We need to hear from you!

Hi everyone,

Greetings from the Stony Brook MSTP. We are in year 47 of the program and have been continuously NIH-funded for 27 years – going into the renewal application this year, we are really hoping not to break that trend!

I hope that you are all doing very well. I’m writing with the request to ask you to take a few minutes and complete this survey for the MSTP – the data in it will help us with the renewal application (NIH loves outcomes data and asks for more of it each time…). It’s very nice to have new buildings and all (check out the new SBU Cancer Center and Children’s Hospital buildings, opening this fall!) – but what NIH (and we) really care about the quality of training and our long-term outcomes, which is why we really need your responses.

To complete the survey, please click here or follow the link at the bottom of this email. Knowing how busy all of you are, I’d be grateful if you would do it quickly before it gets lost in a sea of other email. We have kept it as short as possible to minimize the burden on your time.

Where we are: The program has grown since most of you graduated – there are now about 60-65 students in the program (retreat photo above), and their accomplishments and recent match outcomes are terrific. One of our very successful alumni came back for a visit and remarked, after seeing the credentials of our incoming students (typically 95% on the MCAT, GPA 3.8, averaging 2-3 publications from undergrad / postbac research efforts), “I’d never be accepted these days!” – which, given the terrific success of that former student, makes us very hopeful for the current crop of trainees. We have great support from the school (about $1.5-2M investment per year from the Dean’s office), and assistance from scores of faculty. See https://medicine.stonybrookmedicine.edu/mstp for details (some of the web site needs updating, admittedly). We also have a new facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/StonyBrookMSTP/.

Finally, we also received an AAMC Education Innovation Award last year for the MSTP classes taken in conjunction with the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science, which was started at SBU but has now visited many campuses. New this year, an Alda center curriculum designer and a gender communication researcher are creating a workshop for female students in the MSTP on communication approaches, to complement other, more broad-based training in implicit bias that all students are being exposed to.

With best wishes,

Mike Frohman

Director, SBU MSTP

Markus Seeliger, Paul Fisher, Maurizio Del Poeta, Richard Lin, Helen Hsieh, and Carine Maurer

Associate Directors

 

You can open the survey in your web browser by clicking this link or if the above link doesn’t work, try copying the link below into your web browser: https://goo.gl/forms/Bp0p68wKEEsIuH8u1

Featured MSTP Student – Rachel Kery

Rachel Kery has developed a technology that will allow her to study for the first time how failure of adult born neuronal integration underlies diseases such as PTSD, epilepsy and major depressive disorder.

A technology developed by Rachel together with her graduate supervisor Dr. Shaoyu Ge allows her to investigate the process and the functional consequences of how adult born neurons integrate into already existing circuits. With this innovative technology and its application, Rachel applied recently for a prestigious fellowship from the National Institutes of Mental Health. Importantly, Rachel turned around her previous application into an application not only with an excellent and fundable score, but she literally received a perfect score. Dr. Michael Frohman, MSTP director, praises Rachel for her perseverance and hard work when the initial application received a less favorable review. Dr. Role, Rachel’s co-mentor echoes this statement: “She is very careful, extremely well read and an impressive example of how “perseverance furthers”. She really dug in and got the drafts to her advisors well before the deadline so she had ample time to respond– which she certainly did with aplomb!”

Only two brain areas produce new neurons throughout adult life and disruption of adult neurogenesis in these regions occurs in a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders such as major depressive disorder, post traumatic stress disorder and epilepsy. While the integration of new neurons is important for healthy brain function, little is known about how they integrate into existing circuits and how this process affect brain activity. Rachel’s novel functional labeling system is uniquely positioned to answer these pressing questions.

