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  • JAX-GM Seminar: Dr. Christos Hatzis 1p

    Presenter: Christos Hatzis, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine; Director of Bioinformatics, Breast Medical Oncology, Yale Comprehensive Cancer Center, Yale School of Medicine

    The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine Leo Holt Conference Room

    1:00 pm

    Title: “Intratumor and clonal heterogeneity in breast cancer: characterization and implications”

    Biography: Dr. Hatzis has over 20 years of experience in senior research and management roles in biocomputational techniques, systems biology modeling, genomic analysis and clinical diagnostics. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota and held several senior research roles in the biotechnology industry. He has been the cofounder of two startup companies specializing in bioinformatics tools development and in clinical diagnostics. He is currently in the faculty of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine at the Yale School of Medicine.
    Dr. Hatzis had been an active member of the Biostatistics committee of FDA's Microarray QC program, co-investigator on the NCI Cancer Biospecimen Integrity program and co-investigator on serveral studies by Breast Cancer Foundations. Among his most significant contributions are the co-development with colleagues from MD Anderson of the RCB index, a continuous index of residual disease in breast cancer, and the development of a gene-expression based prognostic signature for patients treated with standard chemotherapy that accounts for phenotypic differences and integrates endocrine sensitivity, and chemotherapy response and resistance endpoints.
    Dr. Hatzis continues to be involved in the design of biomarker validation clinical studies and development of strategies for translating genomic diagnostic assays to clinical practice. His current research interests focus on developing methods to characterize the genetic and molecular heterogeneity of breast cancer subtypes and the implications it might have on response and resistance to treatment. A key area of interest is to develop methodology that integrates genomic level information of individual patients to lead to more focused treatment decisions tailored for the individual tumor.
    Dr. Hatzis is serving as academic editor on biomarker journals, has been a reviewer on NCI and NSF panes and is serving as ad-hoc reviewer on several bioinformatics and clinical journals.

    Visit Dr. Hatzis’ web site at: https://medicine.yale.edu/intmed/people/specialtypeople/christos_hatzis.profile

    For more information, contact: Julie Yarmolovich at julie.yarmolovich@jax.org