Conqueror in Action: Dr. Zhang Takes on Lung Cancer

Dec 15, 2017

Certain physicians know they want to become doctors from a very young age. Others start on a different path until something happens to alter their plans. This was the case for Dr. Jianjun Zhang, an assistant professor at MD Anderson Cancer Center.

“When I was a kid, I wanted to be an astronaut,” Dr. Zhang recalled. “Later, I became interested in physics – but in high school, my father was diagnosed with cancer, and he passed away within a year, so that changed my whole career path.”

Ultimately, Dr. Zhang pursued a career in medical oncology, hoping to make a difference for people facing cancer. In 2015, he received a Conquer Cancer Young Investigator Award (YIA) to study lung cancer. The YIA was one of his first important research grants and helped support work that Dr. Zhang and his team are building upon today.

“We’re using next-generation sequencing technology to try to understand how cancers are different, why some respond to treatment and others don’t,” explained Dr. Zhang.

The results of his research could lead to better treatments and improved outcomes for people living with lung cancer.

“Long-term, we’re trying to understand why certain cancers do not respond to treatment, and therefore develop a novel treatment strategy; short-term, we’re trying to develop biomarkers to benefit patients by matching patients with the most appropriate treatment for them,” said Dr. Zhang.

Biomarkers are substances found at higher than normal levels in the blood, urine, or body tissue of some people with cancer. They can play a key role in developing personalized treatment plans for patients. Biomarkers help predict whether a patient will respond to a given therapy and help signal whether a treatment is working.

Dr. Zhang emphasized that the support provided by Conquer Cancer donors is critical to helping researchers improve the current standard of care.

“The current cancer treatment is suboptimal,” said Dr. Zhang. “In the clinic, I feel every day I’m helping patients – and unfortunately we fail a lot of times, but whenever there’s a good story we jump for joy.”

Learn more about Dr. Zhang's research and how he's using his YIA to conquer cancer


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