The story of a pale blue dot

Our story

Bluedot Bio is developing safe and effective new therapies for many solid tumors

Bluedot Bio was founded by a group of scientists, business experts and entrepreneurs to develop innovative new drugs to treat cancer and several other diseases.

Based upon research from many laboratories it is now well understood that there are several biochemical pathways whose activation is critical to cancer development. Many of these pathways lead to increased transcription of specific oncogenes. Bluedot’s technology enables the  development of new drugs that inhibit the transcription of these oncogenes resulting in cancer cell death.

Play Video

Our team

Our world-class team brings together renowned scientists and seasoned biotechnology business professionals to serve one goal: developing novel platform technologies to treat cancer and other diseases.

Check out our team advancing our breakthrough technology.

Chih-Kao Hu, Ph.D., M.B.A.
President
Qral Group Founder and CEO Dr. Chih-Kao Hu is the founder of Qral Group, a life-sciences management consulting firm that helps pre-commercial companies build commercial strategy and operations, with a focus on specialty therapeutics and rare diseases. Dr. Hu and his team have helped with the successful launches of dozens of novel pharma products, including some of the first to market gene therapy and ex-vivo cell therapy products. Prior to his consulting career, Dr. Hu conducted a significant amount of scientific research for EGF-like peptides with Nycomed Pharma AS. His work’s fundamental concept led to the discovery of the anticoagulant Angiomax (bivalirudin). In addition, Dr. Hu worked on evaluating the pharmacokinetic properties of the anti-fibrinolytic protein, Retavase (BM06.022, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator). Dr. Hu is an experienced biotech professional working for over 30 years with top pharmaceutical and biotech companies across more than 50 countries. He received an MBA from Tepper Business School and a Ph.D. in chemistry from Carnegie Mellon University.
Qral Group Founder and CEO
Raju Kucherlapati, Ph.D.
Member, Board of Directors
Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School Dr. Raju Kucherlapati is a renowned leader in the field of human genomics. He was the first Scientific Director of the Harvard Medical School-Partners Healthcare Center for Genetics and Genomics where his research focused on gene mapping, gene modification, and cloning disease genes. He has chaired numerous NIH committees and served on the National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research and the NCI Mouse Models for Human Cancer Consortium. He was also a member of the Cancer Genome Atlas project of the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Kucherlapati obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana and Champaign conducted post-doctoral work at Yale University. Dr. Kucherlapati started several biotechnology companies including Cell Genesys, Abgenix (acquired by AMGEN), and Millennium (acquired by Takeda). He serves on the Boards of several privately-held biotechnology companies and is a Board member of a publicly-traded company called Puretech Health. Prior to Harvard, Dr. Kucherlapati was the University Professor and Chair of Molecular Genetics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. Dr. Kucherlapati is a member of the National Academy of Medicine.
Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School
Sujuan Ba, Ph.D.
Member, Board of Directors
President and CEO of National Foundation for Cancer Research Dr. Sujuan Ba currently serves as President and CEO of the National Foundation for Cancer Research. She is the founding President and CEO of the AIM-HI Translational Research Fund, and the Founder and CEO of the Asian Fund for Cancer Research. In addition, Dr. Ba co-founded and serves as a founding board member of the Global Coalition for Adaptive Research (GCAR). She is also the former President of the Chinese Biopharmaceutical Association and serves on the International Consulting Committee of the China National Research Center for Translational Medicine (Shanghai). She also sits on the Scientific Advisory Boards of Medelis, Inc. (Fountain Hills, Arizona) and Immunicom Inc. (San Diego). Dr. Ba was named as one of the “Top 300 Women Leaders in Global Health” in 2015 by the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies’ Global Health Programme and was awarded the 2014 Public Service Award from the Chinese Biopharmaceutical Association–USA. Dr. Ba received her B.S. in radiochemistry from Peking University and her Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Pennsylvania.
