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Members of the Sarcoma Service at Huntsman Cancer
Institute are involved with other major sarcoma centers dedicated to
being on the leading edge of understanding and treating this unusual
type of cancer. Affiliations include the National Cancer Institute
and National Comprehensive Cancer Network among many others. Our
sarcoma specialists are members of many national and international
cancer societies including the Connective Tissue Oncology Society,
Children's Oncology Group and Southwestern Oncology Group.
Members of our sarcoma team are also active
participants in HCI Community Outreach Program, enabling us to
better interact with physicians throughout the Intermountain area.
This translates into improved care for patients in the western United
States. Our patients travel from Alaska, Arizona, California,
Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, Utah,
Washington and Wyoming and beyond to receive care of their soft
tissue and bone tumor by the HCI Sarcoma Service.
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R. Lor Randall, MD
Director, Sarcoma Services, Chief SARC Lab,
Huntsman Cancer Institute Associate Professor, Department of Orthopedics
Randall Lab
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Sarcoma Surgery
R. Lor Randall, MD, FACS, is an orthopedic surgeon specializing in sarcoma
treatment and director of Huntsman Cancer Institute's Sarcoma Service. Sarcomas are an unusual group
of cancers that arise from connective tissue, including bone, fat, muscle, nerve sheaths, blood
vessels, tendons, and cartilage. Because these tumors can affect all ages, he treats both children
and adults. The Sarcoma Service is an interdisciplinary team comprised of surgeons, radiation
therapists, oncologists, pain specialists, nurse practitioners, and social workers. Among his
academic responsibilities, Randall is chief of the Sarcoma Array Research Consortium (SARC) lab, a
state-of-the-art facility investigating the molecular genetic mechanisms that give rise to
sarcomas.
Randall also directs the metastatic bone disease program, a clinical service dedicated to
developing new treatment to manage cancers that have spread from other organs to the bone. He
pioneered the use of kyphoplasty, which was developed in 1998 to treat "dowager's hump," to relieve
the pain of spinal compression fractures in patients with multiple myeloma and other cancers that
have spread to bone. Kyphoplasty involves inserting a tiny balloon into the collapsed section of the
spine and inflating it. The balloon is then removed and bone cement inserted into the open space. He
was the first surgeon in the Intermountain West to use other minimally invasive techniques such as
radiofrequency ablation to treat tumors of bone.
Randall came to Huntsman Cancer Institute in 1998 from The University
of Washington, where he completed a fellowship in musculoskeletal oncology.
He graduated from Yale University School of Medicine in 1992 and completed
a residency in orthopedic surgery at the University of California, San
Francisco. Dr. Randall's clinical and research efforts have been recognized
internationally. Amongst his honors, he is the recipient of the Association
of Bone and Joint Surgeons' Musculoskeletal Tumor Society Scholar Award
and has been invited as a prestigious American-British-Canadian Traveling
Fellow. He is a member of several national and international oncology
societies including the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, Connective
Tissue Oncology Society, Musculoskeletal Tumor Society, Children's Oncology
Group and Southwest Oncology Group. He is a fellow of the American College
of Surgeons and the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and is the
author of numerous scientific manuscripts, book chapters and abstracts
in the field of sarcoma surgery and biology.
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Robert Andtbacka, MD, CM
Assistant Professor, Department of Surgery
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General Surgery
Robert Andtbacka, MD, CM, is an assistant professor in the Division of Surgical Oncology, Department
of Surgery at the University of Utah School of Medicine and a surgeon and investigator with Intermountain Healthcare and Huntsman Cancer Institute.
He specializes in surgery for melanoma, soft tissue sarcomas, and cancers of the gastrointestinal tract. His research interests include novel techniques to identify how melanoma spreads through the lymph and vascular systems; resistance
to targeted therapies in soft tissue sarcomas, including gastrointestinal stromal tumors; and novel therapeutics for
solid tumors. In addition, he participates in multi-center clinical trials designed to improve diagnosis and treatments
for cancer patients.
Andtbacka received his medical degree from McGill University in Montreal, Canada, where he also
completed a residency in general surgery. Before joining the University of Utah, he completed a three-year fellowship in surgical oncology at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.
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Brandon G. Bentz, MD |
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Head and Neck Surgery
Brandon G. Bentz, MD, Brandon Bentz, MD, is an assistant
professor in the Department of Otolaryngology in the University of Utah's
School of Medicine. He is also a Huntsman Cancer Institute investigator.
He completed his residency in Otolaryngology-Head
and Neck Surgery at Northwestern University Medical Center and his fellowship
in Head and Neck Surgical Oncology at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
Dr. Bentz’s clinical interests include, among other conditions, the surgical
management of sarcomas that arise from the head and neck. Dr. Bentz also
has a significant research interest in the biology of cancer cells, and in
particular exploring the intricacies of nitric oxide biology in cancer.
