The AACR recognizes the untimely loss of one of its finest members, Dr. John Murren, who died December 28, 2005 of metastatic melanoma at the age of 47. Dr. Murren was Associate Professor of Medicine at the Yale School of Medicine where he served as Director of the Outpatient Center, Director of the Lung Cancer Clinic, and co-leader of the Experimental Therapeutics Program of the Yale Cancer Center. He is survived by his wife, Nancy, and son, John.Dr. Murren grew up in Fairfield, Connecticut, where he attended Roger Ludlowe High School. He earned a B.A. in Chemistry at Duke University cum laude and then attended medical school at Loyola-Stritch School of Medicine in Chicago. He did his internship, residency, and chief residency in Internal Medicine at St. Vincent's Hospital in New York.Dr. Murren joined the Yale fellowship program in Medical Oncology in 1988. He distinguished himself for his clinical skills, compassion, and curiosity. He entered the laboratory in 1989, where he developed a lifelong interest in cancer pharmacology. He began by analyzing the curious relationship between neoadjuvant treatment of lung cancer and response rate, research that was notable for its probing questions and analytic approach to evaluating the existing literature. He concluded that neoadjuvant treatment of non–small cell lung cancer was promising, but that no rigorous study existed to prove the concept. Soon thereafter, several groups took up the gauntlet and conducted the experiments that John had recognized were lacking.He then asked why we failed to cure cancers despite a modern understanding of drug resistance mechanisms. That work led to several articles and editorials on multidrug resistance modulators. His interest in atypical multidrug resistance mediated through topoisomerases I and II led him to develop some of the earliest trials using camptothecins in small cell lung cancer. He worked with Yale's Nuclear Medicine group to develop a novel treatment for neuroendocrine tumors with radiolabeled somatostatin analogues. Since 1992, he received continuous NIH funding to study new therapies in lung cancer.In addition to his major responsibilities at Yale, John was the driving force behind the development of the nonprofit Nevada Cancer Institute, founded by his brother, Jim, President and Chief Financial Officer of MGM Mirage, and Jim's wife, Heather. John served on the NVCI Board and was an adjunct faculty member. It was their vision to provide residents of Southern Nevada convenient access to state-of-the-art care and access to clinical trials. John was instrumental in attracting Dr. Nicholas Vogelzang to the NVCI to serve as its founding director and Dr. Guiseppe Pizzorno as Associate Director of Translational Research.John was recognized nationally and internationally for his work. He served on the Clinical Translational Research Committee of the American Association for Cancer Research and the American College of Surgeons Cancer Committee. He also served on the Clinical Research Subcommittee of the Program Committee for the American Association for Cancer Research National Meeting in 2001. He was a member of the Research Grants Council in Hong Kong.John was the consummate academic medical oncologist. In addition to providing unsurpassed care and leading an active laboratory, he was an outstanding teacher and role model for the many fellows he mentored. John's patients benefited from his warmth, compassion, and genuine joy at seeing them.John was perhaps best known around Yale for his radiant smile, quick wit, and kindness. It would be difficult to find anyone who disliked him. To those who worked closely with John in the Yale Medical Oncology Section, he will be remembered as an astute clinician and a creative scientist, but most of all, as a kind, gentle man, devoted to his patients, family, and many friends.
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