Advancing Precision Oncology Education Series
Fairfax, VA 2025
July 11
Breaking Barriers in RAS-Driven Cancers
Join us for a FREE, exclusive one-day CME (4.5 available) event focused on the latest breakthroughs in RAS-targeted therapies, hosted in partnership with Inova Schar Cancer Institute and led by Dr. Timothy Cannon, our event chair.
This premier gathering will explore cutting-edge advancements in therapeutic mRNA KRAS vaccines, KRAS inhibitors, KRAS degraders, KRAS G12D inhibitors, PLK inhibitors, and the latest updates on KRAS G12C. Additionally, we’ll delve into the biologic activity of specific KRAS mutations by genotype, providing key insights to drive innovation in cancer treatment.
Designed for oncology professionals, researchers, and clinicians, this event offers a unique platform to engage with leading experts, exchange ideas, and stay at the forefront of RAS-driven cancer therapeutics. Don’t miss this opportunity to connect, learn, and shape the future of precision oncology.
Agenda
FRIDAY, JULY 11 | |
---|---|
7:30AM | Registration & Check-in |
8:25AM | Welcome and Introductions |
8:30AM | Combination Strategies for KRAS-Mutated Cancers |
9:00AM | Overcoming Resistance to KRAS-Directed Therapies |
9:30AM | Breakfast and Presentation |
10:30AM | Biomarker-Driven Approaches in KRAS Targeted Therapy |
11:00AM | Next-Generation KRAS Inhibitors |
11:30AM | PLK Inhibitors in Oncology |
12:00PM | Lunch and Presentation |
1:00PM | Translating KRAS Research into Clinical Practice |
1:30PM | mRNA Therapeutics Beyond KRAS |
2:00PM | Presentation |
2:30PM | Targeting KRAS in Pancreatic Cancer |
3:00PM | Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) and KRAS Mutations |
3:30PM | Closing Remarks |
- Analyze the Latest Advances in KRAS-Targeted Therapies
- Differentiate KRAS Mutations by Genotype and Therapeutic Response
- Illustrate the role of next-generation KRAS-targeted approaches enhancing precision medicine in oncology and improving patient outcomes
Joint Accreditation Statement
In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by Amedco LLC
and Kneed Communications. Amedco LLC is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for
Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE),
and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the
healthcare team. Amedco Joint Accreditation Provider Number: 4008163 Professions in scope for this activity are listed below.
Physicians
Amedco LLC designates this live activity for a maximum of 4.50 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM for physicians. Physicians
should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Pharmacists & Pharmacy Technicians
Amedco LLC designates this activity for a maximum of 4.50 knowledge-based CPE contact hours.
NOTE to Pharmacists: The only official Statement of Credit is the one you pull from CPE Monitor. You must request your
certificate within 45 days of your participation in the activity to meet the deadline for submission to CPE Monitor. Credits are
generally reported during the first week of each month for those who claimed during the month prior.
Nurses
Amedco LLC designates this activity for a maximum of 4.50 ANCC contact hours.
Speakers


