Turning Points

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  • Johanna Joyce received her PhD from the University of Cambridge, and did postdoctoral research at the University of California, San Francisco. She then joined the faculty at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, becoming a tenured member in 2014. She moved to Switzerland in 2016, where she later served as the inaugural executive director of the Agora Cancer Center Lausanne. She is currently a member of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and a professor at the University of Lausanne.

    • Johanna A. Joyce
    Turning Points
  • Anirban Maitra obtained his medical degree from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, in 1996; this was followed by residency and fellowships in pathology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore. From 2002 to 2013, he served as faculty in the departments of pathology and oncology at Johns Hopkins, before being recruited to the MD Anderson Cancer Center as Professor of Pathology and Translational Molecular Pathology and Scientific Director of the Sheikh Ahmed Center for Pancreatic Cancer Research.

    • Anirban Maitra
    Turning Points
  • Rebecca Fitzgerald completed her medical degree at the University of Cambridge, followed by doctoral research at Stanford University, and then postdoctoral research alongside specialist training in gastroenterology at Barts and the London Hospitals. She started her own independent group the MRC Cancer Unit in 2001 with an honorary gastroenterology consultant position at Addenbrooke’s Hospital. In 2014, she was elected to chair in cancer prevention, and in 2022 inaugural director of the department of oncology at the Early Cancer Institute, University of Cambridge.

    • Rebecca Fitzgerald
    Turning Points
  • Charles Swanton obtained a PhD from the Imperial Cancer Research Fund Laboratories (now the Francis Crick Institute) in 1998 and completed his medical oncology and Cancer Research UK (CRUK)-funded postdoctoral clinical scientist training in 2008. He was appointed chair in personalized cancer medicine at the UCL Cancer Institute, and consultant thoracic medical oncologist at UCL Hospitals in 2011. In 2016, he was awarded a Napier Professor in Cancer by the Royal Society, and in 2017 he was appointed principal group leader of the Francis Crick Institute. He is co-director of the Cancer Research UK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, and chief clinician of Cancer Research UK.

    • Charles Swanton
    Turning Points
  • Charles Rudin completed his MD, PhD, medical and oncology training at the University of Chicago, where he joined the department of medicine faculty in 1998. He directed the lung, esophageal and head and neck cancer program at Johns Hopkins University from 2003 to 2013, while also serving as associate cancer center director for clinical research. He joined Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in 2013 as chief of thoracic oncology, co-director of the Druckenmiller Center for Lung Cancer Research, and the Sylvia Hassenfeld Chair in Lung Cancer Research.

    • Charles M. Rudin
    Turning Points
  • Mark A. Dawson obtained his medical degree from the University of Melbourne, followed by a PhD from the University in Cambridge. From 2010 to 2014, he was a Wellcome-Beit fellow at the University of Cambridge, and thereafter he joined the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre as a consultant hematologist and group leader of the cancer epigenetics laboratory. In 2016, he was appointed co-program head of the Cancer Biology and Therapeutics Program, and in 2019 as associate director for research.

    • Mark A. Dawson
    Turning Points
  • Elaine R. Mardis earned her PhD at the University of Oklahoma, in the laboratory of Bruce Roe. After postgraduate work at Bio-Rad Laboratories in California, she joined the Washington University School of Medicine faculty in 1993. In 2016, she moved to Nationwide Children’s Hospital and is a Professor of Pediatrics at The Ohio State University. She was elected to the US National Academy of Medicine in 2019.

    • Elaine R. Mardis
    Turning Points