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The molecule meets the computer chip
$430 million cancer facility in a new
hospital pavilion
Helping with the business of medicine
Pilot program for treating HIV/AIDS
in Russia
Et cetera
Kaplan named to IOM
Yale joins national epilepsy
study


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The molecule meets the
computer chip
Harnessing the power of computers is essential as biologists work to
decipher mountains of new data.
It is difficult to imagine two places more different than The Eagle Pub
and Celera Genomics, each of which provided the setting for signal events
in modern biology. The cozy Eagle, in Cambridge, England, was already
a smoky anachronism fitted with burnished brass and dark wood in February
1953, when Francis H.C. Crick famously burst through the door to inform
James D. Watson that they had jointly deciphered “the secret of
life”—the structure of DNA. Nearly 50 years later, in Celera’s
sterile, starkly lit “sequencing rooms,” and in similar rooms
at institutions responsible for the government-sponsored Human Genome
Project, the complete human genome was painstakingly unraveled by row
upon row of humming computers.

The pub and the sequencing room are apt metaphors for the vast changes
wrought by Watson and Crick’s discovery, which unleashed a torrent
of research in molecular biology that has revolutionized our understanding
of evolution, physiology and disease. Watson and Crick confronted a blank
slate, but today’s scientists are awash in a fast-moving river of
information so thick with possibility that the American Association for
the Advancement of Science recently felt compelled to sponsor a symposium
for biologists called “Inundated With Data.”

The collective efforts of the world’s scientists have allowed us
to construct diagrams of intracellular signaling pathways that would make
a New York subway official blanch, and the complete genomes of over 100
organisms are now in hand. However, biologists have been so busy amassing
fine details that they have had little time or incentive to step back
from the bench, take a breath and begin to grasp the essential patterns
in the big picture.

Luckily, computing power has increased in tandem with biological knowledge
at an exponential rate, setting the stage for the recent emergence of
the cutting-edge, multidisciplinary field of computational biology. The
field embraces genomics and proteomics (the latter aims to catalog the
complete inventory of proteins encoded by genomes), but also promotes
computational modeling of intracellular processes and cell-cell interactions,
as well as the “high-throughput” data-mining techniques of
bioinformatics, which can unveil common mechanisms underlying seemingly
diverse diseases and compare genomes to discern subtle evolutionary relationships
among organisms.

In 2003, Yale established an interdisciplinary Ph.D. program in computational
biology and bioinformatics. That same year, the university’s Biological
Sciences Advisory Committee (BSAC), under the leadership of H. Kim Bottomly,
Ph.D., professor of immunobiology, began a study which concluded that
computational approaches would play a central role in 21st-century biology.
The committee has just produced its final report, a blueprint for Yale
to stay ahead of the curve in faculty recruitment, funding and facilities.

The committee’s efforts also led to “A Look to the Future,”
an October symposium at the medical school’s Anlyan Center chaired
by Perry L. Miller, M.D., Ph.D., professor of anesthesiology and director
of the Center for Medical Informatics; Mark B. Gerstein, Ph.D., the Albert
L. Williams Associate Professor of Biomedical Informatics and associate
professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry; and William L. Jorgensen,
Ph.D., the Conkey P. Whitehead Professor of Chemistry.

The symposium assembled seven top researchers from around the world who
use computational approaches to attack a variety of biological problems,
from untangling phylogenetic relationships between species to manipulating
gene sequences to create completely new proteins and enzymes with customized
biological functions.

In addition to providing a forum for these scientists to present their
latest work, the symposium also included several informal brainstorming
sessions where Yale scientists and administrators learned how the speakers’
home institutions have risen to the structural and organizational challenges
of integrating computational biology into teaching and research.

The BSAC report argues that Yale must increase its research and teaching
strengths in computational biology and bioinformatics. It recommends the
creation of thematically oriented clusters of faculty at the medical school
and on Science Hill. And it proposes the formation of a universitywide
center for computational biology and bioinformatics that would foster
campuswide interactions of faculty and trainees and provide administrative
support.

No one doubts that computational biology is here to stay. “The old
view was that biologists were the scientists who didn’t like to
think quantitatively,” said Carolyn W. Slayman, Ph.D., Sterling
Professor of Genetics and deputy dean for academic and scientific affairs.
“Now, biologists must face up to the fact that there’s going
to be a demand for greater computational skill and greater expertise in
informatics than ever before—it’s the future of the field.”

—Peter Farley

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An artist’s rendering shows a new pavilion at Yale-New Haven Hospital,
which will house all cancer services under one roof. It is expected to
open by 2008.
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A new hospital pavilion,
set to open in 2008, will house $430 million cancer facility
Services for cancer patients are currently scattered at six sites across
the Yale-New Haven Medical Center, but that will change by 2008 with the
planned opening of a new hospital facility that will offer all cancer
services under one roof and significantly enhance the medical school’s
ability to conduct clinical research.
At a press conference on November 30, Yale-New Haven Hospital (YNHH)
President and CEO Joseph A. Zaccagnino, M.P.H. ’70, announced that
YNHH would add a 497,000-square-foot north pavilion to the YNHH complex
that will house a comprehensive clinical cancer center. The plan will
add 112 inpatient hospital beds and an estimated 400 permanent jobs.

