2009-01-01
An interview with Bruce Furie, MD
Dr. Furie, a long-standing member of ASH and co-winner of the 1984
William Dameshek Prize, is a physician-scientist focused on hemostasis
and thrombosis. He is chief of the Division of Hemostasis-Thrombosis at
the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, professor of medicine at
Harvard Medical School, and president of the International Society on
Thrombosis and Haemostasis. He helped initiate the Special Symposium on
the Basic Science of Hemostasis and Thrombosis in 2006 in conjunction
with the ASH annual meeting. We asked Dr. Furie to comment on the state
of hemostasis/thrombosis research at ASH with respect to the special
symposium.
The Hematologist: How has the hemostasis/thrombosis community changed over the years?
Dr. Furie: When I first entered the field it was
dominated by physicians (mainly hematologists) who practiced clinical
medicine and maintained laboratory interests. Most had a Y chromosome.
Given the biological nature of laboratory testing in this field, there
was a strong emphasis on standardization of clinical laboratory
practice. Subsequently the field has matured tremendously, in part
because many basic scientists became interested in the molecular basis
and pathobiology of disease. Furthermore, the biotechnology revolution
that started in the 1980s focused on treatments relevant to this field:
recombinant factor VIII, recombinant factor IX, recombinant tissue
plasminogen activator, and recombinant factor VIIa. Hemostasis and
thrombosis proved an attractive and well-funded field of activity in
the basic sciences because of its link to important diseases and human
health. As such, a high proportion of principal investigators in this
field are PhD scientists, and women are now well represented.
The Hematologist: What was the reason for initiating the Special Symposium on the Basic Science of Hemostasis and Thrombosis in 2006?
Dr. Furie: The complexion of the ASH meeting has
changed since I entered the field. For many years the
hemostasis/thrombosis community alternated their scientific sessions
annually between ASH and the American Heart meetings. But over the past
15 years or so, the ASH meeting has increasingly featured malignant
hematology at the expense of some of the traditional fields of
non-malignant hematology. While this reflects, in a positive way, the
explosion in understanding of and novel therapies for leukemia,
lymphoma, and myeloma, it reduced participation by folks interested in
hemostasis and thrombosis. Meeting content in the field decreased,
important work was presented elsewhere, and attendance from this
community diminished — particularly among PhDs. My approach to
rectifying this situation was to propose a meeting-within-a-meeting. As
a three-year experiment supported by then ASH President Kanti Rai and
the Executive Committee, Drs. Mortimer Poncz, Barbara Furie, and I
organized the first Special Symposium on the Basic Science of
Hemostasis and Thrombosis at the ASH meeting in Orlando in 2006.
The Hematologist: How would you judge its success?
Dr. Furie: The session was held at what many might
consider an unpopular time: Tuesday afternoon, after the formal ASH
meeting was over. For most, attendance required staying an extra night
in Orlando. ASH asked us to estimate attendance so that they could book
the proper size auditorium. We guessed 200 attendees since the program
was organized on short notice, could not be adequately advertised, and
required changes in departure schedules of participants. In fact, more
than 1,200 people signed in, and an additional auditorium was
commandeered so that interested individuals could be accommodated. By
these criteria, this initial symposium was a success. However, the real
questions are whether, over multiple years, the ASH meeting will remain
a vibrant place for hemostasis/thrombosis research and an attractive
meeting for basic scientists in the field.
The Hematologist: What format did you use for this session?
Dr. Furie: We invited six speakers, each of whom
gave 30-minute plenary presentations. These were selected on the basis
of their publication of seminal work over the previous year. Morty
Poncz argued, and rightly so, that the high quality of abstracts and
the small number of oral presentations concerning hemostasis and
thrombosis at the ASH meeting precluded many young investigators from
having the experience of an oral presentation. Therefore, we also had
six simultaneous sessions for oral presentation of selected abstracts
presented during the regular ASH meeting as posters. We felt that the
quality of these abstracts matched those selected for oral presentation
at the regular ASH meeting — an indication of the depth of quality of
the submitted abstracts.
The Hematologist: How were the subsequent special symposia in Atlanta 2007 and San Francisco 2008 organized?
Dr. Furie: The chairs of the Scientific Committees
on Hemostasis, Platelets, and Thrombosis and Vascular Biology took over
the responsibility for the symposium after the first year. I did
attend, and both sessions attracted large audiences. In San Francisco,
the organizers elected to divide the session into two parts: the
invited speaker presentations early in the morning and the oral
communications earlier in the afternoon on Tuesday, the final day of
the ASH meeting.
The Hematologist: What are the challenges of this special symposium?
Dr. Furie: The major challenge is finding the
right times for these sessions without lengthening the ASH meeting,
while at the same time keeping the density of interesting activities
high so that there is no idle time for this community.
The Hematologist: Why is it important to
keep this community within the ASH umbrella? And how do these issues
speak to the broader question of clinical training in hematology?
Dr. Furie: I am a hematologist, and I believe that
hemostasis and thrombosis are parts of hematology. I would not like to
see hemostasis and thrombosis migrate into a separate specialty or
become part of cardiovascular medicine. Current hematology consult
practice in a busy general hospital is dominated by consultations in
this field, and 20 percent to 25 percent of the hematology subspecialty
board exam is on thrombosis and coagulation. The hemostasis/thrombosis
section of most of the popular hematology textbooks, including the one
that I co-edit, represents about 20 percent of the book. Nonetheless, I
remain concerned about the quality of training in hematology that is
offered in some combined hematology-oncology programs. Oncology
practice can overwhelm the training components of combined fellowship
programs as the common solid tumors (lung, breast, prostate, and colon
cancers) are often the dominant clinical exposure for young physicians.
I would like to see the development of completely separate clinical
fellowship programs in oncology and in hematology.
2009 Special Symposium on the Basic Science of Hemostasis and Thrombosis
This
special session has been approved to continue and is scheduled to take
place on Tuesday, December 8, 2009, in New Orleans. The format will
stay the same as in 2008. On Tuesday morning, there will be three
invited speakers plus a short talk by the winner of the Mary Rodes
Gibson Memorial Award in Hemostasis and Thrombosis followed in early
afternoon by six simultaneous oral sessions.
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