Eric Smith, MD PhD is Director of Translational Research for Immune Effector Cell Therapies at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) where his primary responsibility is as PI of a gene and cell engineering pre-clinical laboratory. He is an Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School (Immunology PhD Faculty); Associate Member at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT; a Member at the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy; and the founding faculty director of the IMmunotherapy Platform for Antibody and CAR Therapeutics Development and Translation (IMPACT2) Center at DFCI. He received his MD/PhD and internal medicine training at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine and medical oncology and post-doctoral training at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and stayed on as faculty in the Cellular Engineering Center and Myeloma/Cellular Therapy services. He was recruited to DFCI in 2020 to advance the home-grown adoptive cellular therapy pipeline there. The Smith Lab for Genetic and Cellular Engineering focuses on pre-clinical efforts to advance the field and developing therapies for both hematologic and solid tumors for the benefit of patients. More than a dozen clinical trials have been initiated stemming from his team’s lab work. The most developed of which is a first-in-class CAR targeting GPRC5D, a target he described as important for the immunotherapy of myeloma; he and his colleagues reported the phase I study in NEJM, and a phase II multi-center registration study is now ongoing.
Eric Smith MD, PhD
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Boston, Massachusetts
United States
Project Title
Program
Discovery