held in Baltimore in May.
Persing was also named president of the American Society of Maxillofacial
Surgeons in November 2002 at its annual meeting in Orlando, Fla. |
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Schwab-Stone |
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Among those receiving Seton Elm-Ivy
Awards in April for their contributions to relations between the city
and the university was Mary E. Schwab-Stone, M.D., the Harris Associate
Professor of Child Psychiatry in the Child Study Center and associate
professor of psychology. Schwab-Stone helped to develop a clinical consultation
service for New Haven’s Special Education Department, which evaluates
between 35 and 40 children and youths each year, offers the department
advice on program and policy issues and trains new generations of child
psychiatrists on how to work in and with schools. Since 1992 she has developed
and led the Social and Health Assessment Program, which oversees the assessment
of mental health symptoms, competencies, Problem behaviors and risk factors
in the middle and high school population.
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Zhao
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Hongyu Zhao, Ph.D., the Ira V. Hiscock
Associate Professor of Public Health (Biostatistics) and Genetics, has
received a three-year, $1.2 million grant from the National Science Foundation
for a system biology study. Zhao and colleagues in statistics, genomics
and proteomics, bioinformatics and computer science will develop an integrated
approach to reconstructing biological pathways. Zhao was also awarded
a pilot grant by the Yale Center for Genomics and Proteomics, where he
and colleagues will research tissue- and cell-specific expression profiling
of the rice genome.

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