Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

March/April   Volume 5 Issue 2

Inside this issue

Cover stories

$5 million grant funds dyslexia study

Doing the right thing: can neuroscience research make it easier?

Philanthropists aid a young scientist’s innovative research

People

Skin cancer expert is appointed new Smith Professor

Lifelines: Judy Cho

Innovative teacher, RNA expert is new Ford Professor
Netcast: Arthur Horwich

New Duberg Professor explores the brain’s intricate networks

Protein sorting, kidney disease are interests of Long Professor

Protein basic to life is research focus of new Higgins Professor

Out & about

Science

Newest research building is recognized for environmental features

Advances: Versatile molecule protects against IBD | Aspirin for the heart, now for the liver? | Can we really ‘catch’ healthy behaviors? | A needless barrier to good patient care
Netcast: Arthur Horwich

Health

Finding new ways to calm storms in the brain
Netcast: Arthur Horwich

Not just weight loss: the new stomach surgery
Netcast: Arthur Horwich

Partnerships

Grants & contracts



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Skin cancer expert is appointed new Smith Professor

David J. Leffell, M.D., deputy dean for clinical affairs, chief executive officer of Yale Medical Group and professor of dermatology and surgery, has been named the David Paige Smith Professor of Dermatology.

David Leffell

David Leffell

Leffell specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of melanoma and other skin cancers. He is an expert in Mohs surgery, a technique in which skin cancers are removed layer by layer and studied immediately under a microscope using a frozen section method. The Mohs technique allows removal of the entire tumor, providing the highest cure rate and minimizing scarring. The Cutaneous Oncology Unit that Leffell founded in 1988 treats more than 3,500 patients per year.

His research focuses on non-melanoma skin cancer, wound healing and cancer epidemiology. Leffell and colleagues discovered the skin cancer gene PTCH in 1996, and he has conducted collaborative research clarifying the role of ultraviolet radiation in skin cancer and skin aging. Other research includes the role of the p53 gene in skin cancer and the development of innovative diagnostic devices.

As deputy dean of the School of Medicine, Leffell has been responsible for the growth and development of the school’s clinical practice.

David Paige Smith, who joined Yale’s medical faculty in 1873, was a grandson of Nathan Smith, a premier physician in post–Revolutionary War New England. Nathan Smith was a central figure in the establishment of the Medical Institution of Yale College, as the School of Medicine was known at the time. image

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