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Research Appreciation Celebration Awards and Recognition Ceremony

On June 26, the BRI and ORC honored Brigham researchers and research staff at this summer celebration. Below are a list of all those who were recognized at the ceremony. Congratulations and thank you to all!

President’s Scholars Awardees

Ana C. Anderson, PhD, Department of Neurology

Georg Gerber, MD, PhD, MPH, Department of Pathology

Jessica Lasky-Su, ScD, Department of Pathology

Tracy Young-Pearse, PhD, Department of Neurology

 

BRI Director Service Award

Rick Blumberg, MD

 

Fund to Sustain Research Excellence Reviewers

Jon Aster

Raina Fichorova

Guillermo Garcia-Cardena

Seoyoung Kim

Matt Lavoie

Ed Nardell

Martha Shenton

Emily Stern

 

Limited Submission Application Internal Review Committee

Nancy Berliner

Rick Blumber

Rona Carroll

Assunta De Rienzo

Charles Dimitroff

Heather Eliassen

Mel Feany

Bruce Kristal

Cyndi Lemere

Steve Mentzer

Ellen Seely

Charlie Serhan

Meir Stampfer

Matt Waldor

 

Ad Hoc Grant Reviewers

Gail Adler

Nathalie Agar

Natalie Artzi

Monica Bertagnolli

Richard Blumberg

Joshua Boyce

Michael Brenner

Katherine Burdick

Julia Charles

Laurie Comstock

Ulf Dettmer

Charles Dimitroff

Daniela Dinulescu

Elazer Edelman

Mark Feinberg

Mihaela Gadjeva

Julie Glowacki

Jeffrey Golden

Aaron Goldman

Andreas Gomoll

Anna Greka

Jose Halperin

Kun Hu

Eliott Israel

Oliver Jonas

Jeffrey Karp

Raouf Khalil

Bruce Kristal

Thomas Kupper

Daniel Kuritzkes

Adam Landman

Jean Lee

Yuhan Lee

Jessica Lehoczky

Alexander Lin

Joseph Loscalzo

Richard Maas

Bruce Madore

Glenn Miller

Ronald Neppl

Wilfred Ngwa

Nikolaos Patsopoulos

Gerald Pier

Bohdan Pomahac

Benjamin Raby

James Rathmell

Peter Sage

Frank Scheer

Frederick Schoen

Kricket Seidman

Charles Serhan

Hadi Shafiee

Richard Sherwood

Edwin Silverman

Indranil Sinha

Viviany Taqueti

Ali Tavakkoli

Bruce Tedeschi

Clare Tempany

Junichi Tokuda

Frederick Wang

Adam Wright

Xiaoyin Xu

Tracy Young-Pearse

Ann Marie Zavacki

 

Faculty Career Development Award

Dale Adler

Erik Alexander

Stan Ashley

Nancy Berliner

Jon Borus

Tanuja Chitnis

Laura Fredenburgh

Ursula Kaiser

Thomas Michel

Mark Perrella

Kathy Rexrode

Scott Weiss

 

Fund to Sustain Research Excellence Committee

Jon Aster

Raina Fichorova

Guillermo Garcia-Cardena

Seoyoung Kim

Matt Lavoie

Ed Nardell

Martha Shenton

Emily Stern

 

Internal Review Committee for Limited Submission Funding Opportunities

Nancy Berliner

Rick Blumberg

Rona Carroll

Assunta De Rienzo

Charles Dimitroff

Heather Eliassen

Mel Feany

Bruce Kristal

Meryl LeBoff

Cyndi Lemere

Steve Mentzer

Ellen Seely

Charlie Serhan

Meir Stampfer

Matt Waldor

 

Partners in Excellence (PIE)

BRIGHAM INDIVIUDALS

Carrie Blout

Joyce Clark

Thomas Licata

Allison Moriarty

Denitra Seals

Cameron Speyer

Quoc-Dien Trinh

Cierra Zaslowe-Dude

 

BRIGHAM TEAMS

7T Epilepsy

MRI Team

Vera Kimbrell

Geoffrey Young

Ellen Bubrick

Aida Faria

Lawrence Panych

Ravi Seethamraju

Brigham Care Redesign and Incubator Startup Program

Elizabeth Cullen

Karl Laskowski

Arjun Rangarajan

La’Toya Bartlett

Anu Gupte

Diana Morel

Alexandra Sturchio

DF/BWCC at Milford Regional Medical Center Linear Accelerator Team

Christopher Titley

William Andreas

Daniel Barkyoumb

Monica Batchelder

Kevin Beaudette

Daniel Cail

Abigail Clark

Katelyn Crouse

Alex Cruz

Ellen Davia

Colin Diggins

Zhaohui Han

Thomas Harris

Clay Holdsworth

Julie Hudson

Peter Orio

John Phillips

Danelle Ribok

Gerard Walsh

Colleen Whitehouse

Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) and Center for Comparative Medicine (CCM) Team

