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Cancer Research Day is Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

All Penn State students, trainees, faculty and staff interested in cancer research careers are invited to attend the seventh annual Cancer Research Day hybrid event on Saturday, Oct. 19, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in the Animal, Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences Building on the University Park campus.

Register here

Event overview

About Cancer Research Day

The annual Cancer Research Day provides attendees with the opportunity to collaborate with peers and learn more about cancer research careers from established research professionals with a variety of backgrounds who can support trainees as they showcase their own research. Event organizers hope students, trainees and faculty are inspired to grow and expand their cancer research careers.

This year’s program features oral talks from current cancer research trainees, a keynote speaker in an established cancer research career and a poster session. Only the keynote and trainee speaker sessions will be live-streamed.

Those invited to attend include:

  • Undergraduate students
  • Medical students
  • Graduate students
  • Postdoctoral scholars
  • Residents and fellows
  • Faculty
  • Staff

Featured speakers

  • Katharine Barrientos, PhD

    Katharine Barrientos, PhD

    Scientific Director of Clinical Research Collaborations, Medical Evidence Generation Team, Department of Global Medical Affairs, Bristol Myers Squibb

    Dr. Kate Barrientos is a research scientist with over 15 years of broad experience in the pharmaceutical industry, with a primary focus in oncology drug development. Her current title is Scientific Director of Clinical Research Collaborations within the Medical Evidence Generation Team in the Global Medical Affairs Department of Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) in Princeton, N.J. Prior to this role, Kate has worked across a wide scope of departments at BMS including Precision Medicine, Translational Pathology, and Global Product Development & Supply through which she gained diverse experiences in driving the development and strategy for many key clinical immuno-oncology, cell therapy, and targeted oncology assets within the BMS pipeline. Prior to joining BMS, Kate was an Investigator at GlaxoSmithKline and led a team of immunoassay scientists to develop and validate potency assays for clinical biologics molecules in oncology.

    Kate earned her Bachelor of Science degree from Penn State in Biology and worked in the laboratory of Dr. Jack Vanden Heuvel within the Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences as an undergraduate. She earned her PhD in Pharmacology and Cancer Biology from Duke University working in the laboratory of Dr. Christopher Counter studying the roles of telomere-binding protein complexes and completed a joint postdoctoral fellowship with Duke University and GlaxoSmithKline investigating nitric oxide synthase inhibition in pancreatic and other KRas-driven cancers.

Katharine Barrientos, PhD

Katharine Barrientos, PhD

Scientific Director of Clinical Research Collaborations, Medical Evidence Generation Team, Department of Global Medical Affairs, Bristol Myers Squibb

Dr. Kate Barrientos is a research scientist with over 15 years of broad experience in the pharmaceutical industry, with a primary focus in oncology drug development. Her current title is Scientific Director of Clinical Research Collaborations within the Medical Evidence Generation Team in the Global Medical Affairs Department of Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) in Princeton, N.J. Prior to this role, Kate has worked across a wide scope of departments at BMS including Precision Medicine, Translational Pathology, and Global Product Development & Supply through which she gained diverse experiences in driving the development and strategy for many key clinical immuno-oncology, cell therapy, and targeted oncology assets within the BMS pipeline. Prior to joining BMS, Kate was an Investigator at GlaxoSmithKline and led a team of immunoassay scientists to develop and validate potency assays for clinical biologics molecules in oncology.

Kate earned her Bachelor of Science degree from Penn State in Biology and worked in the laboratory of Dr. Jack Vanden Heuvel within the Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences as an undergraduate. She earned her PhD in Pharmacology and Cancer Biology from Duke University working in the laboratory of Dr. Christopher Counter studying the roles of telomere-binding protein complexes and completed a joint postdoctoral fellowship with Duke University and GlaxoSmithKline investigating nitric oxide synthase inhibition in pancreatic and other KRas-driven cancers.

Contact

The background image is A photo showing the Cancer Institute building

For more information

With questions about the event, contact Amy Savastio-Ladd: