Principal researchers
Julia A. Newton Bishop
julia.newtonbishop@cancer.org.uk
Click here for Julia's biographical sketch
Professor Julia Newton Bishop is a dermatologist, who has worked to understand what causes melanoma since 1989.
Click here for Julia's research website.
Her research is funded predominantly by the ICRF, now Cancer Research UK. She is responsible for screening for melanoma and treating melanoma in Leeds and also runs the paediatric dermatology service at St Jamess Hospital. She has led the development of guidelines for the treatment of melanoma in the UK and more recently the Yorkshire atopic eczema guidelines. Click here to see a pdf of the guidelines.
In 1989 she began a case-control study of melanoma and started to identify families susceptible to melanoma, based first at the London Hospital in Whitechapel, London and more recently in Leeds in the North of England. A newsletter for families who have taken part in this research programme is available via the patient section of this web site or by post. Families continue to be recruited to the study and the contact for this study is Linda Whitaker: see below.
Some eight years ago Julia instigated the formation of GenoMEL, the Melanoma Genetics Consortium, with interested colleagues, whilst at the Sydney World Melanoma Congress, and she has chaired the Consortium since. Her role is to promote collaborative research and to support the identification of funding for the collaborative research internationally.
In the following years her research has been directed towards:
Understanding genetic predisposition to melanoma (see publications below)
Understanding the relationship between naevi (moles) and melanoma risk [6-13]
Understanding treatment issues in melanoma
Understanding the psycho-oncology of melanoma
The genetic epidemiology of relapse: that is understanding what genes and environmental exposures govern why melanoma may recur. A large cohort study of melanoma patients has been set up to address these issues and a study of late relapsing melanoma.
NCRNI web site.
Jennifer Barrett
j.h.barrett@leeds.ac.uk Click here for Jennifer's biographical sketch
Dr Jenny Barrett leads the statistical group within the Genetic Epidemiology Division. She trained in mathematics at Oxford University, then statistics at the University of Sheffield, obtaining a PhD in statistical genetics in 1993. Since then she has held academic posts at the Universities of Leeds and Manchester, before joining the group in 2000.
Click here for the Genetic Epidemiology of Cancer website.
Her interests are in the application and development of statistical methods and study designs to investigate the genetic epidemiology of complex diseases, including cancer and cardiovascular disease. Current focuses of research include investigation of the joint effect of genes and environment (mainly in application to melanoma and colorectal cancer), analytical issues in candidate gene association studies and proteomics. With Faye Elliot she is involved in the statistical analysis of the data from the melanoma studies. |