Amber Hoggatt

Kathryn Holthaus

Allison Moriarty

Christina Nascimento

Kelly Barrett

Erica Brogan

Patrick Doyle

Renee Elliott

Michael Goodridge

Christian Hallman

Kate Hoffman

Richard Hurley

Sharron Kirchain

Andrea Loewen

Jennifer Megyesy

Matt Mellini

Mayrav Moreshet

Brian Payne

Ron Roberts

Tara Robidoux

Luis Rodriguez

John Shea

David Smith

Erin Tait

Mary Tetreault

Angela Vail

Improving GI Follow-Up Care for Hospitalized Patients Team

Emily Hinchey

Lori Newman

Ahmad Bazarbashi

Robert Boxer

Jasmine Hanifi

Kelly Hathorn

Nayna Lodhia

Erin McElrath

Molly Perencevich

Jordan Sack

Allison Yang

Improving Referral to the Brigham Post Intensive Care Clinic Team

Daniela Lamas

Nomi Levy-Carrick

David Gitlin

Hasna Hakim

Bruce Levy

Anthony Massaro

Stacey Salomon

Gerald Weinhouse

Joint Commission Laboratory Survey Readiness Team

Denise Fountain

Pamela Wakefield

Annemarie Austin

Lisa Bernhard

Lee Briggs

Mazhar Chaudhry

Michael Gilfeather

Ellen Goonan

Melissa Gorman

Keith Hirst

Gail Kinchla

Donnamarie Maguire

Lauren Mazzone

Joshua Peltz

Clifford Reeves

Patricia Senna

Linda Weiser

Medical Text Extraction, Reasoning and Mapping System (MTERMS) Team

Li Zhou

Wasim Al-Assad

David Bates

Suzanne Blackley

Frank Chang

Foster Goss

Zfania Tom Korach

Kenneth Lai

Gail Lowenthal

Erin MacPhaul

Carlos Ortega

Harry Reyes

Diane Seger

Long Sha

Chunlei Tang

Lynn Volk

Liqin Wang

Adrian Wong

Obstetric Comorbidity Index Team

Karen Manganaro

Valerie Sweeney

Eileen Cavanagh

Kimberly Ridge

Nora Scharf

Pathology Dragon Implementation Team

Agoston Agoston

Jose Alburquerque

Alexandra Lyons

Kimberly Noble

Rajesh Patel

Stephen Pochebit

Lawrence Riley

Shadan Shafieha

Glenn Spiro

Patient Safety Learning Lab (PSLL)

David Bates

Anuj Dalal

Patti Dykes

Ramesh Bapanapalli

Kerrin Bersani

Nathaniel Bessa

Robert Boxer

Alexandra Businger

Yu Chang

Taylor Christiansen

Ann DeBord

Megan Duckworth

Jenzel Espares

Julie Fiskio

Theresa Fuller

Mohan Babu Ganasekaran

Pamela Garabedian

Esteban Gershanik

Gennady Gorbovitsky

Elizabeth Harry

Daniel Higgins

Lisa Lehmann

Demetri Lemonias

Elizabeth Lilley

Stuart Lipsitz

Samuel Mamane

Anthony Massaro

Vilen Melik-Alaverdian

Nina Plaks

Anatoly Postilnik

Ronen Rozenblum

Jeffrey Schnipper

Kumiko Schnock

Sarah Rose Slate

Julia Snyder

Emily Waiyin

Matthew Wein

Radiology Research Administration Team

Denitra Seals

Jean Valk

Danielle Chamberlain

Courtney May

Reduction in Late Starts and Wasted Treatment Machine Time Due to Delays in MD Coverage for Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT)