Jonathan Brody
Professor of Surgery
Vice Chair, Research, Surgery, School of Medicine
Louis Gerlinger, Jr. and Beatrice Lee Gerlinger Surgical Chair
Oregon Health and Science University
Jonathan Brody
Professor, Department of Surgery
Endowed Chair
Oregon Health & Science University
Research focus: Dr. Brody has dedicated his career to the understanding of the molecular underpinnings of pancreatic tumorigenesis. He has published >170peer reviewed publications, over 100 related specifically to pancreatic cancer. Indeed, these articles cover a diverse range of cancer related topics from patient outcomes to the development of assays to improving therapeutics to reviews on personalized medicine and perspectives on training. Included in this list of publications are key papers listing the bench-bedside work related to personalized therapy (primarily focused on PDAC tumors with DNA repair defects) and work on an RNA binding protein (HuR) that is relevant to acute therapeutic resistance mechanisms. Of note, recently the pre-clinical work from his laboratory on pyrvinuim pomoate was published and set the framework for an initiated clinical trial (NCT05055323). In fact, Dr. Brody’s laboratory has also provided part of the pre-clinical work that supported a recently completed clinical trial involving PARP inhibitors (PMID: 32669374), a focus of his current work. Key studies in the Brody lab discovered that HuR regulated WEE1, IDH1, and PARG. Additionally, his lab has published on drug-target relationships in PDAC cells including many druggable targets directly or indirectly evaluated now for cancer: IDH1, WEE1, PARG, TOP1, thymidylate synthase, CD4/6, HuR, and DNA repair genes (e.g., Fanconi Anemia genes and BRCA2). Early in his career he received a Pancreatic Career Development Award (PanCAN) which initiated his line of investigation into the RNA binding protein HuR which helped to identify and validate PDAC targets, PARG, IDH1 and WEE1, both explored in his lab now. He has now recently been named to the prestigious Scientific Medical Advisory Board for the internationally recognized PanCAN and the council for the PCARP Programmatic Panel for the Department of Defense. To date, the Brody lab is the primary lab working on identifying new targets and understanding therapeutic resistance in PDAC. In relation to mentoring, his recently graduated post-doc (Aditi Jain) and his surgeon-scientist mentee at OHSU (Robert Eil) received PanCAN Career Development Awards and the OHSU Faculty Excellence and Innovation Awards 2025, underscoring Dr. Brody’s commitment to mentorship. Of note, he mentoring and leading the charge with Dr. Clay Kills First to addressing the disparities in Oregon in relation to PDAC care (recently funded by the Kuni Foundation and the DoD).Dr. Brody currently holds NIH and DoD funding to study: 1) metabolic vulnerabilities in PDAC (setting the stage for an initiated clinical trial targeting IDH1 with a surgeon-scientist); 2) a 3D/4D progression model of pancreatic tumorigenesis related to BRCA1/2 germline mutations; 3) disparities in Oregon in the Native American communities as it relates to pancreatic cancer.
Internal leadership at OHSU: Dr. Brody is the Deputy Director for the BCCPC and Vice Chair of Research for the Dept. of Surgery. He also brought to OHSU and co-directs the OHSU-STEMM-Prep, Distance Learning program and serves on many leadership and mentoring committees.
External leadership: Dr. Brody served on the DOD Council for the Peer Reviewed Cancer Research Program for many years and was elected as previous Chair. He has now recently been named to the SMAB for PanCAN and the council for the PCARP Programmatic Panel. Additionally, Dr. Brody was a permanent member and Chair of the CPSS NIH study section and was a recent Chair of the Tumor Biology and Genomics and Professor Study Sections (American Cancer Society); and now a program (P)- grant NIH study section. He served as the chair of the PanCAN career development award study section. He has served on numerous panels (NIH, DOD, American Cancer Society related)and is also the acting co-Editor-in-Chief of Cancer, Biology and Therapy (Taylor, Francis) and Molecular Biology Reports (Springer). He was asked to be a panelist on the education session at the Annual AACR meeting (2022): “The Importance of Surgeon Engagement for Translational Cancer Research.”
Jonathan Brody, Ph.D. Current highlights, and leadership roles:
- Professor in the Department of Surgery and Endowed Chair at OHSU, focusing on pancreatic cancer.
- Vice chair of research, Dept. of Surgery, OHSU
- Deputy Director of the Brenden-Colson Center for Pancreatic Care.
- Co-leader of the Healthy Oregon Project and a member of various research groups, including the Knight Cancer Institute.
- Completed chair of a NIH study section, ad hoc reviewer; Previous chair and council member of a Dept. of Defense Cancer Program, current member of the pancreatic cancer DoD program
- Endowed Gerlinger Surgical Chair