Rachel’s long standing interest in neuroscience goes back to her award winning psychology experiments in the basement of her home in rural Maryland as a high school student. In her undergraduate years, Rachel started to work on adult neurogenesis in crustaceans while studying Neuroscience and Anthropology at Wellesley College. Rachel continued to develop her science background after graduation, spending two years as a laboratory technician in Dr. Anne Klibaniski’s lab at Massachusetts General Hospital. Rachel joined the MSTP at Stony Brook in 2014 to combined her interests in research with her passion for child neurology and psychiatry. Dr. Ge, commends Rachel’s sharp eye for detail and her ability to ask very thoughtful questions evidenced by Rachel’s strong track record of productivity with a total of 5 research publications, including two papers co-authored with fellow MD/PhD student, Greg Kirschen.

Rachel is a strong proponent for women in science, and she is credited with spearheading mentoring meetings for women within MSTP together with Dr. Stella Tsirka. In addition to being an ace neuroscientist, Rachel competes in pub trivia quizzes where her specialties are history, geography and literature in addition to science and medicine.

Featured Alumni: Dr. Oladapo Yeku

Featured Alumni Spotlight

Each Spring, we’ll interview a featured alumni of the Stony Brook MSTP about their time at Stony Brook, their career since, and any personal wisdom they were willing to share with our community. Our inaugural Featured Alumni is Dr. Oladapo Yeku, Class of 2012, who received doctorate in Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology researching with our own Dr. Mike Frohman. Dr. Yeku tells us about his choice to pursue a research-oriented residency, his transition to junior faculty, some personal hobbies outside of the program.

 

Career/Training:

Where did you complete residency training and what led you to choose that specialty?

I completed my residency training at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC). I was part of the ABIM Research Pathway program (AKA short track). For those who might be considering a career in Internal Medicine or its related subspecialties, UPMC is a fantastic program. I ended up choosing medical oncology as my subspecialty because it represented an area where I could practice clinical medicine while synthesizing my expertise in cell biology, pharmacology and immunology in the lab. Medical oncology is one specialty (among several) that has served as a model for the “bench-to-bedside and back to the bench” model that attracted me to the MSTP program.

Who is a role model in your field (research or medical) and what makes them stand out to you?

For the same reasons I think it is helpful to have several different mentors, I also believe in having several difference role models. It’s rare that one single person encapsulates every ideal you aspire towards. That said, I have to say that Dr. Michael Frohman (SBU) is my research role model and my clinical role model is Dr. Greg Bump (UPMC). One thing they both have in common is being seasoned, savvy and well-respected problem-solvers. All with the approachability and humility that often challenges many accomplished scientists/physicians with their stature. My physician scientist mentors are too numerous to list.

What has been the hardest part of balancing clinical and medical work at the residency and fellowship level? What has been the easiest?

Sometimes, working hours could be harsh- very harsh. On paper, being in the clinic and the lab at the same time sounds awesome. In reality, it sometimes gets annoying when you’re trying to focus on patient care during your clinic days and you get calls from the animal facility because your animals are freaking out. It also works vice versa when you have to delay or modify your awesome multi-day experiment because one of the critical read-out days falls on a clinic day. Even as a fellow, this was a source of frustration for me. On the amazing side, there is no feeling like telling a patient that you were the scientific investigator behind a clinical protocol they are considering. Or when you rush clinical samples back to your lab and find that the mechanisms you predicted/ worked out in your preclinical models is what you are finding in patients. Those experiences make everything worth it.

What aspect(s) of your training at Stony Brook did you find the most useful for moving into residency and fellowship?
I learned a lot of resiliency at Stony Brook. Although not explicitly taught, I learned a lot of clinical reasoning from my Attendings and fellows while I was a medical student. During my training, I spent a lot of time at the VA hospital and Winthrop and many of the faculty I worked with were master clinicians. In the same way that I dove into all aspects of conducting research during my PhD training, I fully immersed myself in every rotation – even my 4th year Neurology and Anesthesiology rotations. Learning how to communicate, ask questions, take responsibility and lifelong learning, are core skills that I took away from Stony Brook.