Raymond Mak

Tracy Balboni

Darlene Fix

Josie Grande

Daphne Haas-Kogan

Fred Hacker

Mai Anh Huynh

David Kozono

Kimberly Mackin

Gerassimos Makrigiorgos

Harvey Mamon

Joseph Mancias

Karen Marcus

Neil Martin

Alexander Spektor

Shyam Tanguturi

Iquan Usta

Gerard Walsh

Colleen Whitehouse

Rheumatoid Arthritis Quality Improvement Team

Sonali Desai

Mary Amato

Malka Forman

Roaa Khinkar

EunJi Ko

Emma Stevens

Kate Ulbricht

Treatment of Meniscal Problems in Osteoarthritis (TeMPO) Trial Team

Jeffrey Katz

Cheri Blauwet

Rebecca Breslow

Angela Chen

Antonia Chen

Jamie Collins

Courtney Dawson

Leigh Dechaves

Aida Faria

Kirsten Garvey

Kathryn Hazelwood

Madhuri Kale

Jeffrey Lange

Emma Lape

Elena Losina

Tamara Martin

Elizabeth Matzkin

Jeffrey Neal

Clare Safran-Norton

Faith Selzer

Nehal Shah

Swastina Shrestha

Stacy Smith

Derek Sople

James Sullivan

Alex Truong

Richard Wilk

Vaginal Dilator Support Team

Gabriela Alban

Teresa Cheng

Sharon Bober

Daniela Buscariollo

Joanne Hall

Martin King

Betty Krechmer

Larissa Lee

Harvey Mamon

Una Randall

Categories
Event Recap Events News

Taipei Delegation to Partners Healthcare

 
Friday, May 31st, 2:30 – 4:00pm in the Hale VTC Conference Room

 

(Above) BWH faculty members pose with officials from the Taipei Ministries of Science & Technology and Health, officers from the Taipei Economic & Cultural Offices (Boston/D.C) and other members of the recent Taipei delegation to Partners Healthcare

 

(Above) Dr. Dar-Bin Hsieh, Deputy Minister, Taipei Ministry of Science & Technology with Dr. Joseph Bonventre, Chief, Renal Division, BWH

 

(Above) Dr. Dar-Bin Hsieh, Deputy Minister, Taipei Ministry of Science & Technology with Dr. Joseph Bonventre, Chief, Renal Division, BWH

 

 

(Above) Dr. Joseph Bonventre, Chief, Renal Division, BWH talking about his research in regenerative medicine to members of the recent Taipei delegation to Partners Healthcare

Categories
Cardiovascular, Diabetes and Metabolic Disorders Event Recap News

8th Annual Obesity Research Incubator Session Event Recap

Friday, May 10, 2019 2:00 – 5:30pm, Hale Building for Transformative Medicine 

On Friday May 10th, nearly 100 researchers and clinicians from over 20 institutions gathered at BWH to share ideas, promote cross-collaborative research efforts and identify new areas for further investigation to address the challenging public health crisis caused by obesity. This 8th annual symposium commenced with short talks by selected junior speakers, all of whom received an award of $500. They were followed by keynote speaker, Caroline Apovian, MD, who gave an outstanding overview of the key research discoveries that have made significant contributions to the way obesity is treated in the clinic. This was followed by an electronic poster session featuring 30 presentations covering a broad range of research addressing many different aspects of obesity. Four posters stood out among the rest and were awarded prizes of $250.

This event is a great opportunity for investigators meet colleagues, learn what they are working on and set the foundation for future collaborations. If you were not able to join us this time, we hope to see you next year.

Keynote Speaker

Translating Obesity Research to the Practice of Obesity Medicine 

Caroline Apovian, MD, Professor of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine 

Poster Winners

Leveraging Immunometabolic Control to Prevent and Treat Obesity Related Asthma

Furkan Burak, MD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

Hepatocyte p53 ablation induces metabolic dysregulation that is corrected by food restriction and vertical sleeve gastrectomy

Bethany Cummings, DVM, PhD, Cornell University

Inhibiting Mitochondrial Fission Enhances Mitochondrial Respiratory Capacity and Insulin Signaling in Culture Myotubes Derived from Obese Humans

Benjamin Kugler, MS, University of Massachusetts Boston

The contribution of obesity to adult initiation of chronic prescription opioid use in the US: Results from MEPS, 2000 – 2015

Dielle Lundberg, Boston University School of Public Health

Selected Speakers

Fecal Microbiota Transplantation by Oral Capsules for the Treatment of Obesity: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Pilot Trials

Jessica Allegretti, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital

Identification of novel microbe-metabolome signatures associated with insulin sensitivity in mice

Jennifer Lee, PhD, Instructor in Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Investigating how the source of dietary fat shapes the anti-chancer immune response in obesity

Lydia Lynch, PhD, Instructor in Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Hypertension, Brigham and Women’s Hospital

Categories
News

Research Communications: Exciting News!

We have some exciting news!

Do you have questions or concerns, but don’t know who to reach out to? Send them to our new BWH Research Helpline.

We heard what you’ve had to say and are excited to roll out this new email in order to have one central place where the BWH research community can send any and all of their research related questions.

 

We look forward to answering your questions!

