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Stem Cells, Vol. 14, No. 1, 64-65, January 1996
© 1996 AlphaMed Press


Advances in Cancer Treatment: The Chabner Symposium

Closing Remarks

Eddie Reed

Clinical Pharmacology Branch, Medical Ovarian Cancer Section, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA

Key Words. Cancer treatment • Drug development

Dr. Eddie Reed, Clinical Pharmacology Branch, Medical Ovarian Cancer Section, National Cancer Institute, Building 10, Room 12C103, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.


    Introduction
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 Introduction
 References
 
About twenty years ago, the leaders of the NCI decided to start a new branch in the Clinical Oncology Program of the Division of Cancer Treatment. That new entity was named the Clinical Pharmacology Branch (CPB), and its first leader was a brilliant, young, promising investigator named Bruce Chabner. Chabner was educated at Yale and Harvard, and appeared to have an extraordinary grasp of novel concepts that were being developed in the emerging area of cancer chemotherapy. What the NCI leaders did not fully appreciate at the time was that they had just given birth to one of the most extraordinary careers in academic medicine.

From the early seventies through the early eighties, Bruce Chabner developed a strong laboratory program that was based on scientific discovery and on the development of new talent. The CPB focused on new drug development, elucidation of drug mechanism(s) of action, and the development of new ways to use drugs that were already available. Concurrent with this laboratory effort was active participation in the development of clinical treatment regimens for Hodgkin's disease, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and other malignancies. Individuals who trained under Chabner are now cancer center directors, department heads, laboratory chiefs, and hold many other high-profile positions.

From 1981 to 1995 Bruce A. Chabner was Director of the Division of Cancer Treatment (DCT) of the NCI. In that capacity he was Scientific Director of the Intramural Program within DCT, and he had oversight responsibility for the direction of extramural studies that were funded through the NCI, which were focused on the development of new treatments for human malignant disease. The NCI has five divisions for which the NCI Director has ultimate responsibility. While working with one NCI Director from 1981 to 1988, and with another from 1988 to 1995, and during the transition year of 1988, Bruce Chabner provided stability for the Division of Cancer Treatment while many changes were occurring throughout the five divisions of the NCI.

How does one assess the impact of a career on a discipline such as cancer treatment? It's not easy! Each of the articles contributed to this tribute were written by a person who trained directly with Bruce Chabner, or was otherwise directly impacted by Bruce's guidance. As can be seen from the list of contributors to these Proceedings, each individual has made major contributions to the area of cancer treatment in his or her own right. However, Bruce's contribution to cancer treatment goes far beyond the individuals he trained. The many thousands of human lives who have benefited from his efforts cannot be accurately estimated, because his contributions have been so wide-ranging, as indicated below.

Being "Scientific Director" is similar in a number of ways to being a football quarterback. One of those ways is that when things go well the quarterback may get a little too much credit, and when things go not-so-well the quarterback may get too much blame. However, it is the quarterback who "calls the plays." With that in mind, a partial list of the accomplishments of the Intramural Program of the Division of Cancer Treatment while Bruce Chabner was "quarterback" include the following:

Further, the list above does not include his personal laboratory and clinical accomplishments, some of which are:

With all of these accomplishments, his career is long from over. Having just become the Medical Director of the Cancer Center at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Bruce Chabner is uniquely poised to have an even more far-reaching impact on a discipline in which he has played such a strong seminal role.

This author was never a postdoctoral fellow in Bruce Chabner's laboratory. However, more than any other single person, he has played a central role in my professional development. I know of many others for whom the same statement would be true. It is a pleasure for me to witness the launching of the second phase of an already tremendous career.


    References
 Top
 Introduction
 References
 

  1. Chabner BA, Collins J, eds. Cancer Chemotherapy—Principles and Practice. Philadelphia, PA: J. B. Lippincott, 1990.

Received June 16, 1995; accepted for publication June 16, 1995.




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