InterViews
Janet Rowley medicine (recorded 2010)
Listen to the Interview (mp3, 28mb) (29 minutes)
In 1972, Janet Rowley sat down at her dining room table and made a discovery that would forever change how doctors study and treat cancer. Poring over photographs of chromosomes from patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), the part-time researcher and full-time mother of four boys noticed the patients shared a certain genetic anomaly called a translocation—a piece of one of their chromosomes had broken off and attached itself to another. Consumed by curiosity, she tested more patients and found more translocations, leading her to a new and then controversial conclusion: the translocations weren’t a symptom of the cancer, but its cause. Translocations have since been implicated in other diseases, including several thyroid cancers, lymphomas and sarcomas, and have been used to create new life-saving treatments. Thanks to Rowley’s work, CML patients who were once doomed to die within three to five years of their diagnosis now enjoy a more than 80 percent survival rate. Her contributions to cancer research have earned her numerous awards, including the 2009 Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor in the U.S. Rowley is the University of Chicago’s Blum Riese Distinguished Service Professor of Medicine, Molecular Genetics & Cell Biology and Human Genetics, and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1984.
Interview Highlights Rowley describes growing up in Chicago during the Great Depression, the only child of educators who impressed on her the value of “intellectual independence.” As a girl, she loses herself in books and in the structure and order of biology, and by 23 she earns a medical degree from the University of Chicago. After marrying a fellow physician, Rowley decides to focus on her family life and work only two or three afternoons a week at a children’s clinic. Her work there with children who have Down Syndrome, which is caused by a chromosome abnormality, inspires her to study genetics and chromosome analysis techniques while in England for her husband’s research. Chromosome analysis proves so fascinating to her that she never returns to the clinic, but instead convinces a former professor to grant her a part-time research position at her alma mater to continue her work. In exchange, she agrees to study the chromosomes of his leukemia patients, and the arrangement soon leads Rowley to remarkable breakthroughs in cancer research. Rowley discusses the impact her work has had on her life and the joy she, now 85 years old, still feels each day in the lab.
Last Updated: 08-30-2010
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