As you move into your next academic faculty position, what challenges do you predict you will face? How do you think your training has prepared you for this?
Every time you complete one aspect of your training as a physician scientist, there is often an uncomfortable, anxiety-provoking, night sweat-inducing period. This happens when you transition to graduate school after step 1, it happens when you go back to medical school and even when you go from the clinical aspect of your fellowship to the research part of your fellowship. Transitioning to junior faculty brings out the worst of all those feelings. What research questions will you work on? Are they important questions? Does anyone care? How will you fund your work? Are your clinical skills up-to-date? Are you a good team manager? For me specifically, in addition to all the above, it will be getting my research program off the ground while building my clinical practice.

What advice would you give MS1s and MS2s to consider as they choose their PhD labs?
Pick a well-funded lab and a mentor who you like and think you can get along with (a mentor who likes and is invested in you is also a big deal). I once met a PI (at Stony Brook) who was convinced that it takes 10 years to properly train and educate a PhD candidate. That blew my mind. A lab like that is not where you need to be, even if it’s a Howards Hughes lab. Although not generally discussed, I think personality compatibility also is very important. If you like being micromanaged, you might not thrive in a lab with a hands-off PI who is more interested in big picture experiments and discussions. Also, don’t necessarily pick the field you think you will be working in for the rest of your life during graduate school if there are no suitable mentors in that department. Learning how to think, design experiments, and write are far more important than joining a lab in any particular discipline. For instance, I graduated from the Pharmacology program even though I wanted to be an Immunologist. I picked an immunology lab during fellowship and I have done well because I learned the fundamentals.

How did you decide on your fellowship topic area? Was this a difficult decision?

It was a methodical process that involved a lot of false-starts, dead ends and even mild disappointment. I started out by narrowing down the big subdivisions; I didn’t want to do Neurology, Anesthesiology, Pediatrics, OB/GYN, etc. Then I thought about what the clinical activity of each field was like; inpatient vs outpatient, acute vs chronic illnesses vs consults etc. Then I thought about which of those fields had questions/objectives that could be addressed by a cell biologist/immunologist. Medical oncology came into focus for me after that process.

If students are interested in pursuing your training pathway, what advice would you give them for after completing the MSTP?
Be persistent and settle in for a prolonged campaign. If you want to stay in academic medicine, go to residencies and fellowships at academic centers. Seek out mentors and get advice early and often. Regularly refine your professional goals and objectives to bring them in line with reality. Try to cultivate friends and colleagues in your department or field who are also interested in academic medicine and research.

Personal Interest

What top three things powered you through the program?
I used to have regular coffee breaks with my fellow MSTP classmate, Iehab Talukder. We would come to lab around 6-7 am, work till around 10 am and then have coffee at the back of the CMM building. It was always nice to sit and chat about our research/ politics/ hopes and dreams, etc. I was also into mixed martial arts and practiced seriously for about 3-4 years. I also started a book club and read a whole bunch of classic novels with my friend (1984, Brave New World, Rabbit Run).

What is your favorite Stony Brook study cafe, restaurant or bar?

There is (or used to be) a Starbucks on 347 road. I studied there almost exclusively during medical school. John Harvards was also a go-to place for after-hour hangouts. There was nothing magical about the place, I guess it was just convenient, and there was always a good chance you would run into somebody you knew from Stony Brook on any given night.

Did you develop any fun hobbies or go on any remarkable adventures during your MSTP years?
I got into some serious Kayaking during my MSTP years. I can’t swim so I always went with a friend, presumably to keep me from drowning, call for help or at least notify my next-of-kin. I highly recommend it to anyone who hasn’t tried.

What will you miss most about Long Island?

I think I will miss the people the most. I met some truly incredible and interesting people while I lived out there and I still keep in touch with many. I also formed a lot of connections with faculty members, some of whom I run into from time to time at meetings.