ResearchHelpline@bwh.harvard.edu

 

 

Categories
Event Recap Events News

Harvard Health Innovation Network (HHIN) Science Slam Success!

On April 18th, the BRI co-hosted a Science Slam with Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and other institutions that comprise the Harvard Health Innovation Network (HHIN). The event was held at Daedalus Restaurant and Bar and was part of the Cambridge Science Festival.

HHIN members, colleagues, friends and family gathered to hear several brave “slammers” test their skills as science and/or health care communicators by pitching their research and innovations to the crowd. A range of original and inventive topics from impassioned researchers populated the restaurant. Each presenter had just three minutes to grab the audience’s attention and engage them with their focus area. Yielding to the “no PowerPoint policy,” slammers were left to battle it out with just their brains, presentation skills and props, if they so desired.

Laura Kiesel, a freelance writer from the Harvard Health news blog, impressed the crowd with her thoughts on chronic pain, and won the Science Slam, receiving a fun prize pack from the hosts. Her work has made appearances in publications such as The Guardian, Salon and The Atlantic, and she is truly passionate about chronic pain and related health conditions. Her innovative ideas on the topic helped bring her to the top of the lighthearted competition, yet every slammer must be commended for the courage they had in pitching their ideas in such an unusual environment.

The BRI and HHIN hope to continue bringing researchers and their fascinating ideas forward to the public who may not hear them otherwise. Our goal is to raise awareness to the amazing research that takes place within our institutions and opening people’s eyes to all that goes on behind the scenes in the vast world of health care.

Categories
Event Recap Events News

Second Session: Cross Departmental Affinity Group for Machine Learning Applied to Radiological Imaging

Wednesday, March 13, 10:00am – 12:30pm, Zinner Breakout Room

Over 40 registrants attended this second affinity group meeting for machine learning applied to radiological imaging. Made possible by the BRI NextGen awards, this event will occur quarterly to focus on machine learning methods as applied to research. The meeting began with formal talks from Tina Kapur, PhD, Kirti Magufa, MD, Irfanullah Haider, MD, and Jeff Duryea, PhD.  The speakers offered their expertise from their diverse scientific backgrounds on subject matter such as image-based deep learning, datasets, and predicting disease states.  Attendees and speakers talked freely of shared challenges and how they could collectively overcome them.

During the lunch and open discussion that followed, there was a strong desire for a common platform that would allow researchers currently applying machine learning to their work or those who are interested in doing so to better connect and collaborate with each other. Several audience members spoke positively of collaborations that came about because of the first affinity group meeting and wanted this trend to continue. Plans for future meetings are already in the works. If you were unable to attend this session, keep an eye out for the next quarterly gathering!

NOTE: If you are interested in becoming involved with this group, please contact Jeff Duryea, PhD, Dept. of Radiology (jduryea@bwh.harvard.edu) or Jamie Collins, PhD, Dept. of Orthopedics (jcollins13@bwh.harvard.edu)

 

Categories
News

Stat Madness Voting Opens March 4!

Stat Madness Voting Opens March 4

Two Brigham teams are among the 64 contenders that will compete in Stat Madness 2019 — a bracketed competition from Stat News to find the most innovative research in the country. The first of six rounds of popular voting in the single-elimination contest begins Monday March 4 at 12:01 a.m. Sign up now: https://bit.ly/2GM10BE

Categories
Cardiovascular, Diabetes and Metabolic Disorders Event Recap News

Hypoxia Research Symposium and Poster Session Recap

Friday, January 25th, 1:30 – 5:00PM, Zinner Breakout Room and Zinner Lobby 

The Brigham Research Institute’s (BRI) Cardiovascular, Diabetes & Metabolic Disorders (CVDM) research center hosted its first Hypoxia Research Symposium to bring together clinicians and scientists working on various topics related to this dangerous condition that can have damaging effects on many different organs and tissues. The event consisted of four short talks from selected abstracts, a keynote presentation from professor William Kaelin, MD of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and a poster session. An engaged and enthusiastic crowd of over 35 people attended the symposium where research from four departments and seven divisions was presented, highlighting the cross-collaborative nature of the topic.

Presenting on “The von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Protein: Insights into Oxygen Sensing,” William Kaelin, MD, showcased several lines of research his lab has engaged in to elucidate the molecular underpinnings of cellular oxygen sensing. Spanning the divide from bench to bedside, his lab has made remarkable contributions to the field, including the identification of a druggable target to treat anemia:  an inhibitor of EglN1, a 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase, is currently being evaluated in clinical trials. The BRI and CVDM research center were honored to have such a highly regarded researcher serve as the keynote speaker.