President and CEO of National Foundation for Cancer Research
Noah Peyser, Ph.D.
Project Manager
Scientific Program Director at UCSF Dr. Noah D. Peyser is the Scientific Program Director and digital health clinical research scientist in the Division of Cardiology at UCSF. Previously, he also held positions in the UCSF Division of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, as well as the Office of Clinical Research. With a background in biochemistry, biophysics, and molecular pharmacology, his earlier studies primarily focused on basic and translational cellular signaling biology in head and neck cancer. In particular, he studied genetic and epigenetic biomarkers of response to novel therapeutics for head and neck cancer treatment and prevention, including STAT3 inhibitors. In his current role, he oversees the NIH-supported Eureka Research Platform, facilitating interdisciplinary and decentralized clinical research. He has served on the NIH Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics Tech committees on Community Health Equity & Engagement and Human Subjects & Ethics.
Scientific Program Director at UCSF
Deyri Garcia, M.P.H.
Project Manager
Qral Group Biotech Management Consultant Deyri Garcia serves as a Biotechnology Management Consultant at Qral Group where she specializes in drug asset evaluation and early-stage drug development. Prior to biotech consulting, she was involved in public health and health consulting projects working with health organizations, neighborhood clinics, and health education programs throughout the East Coast. Previously, she served as a Public Health Coordinator at Yale University while pursuing her Master’s in Public Health. In this role, she aided in the development and implementation of public health practices for Yale during the inception of the COVID-19 pandemic. Garcia has over 5 years of experience in the laboratory setting, including prestigious research fellowships at both Yale University and Stanford University. Her intellectual curiosity drove a wide scope of research fields ranging from neuroscience, infectious disease, and green chemistry. In her most recent role, she conducted chemical composition analysis on flavored vape products to identify and quantify what substances are found in e-liquids. This two-year research program accumulated in two publications and presentations at national conferences. At Bluedot Bio, she serves as a project manager and biotech consultant working with senior executives to expedite the development of the lead drug programs and support the strategic growth of the novel biotech company.
Qral Group Biotech Management Consultant
Mary Sawyer, B.A.
Consultant
Qral Group Biotech Management Consultant Mary Sawyer is a Management Consultant at Qral Group, a life-sciences management consulting firm that helps pre-commercial companies build commercial strategy and operations. Prior to working with Qral, she was a researcher at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in the Center for Computational and Systems Pathology. During her time at Icahn, she helped build a technology that uses digital image-based AI methods to optimize choice of therapy for cancer and chronic diseases, which became the platform for the biotech start-up, PreciseDx. With a background in neuroscience, biomedical and clinical research, she helped build the first integrative database that was essential to developing the outcome-based assays now featured in the press as the first proven to detect Early-Stage Parkinson’s Disease. Prior to working in the computational pathology field, she was part of a clinical research team at Maine Medical Center where she led the successful implementation of the team’s published recommendations to increase the use of Quantitative Pupillometry in the ICU to track and predict comatose patients’ neurological outcome. Collectively, she has over 5 years of experience in biomedical and clinical research and has authored several publications. In her current role with Bluedot Bio, she provides operational support and serves as a consultant to the company.
Qral Group Biotech Management Consultant

Our Scientific Advisory Board

Bruce E. Johnson, M.D.
SAB Chair
Institute Physician, Professor of Medicine, Adult Oncology at Harvard Medical School and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Past President, American Society of Clinical Oncology Dr. Bruce Johnson is the Chief Clinical Research Officer at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Leader of the Lung Cancer Program for the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center. He is a Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and an Institute Physician at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Dr. Johnson served on the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Board of Directors from 2008 to 2011 and was elected ASCO President for the 2017-2018 term. Dr. Johnson has published over two hundred and forty research articles on a variety of topics, including the molecular basis of lung cancers and the development of targeted therapies for patients with specific genomic alterations in lung cancer. He is one of the investigators who discovered epidermal growth factor receptor mutations which have enhanced the treatment of lung cancer around the world. His research is devoted to testing novel therapeutic agents for their efficacy against lung cancer and other thoracic malignancies. Dr. Johnson completed his Medical Oncology training at the National Cancer Institute, where he served as an NCI faculty member from 1985 to 1998 and head of their Lung Cancer Biology section for six years. He received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University, his medical degree from the University of Minnesota, and trained in Internal Medicine at the University of Chicago.