Timothy Cannon, MD
Steering Committee
Co-Director
Gastrointestinal Cancer Program
Inova
Timothy Cannon, MD
Sheridan Director, Molecular Tumor Board
Co-Director, Gastrointestinal Cancer Program
Inova
Dr. Timothy Cannon serves as the Sheridan Director of the Molecular Tumor Board and Co-Director of the Gastrointestinal Cancer Program at Inova. He is a specialty care physician board certified in medical oncology, with a clinical focus on the management of gastrointestinal malignancies.
Dr. Cannon leads and moderates Inova’s weekly molecular tumor board, which connects patients with targeted therapies based on comprehensive molecular diagnostics. He is deeply engaged in national cooperative group clinical trials and contributes as a member of the NRG Oncology colorectal and non-colorectal clinical trials committees. He also serves as the site principal investigator for multiple immunotherapy trials.
Prior to his current roles, Dr. Cannon completed his fellowship in hematology and oncology at New York University (NYU), where he was named chief fellow and honored as “Fellow of the Year” during each of his final two years. In recognition of his clinical excellence, he was named a “Best Doctor” by Northern Virginia Magazine in 2015.
Originally from New Jersey, Dr. Cannon is married and the father of two sons. His wife, Amy, works for Save the Children. Outside of medicine, he enjoys playing sports—including soccer, flag football, and tennis—and is an avid reader. A passionate basketball enthusiast, he played for two Division I programs in the 1990s: the University of Utah and Brigham Young University.


Terri Conneran
KRAS Lung Cancer Patient Survivor
Founder
KRAS Kickers
Terri Conneran
KRAS Lung Cancer Patient Survivor
Founder, KRAS Kickers
With five cancer recurrences Terri Conneran began the journey to battle stage III lung cancer at diagnosis in 2017. Return of her lung cancer prompted a second opinion, that identified her KRAS G12D biomarker. With a desire to become an informed patient, she started KRAS Kickers as a virtual community global patient empowerment group to connect KRAS Knowledge + Research + Advocacy = Survivorship for any KRAS cancer.
In 2020, during Covid pandemic KRAS Kickers connected people online for any cancer types internationally building community, with side-by-side learning. Encouraging education to participate in every part of the equation. KRAS Kickers is the go to hub bringing leading doctors, researchers, and advocates to the patient community to learn about new developments and clinical trials. Working to overcome all gaps, barriers, KRAS holes for better healthcare outcomes literacy and education.
Hope is shared, is hope multiplied. It takes us all to kick cancer's KRAS!


Jia Luo
Thoracic Medical Oncologist
Cancer Researcher
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Jia Luo
Thoracic Medical Oncologist
Cancer Researcher
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Instructor
Medicine
Harvard Medical School


Sandra Misale, PhD
Assistant Professor
Oncology
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Sandra Misale
Assistant Professor
Oncology
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Dr. Sandra Misale is an Assistant Professor of Oncology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. She earned her degree in Bio-molecular Biotechnologies in 2009 and completed a PhD in Molecular Medicine at the University of Turin in 2014, where her work on resistance to anti-EGFR therapies in colorectal cancer earned her the ‘Marisa Colbacchini’ award for best doctoral thesis in oncological sciences.
She began her postdoctoral training at Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, later continuing at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, focusing on resistance to KRAS G12C inhibitors and antibody-drug conjugates in lung and colorectal cancers. Her current research centers on developing rational combination therapies to overcome resistance in melanoma, lung, and colorectal cancers.
Dr. Misale is the author of numerous peer-reviewed publications, an invited speaker at international oncology meetings, and a reviewer for several oncology journals.
At Johns Hopkins, the Misale Lab investigates mechanisms of sensitivity and resistance to targeted therapies in solid tumors driven by specific genetic alterations. With a strong emphasis on translational science, the lab bridges bench and bedside by addressing clinically relevant questions in collaboration with oncology teams.
The lab’s research spans colorectal cancer, non-small cell lung cancer, and pancreatic cancer, integrating genetics, pharmacology, and cell biology. A key focus is KRAS-targeted therapy, particularly understanding primary, adaptive, and acquired resistance mechanisms to KRAS inhibitors.


