Ovarian Cancer Expert to Speak at UNMC Bell Lectureship

Robert F. Ozols, M.D., Ph.D., an internationally recognized ovarian

cancer researcher, will be the featured speaker at the Fourth Annual Carol

Bell Memorial Lectureship on Tuesday, Oct. 23, at the UNMC Eppley Cancer

Center.

Dr. Ozols serves as senior vice president in the medical science division

at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. He is internationally recognized

for his research to improve the treatment of ovarian cancer with more effective

approaches to chemotherapy. Specifically, Dr. Ozols research focuses on

how ovarian cancer cells develop resistance to anti-cancer drugs, as well

as developing strategies for overcoming drug resistance.

“We are very honored to have Dr. Ozols present the fourth annual Carol

Bell Lecture, said Ken Cowan, M.D., Ph.D., director of the UNMC Eppley

Cancer Center. He is recognized as one of the leading ovarian cancer experts

around the globe and has developed new clinical approaches for treating

women with ovarian cancer.  His research is both innovative and fundamental

in the battle against ovarian cancer.

Dr. Ozols has published nearly 200 laboratory and clinical research

papers in peer-reviewed journals, as well as more than 100 book chapters,

symposia and editorials. He is on the board of directors for the American

Society of Clinical Oncology and the Association of American Cancer Institutes.

He is the principal investigator for the Fox Chase Cancer Center SPORE

(Specialized Program of Research Excellence) Grant in Ovarian Cancer. He

is board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and the Subspecialty

of Medical Oncology.

Ovarian cancer is the fifth most common cancer among women and it is

predicted that approximately 23,100 new cases will be diagnosed in 2001.

About 14,000 women will die of this disease this year alone. If the cancer

is found and treated before it has spread outside the ovary, 95 percent

of women will survive at least 5 years, but only 25 percent of ovarian

cancers are found at this early stage.

The lectureship was initiated with gifts to the University of Nebraska

Foundation honoring Carol Bell, who died of cancer in August 1997. She

was the wife of Bob Bell, former president of the Greater Omaha Chamber

of Commerce.

This years lecture will be held at noon at the Wittson Hall Amphitheater

on the UNMC campus. That lecture is intended for the scientific community.

Dr. Ozols also will speak at a dinner at the Joslyn Museum the evening

prior to the lecture. The dinner will be attended by about 200 community

leaders and will be hosted by Michael and Gail Yanney, M.D. Michael Yanney

is chief executive officer of America First Companies in Omaha. Dr. Gail

Yanney is the immediate past president of the UNMC College of Medicine

Alumni Association. The dinner will showcase the outstanding cancer research

and treatment programs at the UNMC Eppley Cancer Center.

We really appreciate the support of Carol Bells friends who helped

create this lectureship, Dr. Cowan said. This group has rallied so much

community support for our cancer program.

Beginning this year, the Carol Bell Lectureship will become a bi-annual

event. It will bring a nationally recognized cancer authority to UNMC with

each lecture focusing on a different area of cancer and cancer research.

Past lecturers include Donald Coffey, Ph.D., a Johns Hopkins University

prostate cancer expert and past president of the American Association for

Cancer Research; Lawrence Einhorn, M.D., a renowned testicular cancer expert

who successfully treated world-champion cyclist Lance Armstrong; and Bruce

Chabner, M.D., director of the Clinical Cancer Center at Massachusetts

General Hospital, the teaching hospital for Harvard Medical School.

The Carol Bell Lectureship will rotate each year with the Ambassador

of Hope Award as a premier fund-raising event for the UNMC Eppley Cancer

Center. The Ambassador of Hope Award recognizes individuals who have made

a significant contribution in the fight against cancer through their research

or patient care activities or by raising the publics awareness of cancer.

That award has been presented to retired Army Gen. H. Norman Schwartzkopf,

a prostate cancer survivor, and ABC news veteran Sam Donaldson, a melanoma

cancer survivor.