Institute Physician, Professor of Medicine, Adult Oncology at Harvard Medical School and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Past President, American Society of Clinical Oncology
Jennifer R. Grandis, M.D.
American Cancer Society Professor, Professor, Otolaryngology Surgeon at University of California, San Francisco Dr. Jennifer R. Grandis is a physician scientist whose research is focused on elucidating and targeting key signaling pathways and genomic alterations in head and neck cancer with the goals of enabling precision medicine studies. She has leveraged her access to head and neck cancer (HNC) patients and their biospecimens to optimize translational research studies that include developing novel therapies in the laboratory for clinical application as well as generating and interrogating relevant preclinical models to determine the underlying mechanism of clinical findings. In her institutional roles at the University of Pittsburgh and since 2015, at UCSF, she has facilitated collaborations between clinicians and investigators with an emphasis of developing a robust research infrastructure to support clinical and translational cancer studies. She has published over 350 papers and she has been continuously funded by the NIH since joining the faculty in 1993. Dr. Grandis is an elected member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation the Association of American Physicians and the National Academy of Medicine. She is an American Cancer Society Clinical Research Professor.
American Cancer Society Professor, Professor, Otolaryngology Surgeon at University of California, San Francisco
Raju Kucherlapati, Ph.D.
Paul C. Cabot Professor of Genetics, Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School Dr. Raju Kucherlapati is a renowned leader in the field of human genomics. He was the first Scientific Director of the Harvard Medical School-Partners Healthcare Center for Genetics and Genomics where his research focused on gene mapping, gene modification, and cloning disease genes. He has chaired numerous NIH committees and served on the National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research and the NCI Mouse Models for Human Cancer Consortium. He was also a member of the Cancer Genome Atlas project of the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Kucherlapati obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana and Champaign conducted post-doctoral work at Yale University. Dr. Kucherlapati started several biotechnology companies including Cell Genesys, Abgenix (acquired by AMGEN), and Millennium (acquired by Takeda). He serves on the Boards of several privately-held biotechnology companies and is a Board member of a publicly-traded company called Puretech Health. Prior to Harvard, Dr. Kucherlapati was the University Professor and Chair of Molecular Genetics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. Dr. Kucherlapati is a member of the National Academy of Medicine.
Paul C. Cabot Professor of Genetics, Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School
Gordon B. Mills, M.D., Ph.D.
Wayne and Julie Drinkwed Professor of Cell Development and Cancer Biology at University of Oregon Health Sciences Center Dr. Gordon Mills is the Director of Precision Oncology and SMMART trials at the Knight Cancer Institute at the Oregon Health Sciences University. Prior to moving to the Knight Cancer Institute, Dr. Mills was at the MD Anderson Cancer Center, the number one ranked Cancer Center in the United States. He fulfilled multiple roles including founding chair of the Department of Systems Biology, co-Director of the Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan Institute for Personalized Cancer Therapy, co-Director of the Kleberg Center for Molecular Markers and held the Olga Keith Wiess Distinguished University Chair for Cancer Research at the MD Anderson Cancer Center. Dr. Mills’ research is wide-ranging but focuses on translating the cancer genome through mechanistic studies to determine the role of genomics and other aberrations present in patient tumors. The overarching goal of Dr. Mills research is to perform deep molecular analysis of each patient “to let the patient teach us what is important”. Dr. Mills is recognized as one of the most highly quoted scientists in the world with over 1000 publications and more than 20 patents. Mentorship is important to Dr. Mills, and he takes great pleasure in training and supporting young scientists. Dr. Mills was awarded multiple mentoring awards, including the Stand Up 2 Cancer Laura Ziskin Prize for Mentoring. Dr. Mills earned his M.D. and Ph.D. in biochemistry and completed his training in Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Alberta.