During the poster session that followed the talks, two outstanding posters were awarded with a prize of $250. Each selected speaker was awarded with $500. Congratulations to the winners!

Poster Winners

Gregory Ekchian, PhD, MRI-Readable In Vivo Quantitative Oxygen Sensors

Paul Wrighton, PhD, Novel pH-sensitive biosensor zebrafish enable the in vivo visualization and enterrogation of mitophagy during development and metabolic stress

Selected Speakers

Brian Cade, PhD, Associations of Variants in the Hexokinase 1 and Interleukin 18 Receptor Regions with Oxyhemoglobin Saturation During Sleep

Huamei He, PhD, MD, L-2-Hydroxyglutarate Protects Against Myocardial Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury

Indranil Sinha, MD, Aging-Associated Loss of Hypoxia Signaling Limits Skeletal Muscle Regeneration

AKM Wara, PhD, CD4+ T Cell Deficiency of KLF10 Impairs Blood Flow and Neovascularization in Response to Tissue Hypoxia

Categories
Event Recap Events News

From Bench to Boardroom: Collaborative Research Opportunities Between Academia and Industry

Thursday, January 24th, 3:00 – 5:00pm, Zinner Breakout Room

This is the third session in a series of panels co-hosted by the Brigham Research Institute and MassBio, during which panelists from renowned drug and device companies shared their knowledge on ways in which BWH investigators can obtain funding and in-kind support for their research. Frank S. David, MD, PhD, Innovation Strategist at the BRI, Founder and Managing Director of Pharmagellan moderated the event. The three expert panelists included Michal Preminger, PhD, MBA, Head, Johnson & Johnson Innovation, Chandra Ramanathan, PhD, MBA, BP & Head, East Coast Innovation Bayer, and Jeffrey Warmke, Senior VP of Global Business Development, Daiichi Sankyo Group.

After a brief introduction of the panelists, as well as those in the audience, Dr. David kick-started the discussion by asking the panelists to give a brief overview of the academic collaboration models in place at their respective companies and how they are different from their peers in the industry. The collaboration strategies described by the companies ran the gamut from the focus on niche areas with no-strings-attached grants at Bayer to a wide range of therapeutic domains and a focus on disease prevention across the early discovery to late stage development continuum at J&J. Irrespective of the approach used, the panelists all agreed that their ultimate goal is to find “good medicine” and help to move it forward through mutually productive collaborations with academia.

They offered a few pro tips to the audience of investigators before the networking session commenced. First, if you would like to collaborate, anytime is the right time in terms of reaching out to prospective drug and device companies. Even if someone brings an idea forward that is too early or too incomplete, industry experts can still offer direction, suggestions, and valuable feedback. Second, you must keep knocking on the door. If you don’t push forward seemingly crazy ideas, then you are limiting yourself as well as the world of healthcare. Lastly, they opined that the makings of a good academic collaborator include strong communication skills, openness to sharing ideas and information, and the willingness to sustain long-term relationships. Events like these are an invaluable resource to our investigators across the hospital and we hope that you continue to attend!

 

Featured image from left to right:

Frank S. David, MD, PhD (Moderator), Michal Preminger, PhD, MBA (Panelist, J&J), Chandra Ramanathan, PhD, MBA (Panelist, Bayer), Jeffrey Warmke, PhD (Panelist, Daiichi Sankyo

 

Categories
Event Recap Events News

Cross Departmental Affinity Group for Machine Learning Applied to Radiological Imaging

Tuesday, December 11th, 10:30am – 12:30pm, Zinner Breakout Room

Over 40 people convened for the initial meeting of the Brigham Research Institute’s (BRI) new Affinity Group for Machine Learning Applied to Radiological Imaging. Led by Jeffrey Duryea and Jamie Collins, the group will hold interactive lunch meetings each quarter to bring together investigators from diverse departments interested in applying machine learning methods to radiological imaging.

This first meeting began with several speakers who shared their expertise and enthusiasm for this exciting area of research that has powerful implications for the future. In between the talks, participants broke for lunch where they had the opportunity to network with each other, as well as with the speakers, asking questions, sharing ideas and creating valuable connections. The goal for future meetings is for participants to break into smaller subgroups to delve further into specific research areas to discuss ideas and explore potential collaborations.

The Affinity Group for Machine Learning Applied to Radiological Imaging was formed as a result of a BRI NextGen Award that was granted to Jeffrey Duryea, PhD, Department of Radiology.  The goal of these new BRI Affinity Groups is to provide funding and staffing support for a group of researchers to convene and explore ideas and identify synergies around a common research theme.