EDU 53 - Radiation Oncology Biology Integration Network (ROBIN): Translational Radiobiology, and Critical to the Future of the Field
MODERATOR(S)
Jeffrey Buchsbaum, MD, PhD, MS, FASTRO, AM - NCI
session DESCRIPTION
ROBIN is a transorfative approach to radiobiology and at the NCI it represents perhaps the most ambitious and creative new scientific program. How it studies disease and clinical care has become a new norm and we hope to share the reasons for this with the ASTRO community because it represents a major shift for our field - it seeks to explain what happens when we treat patients with standard radiation in ways not known formally, to set a new bar from which to grow science for our field moving forward.
learning objectives
- Understand why ROBIN was created, what it means, and why it is important for the whole field.
- Have an idea about how to use the ROBIN approach in their practice, thinking, and research moving into the future and how to train people to do so.
Credits
| AMA PRA Category 1 Credits: | 1.00 |
| CAMPEP Credits: | 1.00 |
| MDCB Credits: | 1.00 |
Presentations
-
04:00pm - 04:02pm PT
Introduction - Why Did We Do ROBIN?
Speaker: Jeffrey Buchsbaum, MD, PhD, MS, FASTRO, AM - NCI, Bethesda -
04:02pm - 04:17pm PT
Perspective of the Scientist: Why ROBIN is Important
Speaker: Encouse Golden, MD, PhD - Weill Cornell Medical College, New York -
04:17pm - 04:32pm PT
What is Important About Data Science in ROBIN?
Speaker: Joseph Deasy, PhD - Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York -
04:32pm - 04:47pm PT
Workforce Development in ROBIN - A Critical Need for the Field
Speaker: Jean Nakamura, MD - University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco -
04:47pm - 05:00pm PT
Questions and Answers
Speaker: Jeffrey Buchsbaum, MD, PhD, MS, FASTRO, AM - NCI, Bethesda