Wayne and Julie Drinkwed Professor of Cell Development and Cancer Biology at University of Oregon Health Sciences Center
Daniel E. Johnson, Ph.D.
Professor and Vice-Chair of Research, Department of Otolaryngology at University of California, San Francisco Dr. Daniel E. Johnson is a biochemist whose research is focused on identifying cellular signaling pathways that contribute to cancer and the acquisition of drug resistance. Using the knowledge he derives from his studies he develops new therapeutic agents and strategies for the prevention and treatment of cancer. He places important emphasis on translating findings from his laboratory to the clinic and has facilitated the development of clinical trials in both leukemia and head and neck cancer. While a faculty member at the University of Pittsburgh (1993-2016), Dr. Johnson served as Scientific Director of the Acute Leukemia Working Group. Since 2016, he has been on faculty at the University of California at San Francisco, where he currently serves as Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. He has published over 130 papers, is Editor of two books, and has maintained continuous NIH funding for his research since 1995. He has served on multiple NIH Study Sections and is currently serving on the Board of Scientific Counselors for the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
Professor and Vice-Chair of Research, Department of Otolaryngology at University of California, San Francisco
Elizabeth M. Jaffee, M.D.
Professor Oncology and Deputy Director at Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at John Hopkins Dr. Jaffee is a Professor of Pathology, renowned oncology researcher, and co-director of both the Cancer Immunology Program and the Gastrointestinal Cancers Program at Johns Hopkins University. After her arrival to Johns Hopkins in 1989, Dr. Jaffee established the Cell Processing and Gene Therapy cGMP Facility. In 2015, Dr. Jaffee was appointed deputy director of the Kimmel Cancer Center and was also the co-director of the Skip Viragh Center for Pancreas Cancer Clinical Research and Patient Care. In addition, she is on the scientific advisory council for the Cancer Research Institute and Team Leader for the Stand Up To Cancer Pancreatic Dream Team research project: Transforming Pancreatic Cancer from Death Sentence to Treatable Disease. Dr. Jaffee’s research is focused on the development of novel vaccine approaches that overcome immune tolerance to cancers, and she currently holds six vaccine patents. Dr. Jaffee has completed multiple studies testing an allogeneic tumor vaccine in patients with pancreatic cancer who were eligible for complete surgical resection of their tumors. Today, Dr. Elizabeth M. Jaffee is considered an international leader in the development of immune-based therapies for pancreatic and breast cancers. In 1981, she graduated magna cum laude from Brandeis University before receiving her medical degree from New York Medical College. From 1985-1988 she completed her medical residency at Presbyterian-University Hospital in Pittsburgh, PA, and subsequently received a National Institutes of Health Research Training Grant as a research fellow and principal investigator at the University of Pittsburgh.
Professor Oncology and Deputy Director at Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at John Hopkins
Jeremiah A. Johnson, Ph.D.
Professor of Chemistry at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dr. Jeremiah Johnson is a Professor and research scientist in Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)’s Department of Chemistry where he develops novel polymeric materials for drug delivery, energy, and other applications. Dr. Johnson co-founded Window Therapeutics in 2021 centered on his invention and development of the proprietary Brush-Analogue Conjugate (BAC) technology: a novel, modular, proprietary Brush-Polymer Based technology. Dr. Johnson conducted undergraduate research with Professor Karen L. Wooley at Washington University in St. Louis, where he received a BS in Biomedical Engineering with a second major in Chemistry. He then moved to Columbia University, where he received a PhD in Chemistry under the mentorship of Professor Nicholas J. Turro. Later, he held a Beckman Postdoctoral Fellowship at California Institute of Technology under the guidance of Professors David A. Tirrell and Robert H. Grubbs. Dr. Johnson joined MIT in July, 2011 and is a recognized leader in polymer research with over 80 publications, over 6,000 citations, and an h-index of 39. The Johnson Lab and Research Group at MIT is focused on the development of methods and strategies for macromolecular synthesis and surface functionalization.