Message from the MSTP Leadership

We would like to welcome you to the first issue of our MSTP newsletter. The students and the program leadership thought that our program deserves a newsletter to highlight the achievements of our students. We would like to thank in particular the students who spearheaded this initiative: Nuri Kim, Lillian Talbot and Tyler Guinn.

The past academic year has brought the program to new strengths. We recruited an outstanding new class of 6 students out of a pool of nearly 300 applicants. Our students in the second year of medical, passed the dreaded Step-1 exam with flying colors, well above the national average.  In particular, Andrea Arreguin, who holds a prestigious W. Burghardt Turner Fellowship, did extremely well, scoring at the 93rd  percentile nationally. Scientifically, our students in graduate and medical (!) school continue to excel with more than 60 publications during the last 12 months, including in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and Nature family journals. The students in their first year of graduate school did an outstanding job organizing the Journal Clubs and the Clinical Scientist Dinners. In particular we had a spectacular line up of speakers including Dr. Kristina M. Deligiannidis from the Feinstein Institute of Medical Research who heads the Women’s Institute of Behavioral Health, Dean Kaushansky who generously shared his time, and together with graduate student Nuri Kim, led a Journal Club discussion on platelet biogenesis; as well as our very own alumnus, Dr. Oladapo Yeku, who is now heading off to be an assistant professor at Harvard and shared some very personal advice on the physician-scientist career path. Apart from their initiative with the Journal Clubs and Clinical Scientist dinners, we would like to thank our first year graduate student class for helping interview and recruit another incoming class of students.

Finally, it was a bitter sweet moment to bid farewell to our graduating class. We are very proud of their achievements, which include multiple fellowships, high-impact publications, and many favorable commendations from the clinical preceptors. They are going to outstanding research focused fellowship programs including Johns Hopkins, Case Western, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Rutgers, Washington University at St Louis, and NYU. We are looking forward to working with them as our future colleagues.

We would additionally like to thank our alumni who have been helping with various aspects of this program  and would like to invite other alumni to reconnect with the program and get involved in any of many ways. Our students much appreciate it. And lastly, many thanks to the staff across the university who have provided support to the program over the past year. It takes a Stony Brook village to run the program!

Graduating MSTP Class

MSTP Graduation

With the sun setting across a stunning ocean vista the Stony Brook MSTP program gathered for our favorite event of the year-the MSTP Graduation Dinner. Each May, we come together to celebrate the profound achievements of our graduating students. While our graduates are the main cause for celebration, the dinner offers a chance for each MSTP student to honor their own year of achievements and milestones.  MS1s have survived anatomy and are now flourishing as systems course superstars. MS2s breath easy knowing they have slain the Step1 beast. GS1&2s have passed qualifiers and proposals. GS3s have published papers and generated mountains of data. We celebrate the persevering GS4&5s who have defended their theses earning their first doctoral degrees. MS3s rejoice the end of a year of early mornings and recurring shelf exams. Even for just an evening, an end becomes both visible and attainable for students in every phase of the program as we share a meal and reflect on the past. Our graduates this year are Dr. Ioana Rus, Dr. Anand Bhagwat, Dr. Hiren Patel, Dr. Sean Kelly, Dr. Benjamin Newcomb, Dr. Tomoki Nomakuchi and Dr. Glenn Werneburg. Our newest physician-scientists are pursuing diverse medical specialties at renowned institutions across the country. After glasses were toasted and bread was broken Dr. Frohman delivered his annual graduate roast, sharing stories of the grads during their time at Stony Brook. Throughout the event students of all years mixed and mingled with one another and faculty, sharing advice and strengthening our community. The event was beautifully photographed by Ki Oh and Allen Yu. We wish our graduates good luck and are very grateful for their contributions to Stony Brook MSTP.

