Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden names cancer institute director

Prominent researcher Rathmell will oversee White House-backed initiative­s

- DAN DIAMOND

President Biden on Friday named W. Kimryn Rathmell to be the next director of the National Cancer Institute, where the prominent researcher will help oversee several White House-backed initiative­s intended to reduce cancer deaths and accelerate clinical breakthrou­ghs.

Rathmell, an expert in kidney cancer, is the chair of medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville. The Stanford University-trained physician and scientist has been a member of the National Cancer Institute’s board of scientific advisers since 2018, providing guidance to the institute’s leaders on its scientific research and operations. Rathmell’s new role as head of the cancer institute, which the White House said would begin in December, does not require Senate confirmati­on.

As director of the National Cancer Institute, Rathmell will play a central role in carrying out Biden’s “cancer moonshot” initiative, the president’s stated goal to “end cancer as we know it” by better coordinati­ng efforts across the federal government and the private sector, improving access to cancer screening and taking other steps intended to reduce the death rate from cancer by at least 50 percent by 2047. Biden has also pledged that the moonshot will help improve the patient experience for those touched by the disease.

“Dr. Rathmell is the talented and visionary leader the National Cancer Institute needs to drive us toward ending cancer as we know it,” Biden said in a statement Friday, adding that she “embodies the promise of the Biden Cancer Moonshot.”

The National Cancer Institute “is critical to the success of the cancer moonshot,” said Danielle Carnival, who serves as the White House’s cancer moonshot coordinato­r. “We don’t have all the tools today to prevent, detect and treat cancer to reach those goals. And NCI is central in driving that progress and that innovation forward.”

Rathmell did not respond to a request for comment. She succeeds Monica M. Bertagnoll­i, whom the Senate last week confirmed as director of the National Institutes of Health.

In an interview, Bertagnoll­i said she believes that Rathmell is well-positioned to run the $7.3 billion cancer institute, the largest of the 27 institutes and centers that constitute NIH. As a board member, Rathmell helped develop and roll out the cancer institute’s April 2023 national cancer plan, which detailed eight goals to prevent cancer and save lives, Bertagnoll­i said. “Now, she will be the one leading its execution as she steps into this job,” the NIH director added.

“There’s still a lot of work to do,” said Lynn M. Schuchter, president of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, who listed challenges facing the cancer institute that include securing appropriat­e levels of funding, reaching more cancer patients and encouragin­g younger doctors to pursue becoming physician-scientists like Rathmell.

Beverly S. Mitchell, a hematologi­st who previously led Stanford’s cancer institute and mentored Rathmell earlier in her career, touted Rathmell’s work to understand the molecular basis of kidney cancer and develop therapeuti­c approaches to treat it.

The National Cancer Institute “stands for the very best in terms of both fundamenta­l research, which we have to have if we’re going to push knowledge forward, and also applying it to clinical problems,” said Mitchell, adding that Rathmell’s experience working in research labs and at the patient bedside made her an “excellent match” for both parts of the role.

Rathmell was elected last year to the National Academy of Medicine, a nonprofit organizati­on establishe­d to provide the government with independen­t advice on medical policy from top experts, in recognitio­n of her work on kidney cancer and profession­al mentorship of other physicians.

“She is an amazingly accomplish­ed physician and scientist,” said Carnival, the White House cancer moonshot coordinato­r, who praised Rathmell for “having one foot in clinical practice and one in genetics and molecular biology.”

As director of the National Cancer Institute, Rathmell will play a central role in carrying out Biden’s “cancer moonshot” initiative, the president’s stated goal to “end cancer as we know it” by better coordinati­ng efforts across the federal government and the private sector, improving access to cancer screening and taking other steps intended to reduce the death rate from cancer by at least 50 percent by 2047.

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