Professor of Chemistry at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Our Clinical Advisory Board

Julie E. Bauman, M.D., MPH
CAB Chair
Professor of Medicine and Director of the George Washington Cancer Center Dr. Julie Bauman recently joined George Washington University (GW) as their new Director of the GW Cancer Center and professor of medicine in the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences (SMHS). Previously Dr. Bauman resided at the University of Arizona (UA) College of Medicine-Tucson, where she served as professor of medicine, chief of hematology/oncology, and medical director of oncology services. Dr. Bauman also served as the deputy director of the UA Comprehensive Cancer Center and co-leader of its Clinical and Translational Oncology Program, which brings together basic and clinical scientists to transform scientific discoveries into clinical applications. Bauman was also the co-principal investigator of the UA Cancer Prevention Clinical Trials Network, one of only five NCI-funded clinical trial networks devoted to drug development for cancer prevention. Her own research focuses on so-called “green chemoprevention,” or the use of whole plants or their extracts for cancer prevention. Bauman leads multiple national clinical trials for the treatment of head and neck cancer, with dedicated expertise in precision medicine and immunotherapy. She is the current co-chair of the NCI Cancer Prevention Steering Committee as well as the co-chair of the NCI Head and Neck Steering Committee’s PULA Task Force. Dr. Bauman completed a dual MD/MPH degree at Tufts University School of Medicine, an internal medicine residency at the University of Utah, and medical oncology fellowship at the University of Washington/Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. Her education and training, at the intersection of oncology and public health, resulted in unique expertise in clinical trial design. As a recipient of the prestigious National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Cancer Institute (NCI) Clinical Investigator Team Leadership Award, Bauman is a nationally recognized leader in cancer therapeutics for both prevention and treatment, with more than 150 publications and a long track record of NIH team science funding.
Professor of Medicine and Director of the George Washington Cancer Center
Antonio Jimeno, M.D., Ph.D.
Director of Head and Neck Cancer Clinical Research Program at the University of Colorado Cancer Center Jimeno is director of the Head and Neck Cancer Clinical Research Program at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, a member of the Gates Center for Regenerative Medicine, and the Daniel and Janet Mordecai Endowed Chair for Cancer Stem Cell Research at the CU School of Medicine. Dr. Jimeno’s research focuses on studying how head and neck cancer stem cells trick the immune system. One of his current projects constitutes developing new animal models for melanoma that allow the study and testing of immunotherapies against cancer. Jimeno’s solution has been to transplant a human immune system along with human tumor samples to create “humanized” animal models. These models with both cancer and an intact immune system allow researchers to test the ability of new drugs and treatments to turn the immune system against cancer. Dr. Jimeno graduated from the University of Valladolid School of Medicine in 1998 with his medical degree, and the Complutense University of Madrid in 2003 with his PhD. He completed his residency and fellowship program at Complutense University of Madrid. Dr. Jimeno did a second fellowship at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Program until 2006.
Director of Head and Neck Cancer Clinical Research Program at the University of Colorado Cancer Center
Christine Chung, M.D.