The proposed $430 million center is a 14-story facility with space for
operating rooms; infusion suites; radiation treatment rooms; adult inpatient
facilities for surgical, medical and gynecologic oncology; and an outpatient
women’s cancer center. It will be connected to the Yale-New Haven
Children’s Hospital by way of a five-story bridge across the upper
floors, so that pediatric patients will be able to receive treatment at
the new center while remaining hospitalized in the children’s facility.

“I cannot overstate our level of enthusiasm and excitement about
this project,” Dean Robert J. Alpern, M.D., said at the press conference,
attended by city officials, patients, employees and community, hospital
and medical school leaders. “Now that we’ve seen the drawings,
we’re impatiently ready to move into the building. We’re going
to have to control ourselves.” Yale Cancer Center Director Richard
Edelson, M.D. ’70, called the move “a huge step forward.”

Alpern and Yale President Richard C. Levin both stressed the opportunities
the new center opens up for conducting additional clinical trials, which
are a source of promising new treatments for patients and an important
revenue stream for academic medical centers. Levin noted that Yale is
already one of the top biomedical research institutions in the world and
does excellent cancer research in the laboratory.

“With expanded capabilities to treat cancer patients and to do research
on the efficacy of new therapies, we can do much more,” Levin said.
“We can establish ourselves as one of the world’s great centers
for the treatment of cancer.”

The new center will be built on existing hospital property at the site
of the Grace Building on Park Street, a former nursing hall now given
over to offices, which is slated for demolition this spring. The hospital’s
board of trustees approved plans for the center in November, following
state approval of the preliminary site plan last July. Pending approval
of the plans by the city and state, groundbreaking is expected in the
fall.

—Michael Fitzsousa

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New MBA program to help
health professions with the business of medicine
At some point in the 1980s, according to Howard P. Forman, M.D., M.B.A.,
vice chair and associate professor of diagnostic radiology, the practice
of medicine became more pain than gain for many physicians.

“Health care costs were skyrocketing and cost containment measures
gained importance,” said Forman. “Physicians were targeted
as the cause of the problems and were counted on to bring down costs.”

Forman and others at Yale’s schools of medicine, management and
public health may have a prescription for this malaise—the Yale
MBA for Executives: Leadership in Healthcare. This new program, which
Forman co-directs with Stanley J. Garstka, Ph.D., deputy dean of the School
of Management, and Dick R. Wittink, Ph.D., the George Rogers Clark Professor
of Management and Marketing, will enroll a charter class of up to 30 students
in August.

The 22-month program’s goals—besides providing a second set
of skills without career disruption—are to turn the classroom into
a cross section of the contemporary health care field and to train what
Forman calls “change agents capable of making a positive difference
in the practice of health care.” By enrolling students with a broad
range of background and experience—professionals from hospitals,
clinics, insurance and managed-care organizations and pharmaceutical,
biotechnology and financial service firms—the program aims to change
perceptions that these fields are adversaries. Then, through two intense
residences, weekend classes and seminars with visiting scholars, the curriculum
provides the management skills needed to navigate the complexities of
health care, which is itself constantly changing due to medical and technological
breakthroughs, new laws and government policies.

The seed for the executive program was planted in 1996 when medical students
expressed interest in an M.D./ M.B.A. program. That joint-degree program,
though geared toward medical students, has also attracted faculty and
working physicians. Among the latter, Michael Apkon, M.D., Ph.D., FW ’94,
M.B.A. ’02, was one of the four M.D./ M.B.A.s produced by the first
graduating class in 2002. A former assistant professor in the medical
school, he is now medical director of the pediatric ICU and a vice president
at the Yale-New Haven Children’s Hospital.

Although that program worked for medical students, who could add a year
to their studies, it was not ideal for practicing professionals. “Surgeons
came to me and said, ‘I’d have to give up my career if I’m
going to do this joint-degree program because I can’t do four days
a week and not be in the OR.’ So we started work on an executive
program targeted to health care professionals,” said Forman.

Not so long ago, even the idea of an M.D./M.B.A. was a tough sell. “There
was the fear that you were either selling out to the enemy or selling
your soul,” said Forman. That negative perception was changed, in
part, by the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, where
William L. Kissick, M.D. ’57, M.P.H. ’59, Dr.Ph. ’61,
led an M.D./M.B.A. program that produced some of today’s health
care leaders (See Alumni Faces).

“By the 1990s, it was apparent that for those who want to be leaders
this is an appropriate path—that you’re not selling out,”
said Forman. “You’re fulfilling your mission to improve health
care for larger numbers than you could as a pure clinician.”

—Alan Bisbort

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Health officials in the 300-year-old city of St.
Petersburg have joined with New Haven and Yale in a new effort to coordinate
medical and social services for people infected with HIV/AIDS. The epidemic
in Russia, originally prevalent in drug users, is poised to spread through
sexual transmission.
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Yale and New Haven join
in pilot program for treating HIV/AIDS in Russia
Russia today is where the United States was 20 years ago in dealing with
HIV/ AIDS: denial and prejudice are almost as widespread as the disease
itself.

In an effort to help, last July in St. Petersburg Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy G. Thompson announced a major grant to fight the AIDS
epidemic. A Yale doctor and epidemiologist were by his side, and at an
October news conference in New Haven’s City Hall, they announced
their own role in the initiative. The School of Medicine was one of four
U.S. organizations chosen to receive $320,000 each from the U.S. Agency
for International Development to provide training in care, treatment and
support services to people living with HIV/AIDS in Russia.

The School of Public Health, through its Center for Interdisciplinary
Research on AIDS, has worked on training and prevention programs with
colleagues in St. Petersburg since 1998. But this marks the first collaboration
between the two cities to address HIV/AIDS care and treatment.

The 30-month program calls for Yale, along with state and city agencies,
to share information and strategies with colleagues in St. Petersburg.
The grant will fund four exchanges each year; the first group of Russian
trainees arrived in New Haven in early October. Yale faculty and representatives
from community-based HIV/AIDS organizations will also travel to St. Petersburg
to train Russian health professionals and to observe how they are managing
the epidemic.

In Russia, a major obstacle is the prejudice against HIV/AIDS patients,
typically young, male intravenous drug users. As part of the program,
Russian visitors will observe services provided by the Yale AIDS Program
and organizations in New Haven, and they will visit a methadone clinic
and needle exchange program. Krystn R. Wagner, Ph.D. ’89, M.D. ’96,
assistant professor of medicine and project coordinator of the New Haven–St.
Petersburg partnership, said she hopes that “observing drug treatment
here will help catalyze new thinking about substance abuse management
and the care of drug users.”

The problem in Russia, said Robert Heimer, Ph.D. ’88, associate
professor of epidemiology and public health and co-coordinator of the
project, is the lack of a multidisciplinary, integrated system for managing
HIV/AIDS. “Someone walks into a hospital and is treated for HIV,”
said Heimer, “but what about his drug addiction, or the fact that
he has tuberculosis or that he’s homeless? There’s no coordination,
no system that allows them to deal with the complexities of this illness
in a way that crosses traditional medical boundaries.”

The impetus for this initiative is the soaring number of HIV infections
in Russia. HIV/AIDS didn’t surface in the countries of the former
Soviet Union until the early 1990s, but they now report some of the world’s
fastest- growing rates of new infections. Although there are 300,000 reported
cases in Russia, the United Nations and Russian AIDS officials put the
number at 1 million or more. Wagner, medical director of the Nathan Smith
Clinic, the HIV clinic affiliated with Yale-New Haven Hospital, said this
is due to many factors, including relaxed border controls after the dissolution
of the Soviet Union, rising unemployment and drug trafficking. Most new
HIV cases were initially among IV drug users, but now cases caused by
sexual transmission are on the rise.

Heimer called the collaboration “remarkably exciting. … If
we can create and implement an integrated system on a pilot basis in one
small region of St. Petersburg, and if it’s successful, it can be
replicated elsewhere in Russia.”

—Jennifer Kaylin

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Et Cetera
Kaplan named to IOM
Edward H. Kaplan, Ph.D., the William N. and Marie A. Beach Professor
of Management Sciences at the School of Management and professor of public
health, has been elected to the Institute of Medicine. Kaplan, the only
Yale faculty member named to the institute this year (see Alumni
for more on this topic), is an operations research and statistics expert
who studies problems in public policy and management. His recent research
has focused on counterterror topics such as the tactical prevention of
suicide bombings, bioterror preparedness and response logistics in the
event of a smallpox or anthrax attack. In the early 1990s, he was the
principal investigator of a landmark project that evaluated the efficacy
of New Haven’s needle exchange program.

Membership, one of the highest honors in medicine, is awarded for contributions
to medical science, health care and public health. The institute was established
in 1970 by the National Academy of Sciences and provides independent,
scientifically informed analysis and recommendations on human health issues.

—John Curtis



Yale joins national epilepsy study
Yale has been named a key member of a national group of medical centers
that has received the largest grant ever for a study of epilepsy in children.
The $17 million award from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke will fund a study of the three most-used drugs for treating
childhood absence (petit mal) epilepsy. The five-year study at 20 sites
across the country will attempt to determine the best initial medicine
for childhood absence epilepsy, which involves seizures marked by nonconvulsive
staring spells.

At Yale researchers will try to identify why some treatments work, why
some have side effects and what effects they have on cognition, behavior
and learning. “This is the first step toward our goal of making
it possible for physicians to predict patient response and tailor therapies
for individual needs,” said Edward J. Novotny Jr., M.D., FW ’89,
who is leading the study with colleague Susan R. Levy, M.D.

—J.C.

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