School of Medicine
Showing 1-10 of 18 Results
-
Noeen Malik, PhD
Physical Science Research Scientist, Rad/Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford
Current Role at StanfordResearch Scientist
CRF, MIPS, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford | January 2022 — Present
Responsibilities:
• R & D of radiopharmaceuticals for oncology and neuroscience
• Industrial collaborations
• Market strategic report for theragnostic-isotopes for Nextgen Cyclotron project
• CRF website development project
https://cyclotron.stanford.edu/ -
Domenico Mastrodicasa
Basic Life Res Scientist, Rad/Cardiovascular Imaging
Current Role at StanfordLead Clinical Scientist, Cardiovascular Imaging, Department of Radiology
-
Aaron Mayer
Casual - Non-Exempt, Rad/Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford
BioImmunotherapy has the potential to become the new paradigm of cancer treatment. While anatomic imaging has been the gold standard to monitor treatment efficacy based upon decreases in tumor size, patients treated with immunotherapies often present with a period of apparent tumor growth before prolonged regression. Due to the high cost and delayed response time, there exists a compelling need to accurately predict which patients are most likely to benefit from immune based treatment strategies. Aaron hopes to develop a molecular imaging toolkit including novel software, hardware, and biological wetware to improve monitoring of cancer immunotherapies in the clinic. He is advised on this project by Dr. Sam Gambhir. Aaron brings with him experience in multi-modality molecular imaging of cancer from his time spent under the mentorship of Dr. Efstathios Karathanasis and Dr. Mark Griswold at the Case Center for Imaging Research in Cleveland, Ohio. After graduating from CWRU, Aaron spent a year in Switzerland as a Fulbright Fellow at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) where, with the guidance of Dr. Melody Swartz and Dr. Jeffrey Hubbell, he utilized imaging tools to better understand the mechanisms of therapeutic cancer vaccines.
-
Matthew Joseph Middione
Physical Science Research Scientist, Rad/Radiological Sciences Laboratory
BioMatt started his MR journey as a Ph.D. student at UCLA under the tutelage of Dr. Ennis. There his research focused on the implementation of new pulse sequence techniques for 2D Phase Contrast MRI for faster and more accurate imaging. Following his PhD, he spent four years working at GE Healthcare as a scientist on the neuro applications and workflow team. Through collaboration with Stanford Psychology at the Center for Neurobiological Imaging, the team developed and commercialized a faster EPI imaging technique through the use of simultaneous multi-slice (HyperBand). Matt returns to Stanford as a research scientist looking to apply his experience as an MRI pulse sequence programmer, on both the Siemens and GE platforms, to bring the professional aspects of industry into the academic world of research.