Chair of the Department of Head and Neck-Endocrine Oncology at the Moffitt Cancer Center Dr. Christine Chung is a medical oncologist, researcher, and chair of the Department of Head and Neck-Endocrine Oncology at the Moffitt Cancer Center since 2015. Prior to Moffitt, Dr. Chung was an associate professor in the Department of Oncology at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Dr. Chung’s laboratory is accredited for being among the first to recognize the importance of human papillomavirus (HPV) in the etiology of certain head and neck cancers. This data provided evidence that HPV-positive tumors may be more sensitive to chemotherapy and molecular inhibitors that specifically target cell cycle. In addition, her research findings contributed to establish the prognostic implication of HPV status. Patients with HPV-positive HNC have a better prognosis compared to patients with HPV-negative HNC. Dr. Chung is conducting clinical trials to develop less toxic but effective molecularly targeted agents which can potentially benefit this subset of HNC patients. Dr. Chung attended University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) for her undergraduate studies where she majored in biochemistry. She earned her master’s in interdisciplinary science studies with a focus in molecular biology at Johns Hopkins University and her medical degree at Eastern Virginia Medical School. Dr. Chung completed her residency and fellowship in internal medicine and medical oncology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. It was in the last year of her fellowship in Chapel Hill that Dr. Chung began focusing on head and neck cancers.
Chair of the Department of Head and Neck-Endocrine Oncology at the Moffitt Cancer Center
Ezra Cohen, M.D.
Co-director of Precision Immunotherapy Clinic at UC San Diego Health Moores Cancer Center Dr. Ezra Cohen is the co-director of Precision Immunotherapy Clinic, associate director for translational science, and the leader of the Solid Tumor Therapeutics research program at UC San Diego Health’s Moores Cancer Center. As a physician-scientist, Dr. Cohen also leads a laboratory that studies novel cancer treatments, including immunotherapy, and has significantly contributed to understanding how targeted cancer therapies work. Much of his work has focused on squamous cell carcinomas and cancers of the thyroid, salivary gland, and HPV-related oropharyngeal cancers recent National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded work in the study of epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors in head and neck cancer has contributed to the understanding of the biology of this critical signaling network, integration of these agents into the standard of care, and definition of mechanisms to overcome resistance. Cohen has authored more than 170 peer-reviewed papers and has been the principal investigator of multiple clinical trials of new drugs for head and neck cancer and other solid tumors in all phases of development. Dr. Cohen completed a hematology/oncology fellowship at the University of Chicago, where he was named chief fellow. He completed residencies in family medicine at the University of Toronto and in internal medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Dr. Cohen earned his medical degree at the University of Toronto. He is board certified in medical oncology, and a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (FRCPSC) and the American Society of Clinical Oncology (FASCO). Dr. Cohen recently served as editor-in-chief of Oral Oncology, the most respected specialty journal in head and neck cancer. In addition, he has served as a grant reviewer for the NIH, American Association for Cancer Research, American Society of Clinical Oncology, and the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research.
Co-director of Precision Immunotherapy Clinic at UC San Diego Health Moores Cancer Center
Robert Haddad, M.D.
Chief of the Division of Head and Neck Oncology and McGraw Chair in Head and Neck Oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Dr. Robert Haddad is a medical oncologist, professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Chief of the Division of Head and Neck Oncology and McGraw Chair in Head and Neck Oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Dr. Haddad current research involves the use of concurrent and sequential chemoradiotherapy regimens for patients with locally advanced and metastatic head and neck cancer. He is leading numerous trials of novel agents in head and neck cancer, particularly in the areas of immunotherapy and novel biologic agents. Further, his research interests also include the role of the human papillomavirus (HPV) as a cause of head and neck cancer, particularly in the effect of such infection on treatment and prognosis and in the search for HPV-related biomarkers that can be useful for early detection, risk stratification, and detection of early relapse. Dr. Haddad is a member of several professional societies, including the American Society of Clinical Oncology, American Association for Cancer Research, European Society of Medical al Oncology, and the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology. Dr. Haddad lectures extensively on head and neck cancer, both on the national and international level, and has authored over 169 publications. Dr Haddad received his MD Degree from St. Joseph University French School of Medicine in Beirut. He completed his residency in internal medicine at St Luke’s Roosevelt Medical Center in New York City and completed a fellowship in hematology oncology at the University of Maryland Cancer Center in Baltimore.
