Workshop: Converging on Cancer Presentations
Day One, Monday, April 29
- Leveraging the Past to Challenge the Present and Define the Future
Brian Berridge – NIEHS/NTP - Cancer Hallmarks: An Approach to Understanding the Biology of Tumorigenesis
Dean Felsher – Stanford University - Key Characteristics Approach to Hazard Identification
Martyn Smith – University of California, Berkeley - Application of the Key Characteristics of Carcinogens in the IARC Monographs
Kate Guyton – International Agency for Research on Cancer - Towards Patient Specific Organotypic Models of Cancer
David Beebe – University of Wisconsin-Madison - Carcicast: Developing a Carcinogenicity Testing Toolbox
Nicole Kleinstreuer – NIEHS/NTP - Using Preclinical Models to Understand Metastasis
Kandice Tanner – National Cancer Institute - Mutation Signatures of Environmental Exposures in Mouse and Human Cancer
Allan Balmain – University of California, San Francisco - Integrating Information from Multiple Toxicity Testing Approaches in Cancer Hazard Identification
Martha Sandy – Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) - Weight of Evidence Approaches for Evaluating Carcinogenesis in Drug Development
Tim McGovern – U.S. Food and Drug Administration - A Modern Approach for Evaluating Human Cancer Risk from Exposure to Chemicals
Doug Wolf – Syngenta
Day Two, Tuesday, April 30
- Regulatory Questions That Mixture Science Can Help Address
Lauren Zeise – OEHHA - Developing Rational Hypotheses for Testing Mixtures of Chemicals That Target Pathways of Carcinogenesis
Cynthia Rider – NIEHS/NTP - AOP Based Approach for Mixture Testing and Risk Assessment by the EuroMix Project
Johanna Zilliacus – Karolinska Institutet - Cancer Risk Assessment for Environmental Chemical Mixtures and Combined Chemical and Nonchemical Stressors
Glenn Rice – U.S. Environmental Protection Agency