Ask-A-Grad

On May 18, 2018 seven Stony Brook MSTP Graduates proudly walked across the Wang Center stage for the

ir second doctoral hooding at the medical school graduation. Stony Brook MSTP proudly presents our graduates Dr. Glenn Werneburg (Urology at Cleveland Clinic), Dr. Sean Kelly (Neurology at NYU), Dr. Tomoki Nomakuchi (Pediatrics/Medical-Genetics at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia), Dr. Benjamin Newcomb (Internal Medicine at Barnes Jewish Hospital – Washington University School of Medicine), Dr. Ioana Rus (Anesthesia at Johns Hopkins), Dr. Hiren Patel (Urology at Rutgers), Dr. Anand Bhagwat (Pediatrics at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia). Before our newly minted physician scientists departed from Stony Brook to embark on the next phase of their training we asked them to respond to a few student generated questions about their time in the program. Read on in the newsletter to find out more about their future endeavors, advice for current students and favorite Stony Brook memories. Congrats Grads!

What are some important things for MS1s and MS2s to consider as they choose their labs?

Dr. Werneburg: Consider the dynamic between among the rest of the team members. Is it a collaborative environment, a competitive environment, or a mix? In which of these environment(s) do you thrive? Also, consider the success of previous graduate students in the lab. Did they publish well? In the context of their productivity (grants, papers, etc.), was their time to graduation reasonable?

Did you develop any fun hobbies or go on any remarkable adventures during your MSTP years?

Dr. Werneburg: I developed an affinity for the study of wine and have become a Certified Sommelier. To do so, I acquired knowledge of wine theory and developed analytical tasting skills, as well as an expertise in formal wine service. Requirements such as transpo

rting full champagne flutes to a table of Master Sommeliers, or effectively decanting and describing an aged wine to them, have presented me with learning opportunities in maintaining professionalism, composure, and clear thought processes while performing high-pressure and time-sensitive tasks.

Who were your favorite faculty (research or medical) and why?

Dr. Rus: Dr. Markus Seeliger! who was on my committee and had the most practical and interesting suggestions. Dr. Joseph Sorrento-the surgery clerkship director who has an encyclopedic knowledge of everything and is a probably one of the best educators, along with my own mentor Dr. Giuca. My mentor, Dr. Matthew Giuca is probably my most admired role model, he is an awesome anesthesiologist and it is both helpful from a learning perspective but also motivating to watch him think prepare for his cases and take care of his patients. Every case feels like he is ready for anything! One of my favorite things about working with him is to see his ability to read his patients’ needs and his response to make them comfortable and ameliorate their concerns.

What will you miss most about Long Island?

Dr. Rus: The people I met and the lifelong friends I have made, many of whom are from there or have stayed there after training. If I’m being honest, I’ll also miss the amazing pizza and bagels.

How did you decide on your clinical specialty? Was this a difficult decision?

Dr. Kelly: Some people know long before they ever reach the wards what type of doctor they want to become. For more of us, including myself, it is not so obvious at first and it was difficult initially because I honestly found every rotation to be exciting and eye opening in a new way. However, over time it became easier and more evident which specialties were at the top of my differential diagnosis. In some cases you will know you could not stand doing X or Y for more than a few weeks, so eliminate those things when you’re sure of them. On the other hand, in considering what you do like, think about what the day-to-day is like for a resident and for an attending (not for a medical student) because that is what you will ultimately be doing when you enter the specialty. Consider that some specialties are about solving the clinical riddle and making a diagnosis before recommending a treatment, while others are about taking direct action to abate a problem. Others are about improving patient’s quality of life or guiding them through surgeries, or having a sharp eye while looking at a microscope slide or film. Which one fits you? As you move through the later part of third year, consider these types of questions in the back of your mind, but mostly just focus on learning the core concepts of medicine. I promise by the end of third year you will naturally be better equipped to decide on a clinical specialty.

Have you attended any interesting academic conferences you would recommend to others?

Dr. Kelly: The Combining Research and Clinical Careers in Neuroscience course was extremely worthwhile. The travel is paid for and it has a large variety of useful sessions geared toward fostering young physician scientist careers in Neurology. I recommend going during the later stages of the program (possibly early MS4). Attending any basic science conference where you present and meet others in your field is a must as well.