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Lei L. Chen, MD, PhD |
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Medical Oncology
Lei Chen, MD, PhD is a professor in the Division of Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine at the
University of Utah School of Medicine. She is also an investigator and medical oncologist with special interests in
sarcoma and gastrointestinal cancer at Huntsman Cancer Institute.
Her research interests include oncogene signal transduction (a biological process that creates functional changes
within the cell leading to malignancy), mechanisms of drug resistance, and searching for new targets for cancer therapy. One of her current clinical pursuits involves designing innovative clinical trials that combine targeted therapy and
immunotherapy to eradicate drug-resistant cells and tumor stem cells, with the hope for durable remission or cure. Chen
has numerous publications and invited articles in translational and clinical sarcoma research.
Chen received her PhD in biochemistry from City University of New York and her medical degree at
Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. She completed a residency at Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center and an oncology fellowship at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Before joining Huntsman Cancer Institute in 2006, she
served as a faculty member at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Texas.
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Cheryl M. Coffin, MD |
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Pathology
Cheryl M. Coffin, MD, is a professor of pathology, and adjunct
professor of pediatrics at the University of Utah School of Medicine.
She also serves vice president for pediatric pathology of ARUP
Laboratories, a national reference laboratory in Salt Lake City,
Utah. She is division head of pediatric pathology and medical
director of pathology services at Primary Children's Medical Center
in Salt Lake City.
Coffin is a surgical pathologist whose academic career had focused
on pediatric neoplasia, and soft tissue tumors. She has authored more
than 65 peer reviewed papers and was lead co-editor of Pediatric
Soft Tissue Tumors, published by Williams and Wilkins,
Baltimore, in 1997.
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Ying Hitchcock, MD |
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Radiation Oncology
Ying Hitchcock, MD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Radiation
Oncology, specializing in head, neck, and skin cancers and in sarcomas. She treats all forms of
cancer in her practice.
Dr. Hitchcock received a medical degree from the Peking Union Medical
College Graduate School in Beijing, China, where she specialized in head and neck surgery. She
completed an internship in general surgery at the State University of New York at Buffalo Graduate
Medical-Dental Education Consortium in Buffalo and residency in radiation oncology at the Roswell
Park Cancer Institute, also in Buffalo.
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Kevin Jones, MD
Instructor, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
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Orthopaedic Surgery
Kevin B. Jones, MD, an instructor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Utah, specializes in the
surgical management of various soft-tissue and bone sarcomas for both children and adults. He also provides surgical management of other
cancers that spread to bone as well as benign tumors of the connective tissues.
Jones’s research focuses on the functional outcomes of limb-sparing surgery and on the biology of sarcomas, specifically osteosarcoma, a
bone-forming sarcoma that arises most frequently in adolescence or young adulthood. He conducts research using mouse models of disease to
study the genetic events that lead to these cancers. Jones conducts this research and other work with mouse models of pediatric sarcomas in
the laboratory of Nobel Prize winner Mario Capecchi, PhD.
Jones joined Huntsman Cancer Institute from Mount Sinai Hospital and the University of Toronto, where he completed
fellowship training in musculoskeletal surgical oncology. He graduated from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 2002 and completed orthopaedic surgery residency at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics
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Steve L. Lessnick, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Division of
Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Oncological
Sciences
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Pediatric Hematology/Oncology
Stephen Lessnick, MD, PhD, a Huntsman Cancer Institute investigator and assistant
professor of pediatrics, sees pediatric patients with cancer at Primary Children's Medical Center.
His research focuses on the molecular basis of pediatric cancer development.
The Lessnick lab studies Ewing's sarcoma as a model for pediatric tumor development. Ewing's
sarcoma is a prototypical tumor that has a peak incidence in the teenage years. A chromosomal
translocation (an abnormality that occurs when chromosomes break and the fragments rejoin to
other chromosomes) characterizes Ewing's sarcoma. Learning details of how the cancer-causing
protein created by this translocation functions could help resolve questions about the
differences between pediatric and adult tumors, and between sarcomas and other forms of cancer.
Additionally, the Lessnick lab is interested in developing new therapeutic interventions for
children with cancer that might be identified through their research.
Dr. Lessnick earned his bachelor's degree from Brandeis University,
followed by MD and PhD degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) as part
of the Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP). He conducted his internship and residency
at Children's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, followed by a fellowship in pediatric
hematology/oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Children's Hospital. His
fellowship/postdoctoral research was performed in the Pediatric Oncology Department at
the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Dr. Lessnick joined HCI in January 2004.
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Courtney Scaife, MD
Assistant Professor, Department of Surgery
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General Surgery
Courtney Scaife, MD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Surgery, Division of Surgical
Oncology.
Dr. Scaife specializes in cancers of the gastrointestinal tract; including the esophagus, stomach,
pancreas, liver, colon, and rectum; as well as intra-abdominal sarcomas. Her research interests
include the mechanisms of metastases in colorectal and pancreatic cancers, new approaches to early
diagnosis, and cell-to-cell signaling. In addition, she is studying methods to improve patient
outcomes and participating in multi-center clinical trials designed to improve the standard of care
for cancer patients.