Michael Pishvaian, MD, PhD
Steering Committee
Associate Professor
Department of Oncology
Johns Hopkins University
Michael Pishvaian, MD
Associate Professor
Department of Oncology
Johns Hopkins University
Mike Pishvaian is an Associate Professor in the Department of Oncology at Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Pishvaian completed his undergraduate training at Duke, and earned both his MD and PhD (in Tumor Biology) from Georgetown in 2001. He remained at Georgetown after graduation, completing his medical residency in 2004, then his fellowship in Hematology/Oncology in 2007. He served on the faculty at Georgetown until moving to MD Anderson in 2019. At MD Anderson, he was the co-director for Clinical Research at the Zayed Center for Pancreatic Cancer Research. He then moved to Johns Hopkins, where he works in the Washington, DC National Capitol Region, leading the GI and Phase I programs there. On social media, Dr. Pishvaian is also the Founder of Tumor Board Tuesdays, a case-based weekly discussion on Twitter focusing on interesting biomarker-based therapies.
Dr. Pishvaian is a translational oncologist, focused on providing novel therapies for patients, particularly in the areas of pancreatic cancer and refractory colorectal cancer. His work has been focused in the area of precision medicine, with a special focus on therapy targeted towards homologous recombination DNA repair deficient tumors, and Dr. Pishvaian is a Co-investigator on an NIH RO1 to study mechanisms of resistance to PARP inhibitor-based therapy, and a Co-PI of a U01 grant aimed at studying ex vivo patient derived models of cancer for patients with pancreatic cancer.
Dr. Pishvaian is recognized as a leader in the field of Pancreatic Cancer, and has published over 100 articles. He has been an invited speaker at numerous academic centers in the United States and around the world. He is also the National Study Chair or Co-Chair of several large Phase II and Phase III trials in pancreatic cancer, including a study funded by the Lustgarten Foundation studying combination therapy for Pancreatic Cancer patients with BRCA1/2/PALB2-mutated tumors. He serves as the Alliance Co-Chair of the Pancreatic Cancer subcommittee, and is the Alliance member of the NIH Pancreatic Cancer Task Force, and serves as a member of the Scientific and Medical Advisory Board for the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, and for Let’s Win PC.


Kevin Soares
Surgical Oncologist/Physician Scientist
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Kevin Soares
Surgical Oncologist/Physician Scientist
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Dr. Kevin C. Soares obtained his undergraduate degree at Brandeis University and MD from the University of Massachusetts Medical School. He completed general surgery residency at The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. He completed a three-year research fellowship in cancer immunology in the Jaffee Laboratory at the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center in the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. After finishing residency, he completed a twoyear
dual fellowship in complex surgical oncology and hepatopancreatobiliary surgery at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. He was then appointed to faculty on the Hepatopancreatobiliary Service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and completed a Masters in Science in clinical and translational cancer research at the Louis V. Gerstner Jr. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
Dr. Soares is a surgical oncologist and physician scientist who specializes in caring for patients with hepatopancreatobiliary malignancies. His primary research interest is combinatorial immunotherapy approaches in HPB malignancies with a particular focus on vaccine-based therapies.


Rona Yaeger, MD
Attending Physician
Gastrointestinal Oncology
Memorial Sloan Kettering
Rona Yaeger
Attending Physician
Gastrointestinal Oncololgy
Memorial Sloan Kettering
Dr. Yaeger is a board certified medical oncologist who treats patients as part of the Gastrointestinal Oncology and the Early Drug Development Services at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Her clinical and laboratory research center on understanding molecular subsets of colorectal cancer and anal squamous cell cancer and developing new therapies based on this understanding. She has particular expertise in using targeted therapies for these diseases. Ultimately, Dr. Yaeger aims to use insights into cancer cell biology to help guide the care of patients and to develop mechanism-based clinical trials.
THE LOCATION
Breaking Barriers in RAS-Driven Cancers
Inova Center for Personalized Health Conference Center
8100 Innovation Park Dr
Fairfax, VA 22037


SPONSOR
Interested in sponsoring the event? Email Nigel Russell by using the link below!