Chief of the Division of Head and Neck Oncology and McGraw Chair in Head and Neck Oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Hyunseok Kang, M.D., MPH
Medical oncologist and researcher at UC-San Francisco Dr. Hyunseok Kang, who goes by Hyu, is a medical oncologist and researcher who cares for adults with head and neck cancers at UC-San Francisco. Dr. Kang’s research focuses on evaluating new therapies for head and neck cancers through clinical trials. He studies how to improve the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors (drugs that turn off the ability of some cancer cells to evade detection by immune system cells) with combination approaches to treating head and neck squamous cell carcinomas. He is also working on developing targeted approaches to treat rare cancers of the head and neck, such as salivary gland cancers. Prior to joining UCSF, Kang worked as a medical oncologist at the Johns Hopkins Hospital and served as an assistant professor of oncology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Kang is a fellow of the American College of Physicians. He is a member of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, American Association for Cancer Research, Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer, and American Thyroid Association. He also serves on specialty head and neck committees for NRG Oncology and the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group–American College of Radiology Imaging Network. Dr. Kang earned his medical degree at Yonsei University College of Medicine in Seoul, South Korea. He went on to earn a master’s degree in public health, epidemiology, and statistics from Yonsei University Graduate School of Public Health. He completed his residency in internal medicine at Mount Sinai St. Luke’s and Mount Sinai West, followed by a fellowship in hematology and medical oncology at Emory University School of Medicine.
Medical oncologist and researcher at UC-San Francisco
Barbara Burtness, M.D.
Professor of Medicine at the Yale School of Medicine and Director of the Yale Head and Neck Specialized Program of Research Excellence Dr. Barbara Burtness is a Professor of Medicine at the Yale School of Medicine and Interim Associate Director for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at the Yale Cancer Center. She serves as Co-Leader of the Developmental Therapeutics Program, Leader of the Disease Aligned Research for Head and Neck Cancer, and Director of the Yale Head and Neck Specialized Program of Research Excellence. Dr. Burtness chairs the ECOG-ACRIN Cooperative Group Head and Neck Cancer Therapeutics Committee and leads national and international trials of targeted therapy in head and neck cancer. Her laboratory studies synthetic lethal therapeutic strategies in head and neck cancer and the targeting of aurora kinase A to overcome adaptive resistance to EGFR inhibition and - in lung cancer- to direct KRAS inhibition. Dr. Burtness completed her Bachelor of Arts degree at Bryn Mawr College before enrolling at Stony Brook University for her medical degree. She completed her internship and residency at Yale New Haven Hospital and her fellowship at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Following her fellowship in 1993, Burtness returned to Yale University as an oncologist and cancer researcher until 2008 when she became the Chief of head and neck oncology at the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. In 2014, she returned to Yale where she remains to this day.
Professor of Medicine at the Yale School of Medicine and Director of the Yale Head and Neck Specialized Program of Research Excellence
Lilian Siu, M.D.
Professor of Medicine and Director of the Phase I Program at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre Dr. Lilian Siu has been a senior medical oncologist at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre since 1998 and has been a Professor of Medicine at the University of Toronto since 2009. She is the Director of the Phase I Program and Co-Director of the Bras and Family Drug Development Program at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and holds the BMO Chair in Precision Genomics (2016-2026). She is also the Clinical Lead for the Tumor Immunotherapy Program at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre. Dr. Siu served on the Board of Directors for the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) for a four-year term (2012-2016). Dr. Siu’s major research focus is on new anticancer drug development, particularly with respect to phase I trials and head and neck malignancies. In addition to her active research in early-phase clinical trials, Dr. Siu has been leading genomics initiatives and immuno-oncology trials at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre. Dr. Siu has published over 280 peer-reviewed manuscripts, and she is currently a scientific editor for Cancer Discovery and is on the editorial board for JAMA Oncology. Dr. Siu obtained her medical degree at the University of Toronto, completed her fellowship at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, and completed drug development fellowships at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and the University of Texas Science Center San Antonio.
Professor of Medicine and Director of the Phase I Program at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre