Advisory Board Members
The Give a Scan Advisory Board will set the data
collection priorities. The Board will also review the program and set
additional guidelines as required to achieve the mission of the program and
protect the identity of the donors.
Rick Avila, M.S. is the Senior Director of Healthcare
Solutions at Kitware and has extensive experience leading research on the
computational analysis of medical images. Mr. Avila received an M.S. in
Computer Science from SUNY Stony Brook in 1992 specializing in 3D biomedical
imaging and visualization. He has led numerous research and development
initiatives in several academic and commercial settings including Howard Hughes
Medical Institute and GE Global Research. He has placed an emphasis on the
development of improved methods for early lung cancer management, including the
development of computer aided detection systems, computer-assisted needle
biopsy methods, and quantitative lung cancer therapy assessment algorithms. He
has consistently supported and contributed to open source biomedical imaging
projects for over 18 years including the co-authorship of the Visualization
Toolkit (VTK) textbook and software toolkit, a widely adopted open source
toolkit for data visualization.
Gail Matthews, the mother of two sons and grandmother
of six, and a lung cancer survivor, is an active Lung Cancer Alliance advocate
since 2006. A former free lance writer and Young Adult columnist for the Boston
Globe, Hartford Times and Christian Science Monitor, she
helped her husband co-found College Marketing Group, Inc., which revolutionized
how publishers market books. Currently Gail writes a Caregiver to Caregiver
column for Cognitive Fitness column, a Santa Barbara Alzheimer's clinic as
well as a grand parenting column for New Hampshire's Kids Magazine.
A lifelong community service volunteer, organizer and a leader in anti-smoking
and cancer detection efforts, she is past President of a Massachusetts Heart
Association Chapter, the New London, NH Love Lights a Tree, and founder of the
New London Hospital Mammography Fund for Women in Need in NH which now in its
20th year has served over 1800 women. In 1999, she founded and chaired
Women Who Make a Difference for the Lake Sunapee Visiting Nurse and Hospice
Pediatric Services and launched the first Lahey Clinic Nurses Appreciation Fund
in Burlington, Massachusetts. After bouts with lung cancer in 2000 and 2003,
Matthews, who never smoked, became a determined advocate for raising public
awareness and funding for research. Recognizing the need to aggressively
address the politics of lung cancer as well, she joined with the Lung Cancer
Alliance and held the first Crystal Ball in Boston in 2006.
Jane Reese Coulbourne, MSChE counts more than two
decades of experience working in strategic planning; high performance work
organization design and implementation; reengineering, and new technology/brand
start-ups in manufacturing and utilities. Diagnosed in 1990, with stage IIIB
breast cancer, she has since participated in a cancer clinical trial in the
National Cancer Institute’s Intramural Program, Bethesda, MD. Her diagnosis of
breast cancer led to her interest in cancer and patient advocacy, serving as
Executive Vice President of the National Breast Cancer Coalition, a consultant
to the Director of the National Cancer Institute and later as the interim
Executive Director of the Lung Cancer Alliance. Currently, Ms. Reese-Coulbourne
is working with the Reagan-Udall Foundation for the FDA, to help start it up.
She also serves as a consultant to the Critical Path Institute in Tucson,
Arizona. The focus of her work includes Tuberculosis drug development,
regulatory harmonization, and several regulatory science projects. Ms. Reese
Coulbourne currently serves on the Board of the Lung Cancer Alliance and the
Arlington Free Clinic and has advanced degrees in Chemistry and Chemical
Engineering
Daniel C. Sullivan, M.D. is Professor of Radiology at
Duke University Medical Center, coordinator of imaging activities for the Duke
Comprehensive Cancer Center (DCCC), and Director of the Imaging Core of the
Duke CTSA program. He is also Science Adviser to the Radiological Society
of North America (RSNA). He completed radiology residency and nuclear
medicine fellowship in 1977 at Yale-New Haven Hospital, and was in academic
radiology for 20 years before joining the National Cancer Institute at NIH in
1997. From 1977 to 1997 Dr. Sullivan held faculty appointments at Yale
University Medical Center, Duke University Medical Center, and University of
Pennsylvania Medical Center. His areas of clinical and research expertise
are in nuclear medicine and oncologic imaging. From 1997 to 2007 Dr.
Sullivan was Associate Director in the Division of Cancer Treatment and
Diagnosis of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), and Head of the Cancer Imaging
Program (CIP) at NCI. Dr. Sullivan’s current responsibilities at Duke
include heading the Imaging Core of Duke’s CTSA program and the Imaging Program
in Development for the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center. These activities
focus on improving the use of imaging as a biomarker in clinical trials and
facilitating translational research involving new and established imaging
methods. In his role with the RSNA Dr. Sullivan coordinates integration
of a wide range of national and international activities related to evaluating
and validating imaging methods as biomarkers in clinical research.
David
Yankelevitz, M.D. graduated from Downstate Medical Center in 1981.
He went on to complete residencies in Diagnostic Radiology and
Nuclear Medicine, and subsequently did a fellowship in Thoracic Imaging at The
New York Presbyterian Hospital. Since his fellowship, he worked at Weill
Medical College until 2010 when he joined the Mount Sinai Medical Center.
His main academic interest is the early diagnosis and evaluation of treatment
response for lung cancer. He was one of the initiators of the I-ELCAP
lung cancer screening study, which now has enrolled over 50,000 people in eight
countries worldwide. He has also been part of a team that develops software
for computer aided diagnosis. He has been Principal Investigator on 4 NCI
grants and co-author of over 200 articles and book chapters. He has
trained 14 research fellows in Thoracic imaging. On the clinical side,
his main area of interest has been fine needle aspiration of lung nodules and
he has developed one of the largest practices in the United States.