Alan and Sybil Edelstein Professionalism and Ethics in Medicine Lecture

Alan & Sybil Edelstein Professionalism and Ethics in Medicine Lecture

Genetic Testing: Ethical Dilemmas

On Monday, March 25, 2024 at 6pm (ET) the 2024 virtual lecture took place, featuring the topic of Genetic Testing: Ethical Dilemmas.  The program featured a panel of Alumni and Faculty moderated by David R. Edelstein, MD ’80.  The lecture also included introductions by Marcia Edelstein Herrmann, MD ’78 and Greg Grillone MD.

Moderator:

Dr. David Edelstein Photo

David R. Edelstein, MD ’80: Chief of Otolaryngology at Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital (MEETH)

Dr. David R. Edelstein is the Chief of Otolaryngology at Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital (MEETH) and the former Chair of Otolaryngology at Lenox Hill Hospital (LHH). He is a clinical professor of otorhinolaryngology at Weill Cornell Medical College, and is nationally known for work in endoscopic sinus surgery, CT-guided nasal surgery, balloon sinuplasty, hearing loss, nasal polyps, and nasal aging. He is a past chair of the Board of Governors of the American Academy of Otolaryngology (AAOHNS), the senior editor of Revision Surgery in Otolaryngology, and has won numerous awards, including the Distinguished Service Award from AAOHNS, the Practitioner of the Year from AAOHNS, the Distinguished Alumni Award from the Boston University Avedisian & Chobanian School of Medicine (BUSM)  and from the Physician Attending Association of LHH, and several Patients’ Choice Awards. He has been included among the “Best Otolaryngologists in New York” by New York Magazine, “New York Super Doctors,” “America’s Top Doctors,” and “New York’s Most Compassionate Doctors” for many years. He also sits on the Deans Advisory Board at BUSM.

2024 Panelists:

Jodi D Hoffman, MDJodi Hoffman, MD: Chief of Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center; Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine

Speaking Topic: The Ethics of Genetic Testing

Dr. Hoffman graduated from Harvard University and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. She did her residency in Pediatrics at Yale Children’s Hospital and was a Fellow in Medical Genetics at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia/Hospital of the Univ. of PA. She is Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Boston University, Chief of the Division of Genetics, Chair of the BUMC Genetics Oversight Committee, Medical Director of the BU Genetic Counseling Master’s Degree Program and Chair of the BUMG Work-Life Harmony group. She served 9 years on the Tufts Medical Center Ethics Committee. She is currently the Vice Chair of the Program Committee for the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and previously chaired the ACMG Social, Ethical, and Legal Issues Committee.

Margaret A. Kenna, MD, MPH '79Margaret A. Kenna, MD, MPH ’79: Sarah Fuller Chair for Hearing Loss and Hearing Restoration, Director of Clinical Research, Dept. of Otolaryngology and Communication Enhancement at Boston Children’s Hospital; Professor of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Harvard Medical School

Speaking Topic: From Conception to College: Genetic Diagnosis of Pediatric Hearing Loss

Dr. Kenna received her undergraduate degree from the University of Pennsylvania and her MD from Boston University School of Medicine. She completed a residency in Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and a Pediatric Otolaryngology Fellowship at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine). She completed a Master’s in Public Health degree (MPH) in the area of Clinical Effectiveness at the Harvard School of Public Health in 2005.

Before coming to Boston Children’s, Dr. Kenna was on the academic faculty at Children’s Hospital Pittsburgh and Yale University School of Medicine. Dr. Kenna has been a member of the Pediatric Otolaryngology faculty at Boston Children’s Hospital since 1995. She co-founded the Boston Children’s Hospital Pediatric Cochlear Implant Program, and was its Director from 1995-2003. Since 2003, she has been the Director of Clinical Research in the Dept. of Otolaryngology, Boston Children’s Hospital, and is Director of the Hearing Loss Program.

Dr. Kenna’s early research focused on otitis media, and she and her group published several articles demonstrating that chronic suppurative otitis media could be managed medically, rather than surgically, changing the standard of care. Over the past 2 decades, she has focused on the causes of pediatric hearing loss, including genetics, congenital cytomegalovirus, structural anomalies of the temporal bone, and hearing loss secondary to ototoxicity in patients with Cystic Fibrosis. She is a long-standing member of the Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Advisory Committee of the MA Dept. of Public Health, and is a founding member of the Harvard Medical School Center for Hereditary Deafness, the MA Coalition for Congenital CMV, and of the American Society for Pediatric Otolaryngology (ASPO).

Daniel Faden, MD, FACS '11Daniel Faden, MD, FACS ’11: Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, Harvard Medical School; Head and Neck Surgeon, Mass. Eye and Ear

Speaking Topic: Current role of Genetic Testing and Personalized Medicine in Head and Neck Cancer

Daniel Faden MD, FACS, is a head and neck surgical oncologist and scientist in the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery at Harvard Medical School. After completing medical school he was a Howard Hughes Research Scholar in the National Human Genome Research Institute studying cancer genomics. He then completed residency training in Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery at UCSF where he was embedded in the laboratory of HHMI Investigator Joe DeRisi studying viral oncogenesis. He completed three fellowships at the University of Pittsburgh in head and neck surgical oncology, in cranial base surgery, and a T32 research fellowship in the laboratory of Robert Ferris, MD PhD. In 2018 he returned to Boston where he is an attending surgeon in the division of head and neck surgical oncology at Mass Eye and Ear and Mass General Hospital and an associate member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. The Faden lab is a translational research laboratory focused on head and neck cancer biomarker discovery. The lab is currently funded by three NIH grants, as well industry and foundation awards, to utilize tissue and blood-based approaches for studying head and neck cancer genomics with a focus on development of liquid biopsies for detecting, diagnosing, and monitoring HPV-associated cancers.

Erica HollandErica Holland, MD: Assistant Professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine; Interim Director, Division of Maternal and Fetal Medicine, Boston Medical Center

Speaking Topic: Prenatal genetic testing: ethical questions and challenges

Erica Holland, MD is the Interim Division Director for Maternal and Fetal Medicine at Boston Medical Center and an Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Boston University School of Medicine. She received her BA from Cornell University and her MD from the University of Massachusetts Medical School. She completed a Residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology from Boston University/Boston Medical Center, a Fellowship in Maternal and Fetal Medicine from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and a Fellowship in Bioethics from the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School. She was recently awarded funding through the Greenwall Foundation to study the ethics issues surrounding urine drug testing of pregnant patients. She is a member of the ethics committee at Boston Medical Center and is currently serving on the national ethics committee for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Headshot Dr. Wendy KuochungWendy Kuohung, MD: Director of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Boston Medical Center; Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine

Speaking Topic: Ethical Dilemmas in Preimplantation Genetic Testing

Wendy Kuohung, MD is the Director of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Boston Medical Center and an Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine. Dr. Kuohung received her medical degree from the Yale School of Medicine and has been in practice for over 20 years. She completed her residency in OB/GYN at BMC and fellowship training in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. She is an expert in treating infertility, in vitro fertilization, fertility preservation, menstrual disorders, fibroids, endometriosis, mullerian anomalies, and minimally invasive and robotic gynecologic surgery. Her research interests lie in disparities in reproductive care, placental and reproductive tract development, and the microbiome of the reproductive tract.

Kathleen Swenson, MS, MPH, CGCKathleen Swenson, MS, MPH, CGC: Director of the Master’s Program in Genetic Counseling and Clinical Associate Professor of Medical Sciences & Education, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine

Speaking Topic: The Value of Genetic Counselors for Patients and Providers

Kathleen received an MS in Human Genetics from Sarah Lawrence College, and an MPH from Columbia University focusing on Population and Family Health. Kathleen’s contributions to the genetic counseling profession include a range from clinical care across many specialties (reproductive care, pediatrics, neurology, and cancer) in New York City and Boston. She led advocacy work at the national level with the Children’s Tumor Foundation and at the community level with the Dominican Women’s Development Center. She collaborated with industry to develop an online genetic counseling platform, which broadened access to genetic counseling services nationally. She is currently active on committees for the National Society of Genetic Counselors and the Accreditation Council for Genetic Counseling. She is former President of the New England Regional Genetics Group and is a current member of the Executive Committee for the Genetic Counselor Educators Association. Kathleen is passionate about teaching the next generation of genetic counselors. She was recognized as the 2019 Graduate Medical Sciences Educator of the Year and for Outstanding Mentorship in 2021. She will complete her EdD doctorate in 2024.

 

To support the work of Professionalism and Ethics in Medicine at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, please donate to the Alan and Sybil Edelstein Lecture Fund for Professionalism and Ethics in Medicine

  1. Online: via the Online Giving Form
  2. By check: Make payable to Trustees of Boston University, and in the memo on your check (or an accompanying note) list the “Alan and Sybil Edelstein Lecture Fund for Professionalism and Ethics in Medicine” to ensure your donation is deposited to the correct fund. You can mail the check to the address below:

Boston University Development
Gift Processing
C/O JPMorgan Chase & Co.
PO Box 22605
New York, NY 10087-2605

For any questions about donations, please contact cameddev@bu.edu.