Dr. Scaife received her medical degree from the University of Wisconsin Medical School and completed
a general surgery residency at the University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics. She completed a
fellowship in surgical oncology at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.
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Meic H. Schmidt, MD
Assistant Professor, Department of Neurosurgery
Director, Spinal Oncology
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Neurosurgery/Spinal Oncology
Meic H. Schmidt, MD, is a member of the brain tumor research team at
Huntsman Cancer Institute, an assistant professor in the Department of
Neurosurgery at the University of Utah and the Director of the Spinal
Oncology Division within the department. He is a neurosurgeon who
specializes in the treatment of primary and metastatic spine tumors,
spinal cord tumors, and brain tumors. In his practice, he encourages his
patients to actively participate in choosing the best treatment by
helping them learn about their disease.
Schmidt's research interests include investigating the benefits of
minimally invasive spinal surgery for metastatic tumors and the
development of spinal radiosurgery techniques. He is also interested in
tumor biology, as well as the basic science and clinical application of
laser surgery using light sensitive drugs for primary and metastatic
brain tumors and spinal cord tumors. In April of 2000, the NASA Space
Technology Hall of Fame awarded him the Space Technology Research Award
for his work using LED technology in the photodynamic therapy of cancer.
Schmidt received his medical degree at the Medical College of Wisconsin
and completed a neurological surgery residency there. He received
further training through an NIH training grant in the Department of
Neurological Surgery at the University of California, San Francisco,
where he was appointed to back-to-back fellowships in neuro-oncology and
spinal surgery.
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Sharon Weinstein, MD
Director, Pain Medicine & Palliative Care |
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Pain and Palliative Care
Sharon Weinstein, MD, is board certified by the American Academy
of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. She is Associate Professor of
Anesthesiology, Neurology and Oncology. She is Faculty Scholar of the
Project on Death in America, on the Executive Committee of the
Partnership to Improve Care at the End of Life in Utah, and on the
Board of the Rocky Mountain Candlelighters.
Weinstein recently accepted an invitation to serve on the Advisory
Council of the Utah Department of Health's "Promoting H.O.P.E. (Hope
and Optimal Palliative Efforts) for Utah Children." With funding from
the federal Health Care Financing Administration, the Department of
Health has embarked on a planning process to develop an 1115 waiver
to expand Medicaid eligibility and services to children with
life-threatening illness and to partner with other groups to effect
changes to improve end-of-life care for the larger pediatric
population. The mission of "Promoting HOPE for Utah Children" is to
make coordinated, holistic care and services accessible to children
in Utah with a life-threatening (limiting) illness and to preserve
the quality of life of the child and family throughout the illness
and beyond.
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David E. Joyner, PhD
Sarcoma Array Supervisor |
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SARC Lab
David E. Joyner, PhD, is supervisor of the
Sarcoma Array Research Consortium (SARC) Laboratory at the Huntsman Cancer
Institute. He is responsible for all SARC Lab research activities, including
sarcoma gene expression profiling using microarray technology, in vivo/ in
vitro studies, and projects exploring the molecular genetics of sarcomas.
Joyner’s primary interests include the process of programmed cell death
(apoptosis), genetic and physiological traits conferring a “competitive
advantage” to cancer cells in a normal-cell environment, molecular genetics,
and the implementation of microarray technology in cancer research.
Joyner has been involved in cancer research since
joining the University of Utah School of Medicine in 1984. He received
his baccalaureate and Master of Science in Zoology from the University of
Utah, and a Doctor of Philosophy (Zoology/Ecology) from the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln. Prior to his affiliation with the School of Medicine,
he taught in the Departments of Zoology at the University of Guelph
(Ontario, Canada) and at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale. He is
currently a Research Instructor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery.
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Susie Newman Crabtree, RN, BS
Study Coordinator |
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Research Nurse
Susie received her RN diploma from Hillcrest Medical Center, Tulsa
Oklahoma, and her BS from College of St. Frances, Joliet, Illinois.
With over 30 years experience in Operating Room, Trauma and Critical
Care, she currently works as an O. R. nurse at University of Utah
Health Science Center, and as study coordinator with the Sarcoma
Service at Huntsman Cancer Institute.
She was principle investigator
and author of "Utilization of Time in the Operating Room" and
co-investigator for an Association of Operating Room Nurses
congressional scientific presentation, studying skin preperation
techniques immediately prior to surgery. As Study Coordinator for the
Sarcoma Service, she conforms to Institutional Review Board and
Clinical Cancer Investigations Committee guidelines and is an active
participant in the Clinical Coordinator Research Organization.
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Sylvia Trang
Lab Technician |
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Last Modified: Friday, October 10, 2008
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