Apr
10
Wed
Medicine Grand Rounds Blume Memorial Lecture: Twenty-five years of Progress in the Clinical Art of Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation @ LKSC Berg Hall
Apr 10 @ 8:00 am – 9:00 am
Medicine Grand Rounds Blume Memorial Lecture: Twenty-five years of Progress in the Clinical Art of Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation @ LKSC Berg Hall | Palo Alto | California | United States

Presenter: Fred Appelbaum, MD

Professor of Medical Oncology, University of Washington

Executive Vice President and Deputy Director, External Affairs, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

Dr. Appelbaum is the executive director of SCCA. His work centers on the biology and treatment of acute myeloid leukemia.

Decades of working with cancer patients teaches you to savor everyday pleasures like the teasing notes of coriander and cumin in a simmering pot of curry or getting to hug your child, and it fortifies his resolve to keep moving cancer care forward. He’s determined to improve screening, enhance treatment and stop cancer from returning.

As a medical student in the early 1970s, Dr. Appelbaum happened upon Dr. E. Donnall Thomas’ initial description of bone-marrow transplantation in a medical journal. The pioneering technique eventually earned Thomas the Nobel Prize and transformed leukemia and related cancers, once thought incurable, into highly treatable diseases with survival rates as high as 90 percent.

Bone-marrow transplants became the cornerstone of the newly formed Hutchinson Center, and it wasn’t long before Dr. Appelbaum was recruited to join Thomas’ team of medical mavericks in Seattle making historic inroads against blood cancers.

Now, he holds the job that Thomas once held, and he has spent decades building on Thomas’ groundbreaking innovations. Dr. Appelbaum has been an innovator in his own right, refining transplant procedures, conducting clinical trials and caring for patients.

Part of that job is extending the Hutch’s patient research beyond transplants. We’ve expanded our role in the more common solid tumors and have created nontransplant approaches to blood cancers. We’ve made substantial gains in treating prostate, colon, pancreatic, lung, breast and ovarian cancers, but we have a long way to go.

Dec
4
Wed
Medicine Grand Rounds: Optimizing Bone Health in Breast Cancer @ LKSC Berg Hall
Dec 4 @ 8:00 am – 9:00 am
Medicine Grand Rounds: Optimizing Bone Health in Breast Cancer @ LKSC Berg Hall | Palo Alto | California | United States

Presenter: Joy Wu, MD

Assistant Professor of Endocrinology, Stanford University

Joy Wu, MD, is a board-certified endocrinologist with over 12 years’ experience who specializes in treating women and men with osteoporosis and other bone and mineral diseases, including primary hyperparathyroidism, vitamin D deficiency, Paget’s disease and fibrous dysplasia. She has a special interest in optimizing skeletal health for those at risk of bone loss from glucocorticoid treatment, cancer therapies, or organ transplant. She works closely with each individual and his/her referring physician to assess fracture risk, and to develop a tailored treatment and monitoring plan.

Wu directs a broad basic and translational research program that focuses on skeletal development and the bone marrow hematopoietic niche. Her laboratory is currently studying stem cell therapies for bone formation, and the prevention of cancer metastases to bone (joywulab.stanford.edu). She has been honored with awards from the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award, the Endocrine Society, the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research, and the Mary Kay Foundation. Dr. Wu is committed to training the next generation of physician scientists, and serves as Co-Director of the Stanford Internal Medicine Translational Investigator Program.