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The Jordan Translational Medicine Lecture was established following a donation by Professor Craig Jordan (University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center) to support an annual lecture in the area of translational research.

upcoming lectures

TBC

 

 

Past lectures

2022 Dr Vishva Dixit,
Vice-President, Early Discovery Research, Genentech Inc.
Why so many ways to die?
2019 Prof Fiona Watt
Director, King’s Centre for Stem Cells & Regenerative Medicine, Executive Chair of the MRC
Mechanisms controlling homeostasis in mammalian epidermis
2018 Prof Patrick Cramer
Director, Max Plank Institute of Biophysical Chemistry
How to switch on human genes
2017 Tasuku Honjo
Kyoto University, Japan
Cancer immunotherapy by blockade of the lymphocyte surface receptor PD-1
2015 Adrian Bird
Wellcome Centre for Cell Biology, UK
Genetic and epigenetic roots of an autism spectrum disorder
2014 Rudolf Jaenisch
MIT, USA

iPS technology, gene editing and disease research

2013 Craig Jordan
Georgetown University, USA
Evolution of Endocrine therapy for Breast cancer - the Paradox of Estrogen Induced Apoptosis

 

About Professor Jordan

Prof Craig Jordan

Professor Jordan discovered the biology of a group of medicines now called Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators (SERMs). These medicines prevent osteoporosis, decrease coronary heart disease and treat and prevent breast cancer. Tamoxifen is the first SERM that has been used as a long-term adjuvant therapy, significantly increasing survival rates for breast cancer patients. The FDA in the United States has approved five SERMs, all of which are connected to Prof Jordan's research. Prof Jordan is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine, and a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Science. In 2016, he was named one of four individuals who have changed women’s healthcare in the 21st Century and the American Society for Clinical Oncology recognized the impact of his translational research to medical practice. The Jordan Translational Medical Lecture focuses on encouraging further success in translational research.