Yingye Zheng, PhD
Professor
Public Health Sciences Division, Fred Hutch
Member
Translational Data Science Integrated Research Center (TDS IRC), Fred Hutch
Dr. Yingye Zheng is a biostatistician who develops novel statistical tools for medical decision-making related to disease screening, diagnosis, prognosis and outcome prediction. Her work includes evaluating how useful potential biomarkers and disease-risk models will be/are for real patients in the clinic and how to use electronic medical records to evaluate cancer screening techniques. She also studies how to use molecular signals that change over time (called longitudinal biomarkers) to dynamically predict risk and monitor patients’ disease status. Dr. Zheng is an investigator in the Fred Hutch-based Data Management and Coordinating Center of the Early Detection Research Network, or EDRN, a national network that develops, evaluates and validates biomarkers for early detection and risk assessment for cancer. She also is co-principal investigator of the Hutch-based Coordinating Center for the Population-based Research to Optimize the Screening Process II, or PROSPR II, a national consortium that aims to reduce false-positive and false-negative test results in cancer screening.
Other Appointments & Affiliations
Affiliate Professor, Biostatistics, University of Washington School of Public Health and Community MedicineAffiliate Professor, Biostatistics
University of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine
Education
PhD, Biostatistics, University of Washington, 2002
MS, Biostatistics, University of Washington, 1999
MA, Psychology, Washington University in St. Louis, 1997
BS, Psychology, Peking University, 1992
Research Interests
Evaluation of clinical utilities of novel biomarkers and risk models with censored time-to-event outcome
Dynamic risk prediction and disease surveillance with longitudinal biomarkers
Evaluation of cancer screening process (recruitment, screening, diagnosis, and referral for treatment) using electronic medical records from health care systems