Tell us about one of your role models in your research or clinical field and what makes them stand out to you.

Dr. Sean Kelly’s Answer: My former research mentor Elizabeth McNally comes to mind because she was the first physician scientist I ever worked with who truly balanced clinical duties and the role of running a large successful basic science lab on a weekly basis. Over time having direct interactions with Dr. McNally led to many special insights into how she accomplished such a delicate balance. To my surprise, it really came down to two simple habits – focusing singly on key tasks and using time strategically each day. For example when it came to lab meeting, it was a time to focus on the nuts and bolts of the science without distraction, with a special mind on identifying the concrete changes needed to advance the significance of the project. Similarly, in terms of time management she scheduled dedicated times for meeting with lab members, writing grants, and even specific hours for checking email. Finally, maintaining a highly specialized clinical focus on the cardiac problems associated with Marfan’s syndrome and muscular dystrophies allowed her to be engaged in exciting and rare clinical cases regularly while still leaving enough time to be productive in research. Today, Dr. McNally is the director of the Center for Genetic Medicine at the Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine. She continues to run a successful lab while also seeing patients and spearheading a clinical data collection program investigating the genetic causes of sudden unexplained death.

 

What top three things powered you through the program?

Dr. Kelly: Without a doubt I could not have survived this program without the support of my wife, who went through a PhD program herself and has been living with me through most of the past 9 years hearing what I have had to say about it. Second, I think I benefit from regular involvement in team sports such as basketball or ultimate frisbee. CSHL has a great biweekly game for anyone interested. I find that these activities wake me up a lot and elevate the mood, even if I am dead tired from a rotation. And finally, the occasional visit with classmates to Checkmate or Country Corner after journal club have helped sustain many great friendships and memories from my time in the program.

What one accomplishment over the last 8 years are you most proud of?

Dr. Kelly: It is always nice to be recognized by fellow members of the MD/PhD program. For me, writing a successful F30 that could be passed on to others in the program as an example felt like the first thing I had accomplished while in the program, and I always appreciated being asked to share it. It’s a small thing, but even after finishing the proposed project and writing the dissertation, I am still proud of the F30, which was really a struggle to complete at the time.

If you could have gone back and done one thing differently during any stage of your MSTP training, what would it be and why? / If you could go back in time and tell yourself 3 things at your white coat ceremony, what would they be?

Dr. Nomakuchi: I’m mostly happy with the ways I did things. I probably should have tried to go to bigger conferences related to my field earlier on in my PhD, and not let the fact that I didn’t have much to present stop me. If I could go back to my white coat ceremony, I would stress the fact that you’re in charge of your own learning and choose freely but wisely who and what to learn from.

How did you decide on your clinical specialty? Was this a difficult decision?

Dr. Nomakuchi: I stayed open to anything during my 3rd year, and enjoyed most clerkships. I enjoyed pediatrics because kids are fun and cute, and you get the chance to really make a difference in their lives. I enjoy talking to the parents too, because for the most part they are very motivated for their children. The specialty of medical genetics ties in nicely with my research interest, and it’s also a relatively new and evolving field. The practice and scope of medical genetics will be different by the time I finish my training, and that prospect is pretty exciting.

What are some of your go-to pick-me-ups after a rough day in the hospital/lab?

Dr. Nomakuchi:I joined a Brazilian Jiu Jitsu gym in Huntington right before I started my first year. No matter how mentally or emotionally exhausted I was, wrestling people and trying not to get choked out for an hour would always reset my mind and prepare me for the next day. But once I had to give a talk at Cold Spring Harbor with a black eye. I also like to run and go to the gym, and I always made time for some of these activities regardless of how busy I might be .I also enjoy cooking and eating. I spend too much time each morning cooking my favorite breakfast and waking up my housemates with the smell of bacon, but it definitely gets my spirits up before a long day.