David James Kerr | |
Honorific Suffix: | CBE, MA MD DSc FRCP (Glas & Lon) FRCGP (Hon) FMedSci |
Birth Date: | 1956 |
Birth Place: | Glasgow, Scotland |
Nationality: | British |
Education: | University of Glasgow – MD (1987), BSc-Biochemistry (1977) |
Years Active: | 1992-present |
Known For: | Research and Treatment of colorectal cancer; Gene Therapy |
Profession: | Medical Doctor, researcher |
Field: | Oncology |
Work Institutions: | Oxford University |
Research Field: | Colorectal Cancer, Gene Therapy |
Professor David James Kerr CBE (born 1956, Glasgow)[1] is a British Cancer Researcher. His primary area of research is treatment and management of colorectal cancer.[2]
He served as Chief Research Advisor at Sidra Medical and Research Center in Doha, Qatar.[3] [4] David James Kerr is Professor of Cancer Medicine and Former Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford.[5] He was also President-Elect for European Society for Medical Oncology (2009).[6]
David James Kerr’s clinical research into adjuvant therapy of early-stage colorectal cancer has contributed to saving thousands of lives over the past two decades.[7]
Kerr was born in 1956 in Glasgow. He attended Dunard Street Primary School, Maryhill, and Eastwood High Secondary School. Knowing from a relatively early age that he wanted to become a doctor having read A. J. Cronin's The Citadel as a child, he went on to study biochemistry and medicine at Glasgow University, and subsequently became an ontological clinical scientist[8] following specialist and fellowship training within the Department of Medical Oncology at the University of Glasgow under Professor S. Kaye (1984–1992).
Beginning in March 1992, Kerr served as Professor of Clinical Oncology at the University of Birmingham and Director of the Clinical Trials Unit where he and Professor Alan Rickinson built the Institute of Cancer Studies.[9]
In 1994, he was appointed Clinical Director of the Regional Cancer Task Force for the West Midlands.[1] There, he developed a "hub and spoke" Network model for cancer services in the region. The key elements of the plan are:
He undertook the first national audit of cancer waiting times for Sir Kenneth Calman, who was then Chief Medical Officer which was one of the drivers which led to the Government creating a National Cancer Plan.[1] [10]
In 2001, he was appointed Rhodes Professor of Clinical pharmacology and Cancer Therapeutics[11] and Head of the Department of Clinical Pharmacology at the University of Oxford. At the same time, he was also asked by the Secretary of State for Health Alan Milburn to undertake a review of NHS research strategy into cancer.[12] The resultant blueprint for the provision of infrastructure to support clinical cancer research in the UK led to the establishment of the NHS Cancer Research Network (NCRN)[13] and the National Translational Cancer Research Network (NTRAC). Kerr was subsequently appointed the Director of NTRAC.[14]
He subsequently worked with colleagues to build an Institute of Cancer Medicine and Cancer Treatment Center in Oxford.
In 2004, Kerr was invited by Scotland’s First Minister to chair the work of a National Framework Advisory Group to consider the future shape of the NHS in Scotland. This Group produced three volumes of work, "Building a Health Service Fit for the Future" (Vol I and II) and a web-based data link showing the Reports from the individual action teams.[15] This has been adopted as the blueprint for Scotland’s NHS over the next 20 years.
In 2009, David Kerr temporarily left Oxford University to serve as the Chief Research Advisor at the Sidra Medical and Research Center. He also became a Member of the Supreme Council of Health in April 2009. Although he has since returned to the UK and is no longer affiliated with Sidra, Kerr has made significant contributions to cancer care and research in Europe. He played a leading role in co-chairing the Anglo-French Scientific committee for the centenary of the Entente-Cordiale in 2004, focusing on cancer research as the joint theme of the Queen and President Chirac. Additionally, Kerr successfully established the first network of top cancer centers in India, transforming it into a globally recognized trials network and providing training for numerous young Indian oncologists.
He has brought worldwide attention to the looming epidemic of cancer which is a risk of claiming the lives of more than a million Africans every year.[16] He organized the first ever African Cancer Reform convention in London (2007).[17] This was attended by 27 African Health ministries, led to the London Declaration calling for immediate action to develop cancer control plans for these nations.[18] Subsequently Kerr was asked by African ministers to lead a new organization, AfrOx to aid national cancer planning in Africa. AfrOx has already received international support (WHO, IAEA) and is seen as a beacon to establish cancer care in Africa. He has completed a National Cancer Plan for Ghana, has been invited by the governments of Rwanda, Nigeria and Sierra Leone to lead their cancer plan activities, has initiated a mass vaccination program for cervical cancer, the commonest cancer affecting African women, and is coordinating the International Oncology Association's engagement in this field.
Kerr spoke at a New Frontiers in Science Diplomacy event[19] and blogged on the Guardian[20] about it.
Kerr has published over 350 papers in peer reviewed journals. His primary areas of research are colorectal cancer and gene therapy. He has been awarded several patents which have led to spin out biotech companies – Cobra Therapeutics,[21] Oxford Cancer Biomarkers,[22] and Celleron Therapeutics.[23]
He sits on a number of general editorial boards including Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology journal.