Nancy E. Davidson, MD
Executive Vice President, Clinical Affairs
Fred Hutch
Professor
Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutch
Member
Immunotherapy Integrated Research Center (IIRC), Fred Hutch
Raisbeck Endowed Chair for Collaborative Research
Fred Hutch
Dr. Nancy Davidson is the executive vice president of Clinical Affairs at Fred Hutch. She serves as a bridge builder across the cancer treatment and research programs of the Fred Hutch/University of Washington/Seattle Children's Cancer Consortium. Dr. Davidson, a breast cancer oncologist, has built a worldwide reputation for her expertise and leadership in this field, for her research teasing out the role of hormones in breast cancer growth, and for her impact on the development of new standards of care. Her team was the first to describe how the activity of one of the estrogen receptor genes is regulated by epigenetic factors, which affect how the DNA code is read and translated into proteins. She has also made foundational contributions to our understanding of how estrogen deprivation and other therapies trigger breast cancer cells to kill themselves through apoptosis, or programmed cell death. Her lab studies paved the way for new clinical trials of drugs that exploit hormonal pathways to kill breast cancer. She has also led several critical trials that have established new therapeutic regimens for patients with the disease.
For assistance, contact:
Karla Smith, Executive Assistant
Office of Dr. Nancy E. Davidson
206.667.6825
kjsmith@fredhutch.org
Other Appointments & Affiliations
Member, Translational Data Science Integrated Research Center (TDS IRC), Fred HutchMember
Translational Data Science Integrated Research Center (TDS IRC), Fred Hutch
Affiliate Investigator
Translational Science and Therapeutics Division, Fred Hutch
Past President
American Association for Cancer Research, 2016-2017
Past President
American Society Clinical Oncology, 2007-2008
Education
National Cancer Institute, Medical oncology fellowship
Johns Hopkins Hospital, Internal medicine residency
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Internal medicine internship
Harvard Medical School, MD
Wellesley College, BA Molecular Biology
Research Interests
My laboratory focus has been on the role of epigenetics in breast cancer, especially the role of aberrant DNA methylation and histone modifications in hormone resistance using human breast cancer cell lines as a model system. These preclinical studies have advanced to early phase clinical trials assessing the role of epigenetic modifiers for treatment of breast cancer. Through my role as a member and chair of the Breast Committee for the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group I have served as a co-investigator or lead investigator for a number of practice-changing breast cancer trials. These include trials of optimal endocrine therapy for premenopausal hormone-responsive breast cancer, optimization of endocrine therapy for postmenopausal women, use of taxanes in the adjuvant setting, and utility of trastuzumab for early HER-2 positive breast cancer. As a co-founder of the Translational Breast Cancer Research Consortium (TBCRC) I have contributed to the development of early phase biospecimen-rich translational trials in breast cancer. I am an active participant in the development of evidence-based clinical pathways in breast cancer treatment and helped to spearhead a focus on value of cancer care through the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Clinical Expertise
Management of breast cancer and conduct of all phases of oncology clinical trials