Faces of Cedars Sinai Dr Karen Reckamp Cedars Sinai
Faces of Cedars-Sinai Dr Karen Reckamp Cedars-Sinai Skip to content Close Select your preferred language English عربى 简体中文 繁體中文 فارسي עִברִית 日本語 한국어 Русский Español Tagalog Menu Close Call 1-800-CEDARS-1 toggle search form Close Share Email Print CS-Blog Cedars-Sinai Blog Faces of Cedars-Sinai Dr Karen Reckamp Jul 22, 2020 Cedars-Sinai Staff Share Tweet Post Meet Dr. Karen Reckamp, director of medical oncology in the Department of Medicine, associate director of clinical research for the Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute and medical oncology director for the Women's Guild Lung Institute at Cedars-Sinai. I was interested in cancer from an early age. I had several family members who had cancer when I was younger, and that left an imprint on me. She assumed her posts at Cedars-Sinai in January. She's devoted much of her career to advancing treatment for lung cancer, especially late-stage and hard-to-treat cases. She shared with us how she became interested in treating lung cancer and what ties her different roles together. Read: Should I Get a Lung Cancer Screening? Karen L Reckamp MD IM Hematology Oncology Karen L Reckamp MD IM Hematology Oncology Accepting New Patients In-person Visits 310-423-7197 Accepting New Patients Call to Schedule You re wearing quite a few hats Can you tell us about your different roles at the medical center Dr. Karen Reckamp: Yes! They all intersect for me because my expertise is in developing novel treatments for lung cancer. So all of these roles go well together. As the division director for medical oncology, I oversee the administrative, clinical and research activities going on in that area. As the associate director of clinical research, I help guide our goals as they relate to research. We want to increase the number of investigator-initiated clinical trials and improve some of our processes. In the Women's Guild Lung Institute, that role is about bringing the lung cancer perspective to the realm of pulmonary diseases. We're integrating screening and working closely with pulmonologists, radiologists, medical oncologists and surgeons to look at who may be at higher risk of cancer. Read: Cancer Picked the Wrong Dude What drew you to the cancer field and to lung cancer specifically KR: I was interested in cancer from an early age. I had several family members who had cancer when I was younger, and that left an imprint on me. When I was in my fellowship, I was interested in bone marrow transplant. At the time, lung cancer was a difficult disease to treat, and it wasn't as intriguing biologically as some other cancers. Then I had the chance to work with a lung cancer expert who was working in immunology with lung cancer. During that time in the lab, the EGFR gene mutation was discovered—and that changed everything. Suddenly, lung cancer became a completely different disease. It was exciting, and I was all in. Over the past 15 years or so, lung cancer treatments have dramatically improved. Patient survival and quality of life have improved. We understand the disease and we understand there are more types of lung cancer than you can see through a microscope. Read: What's It Like to Donate Bone Marrow? What do you wish more people knew about lung cancer KR: That it's a very treatable cancer. People can live well, even on treatment. People can get back into their lives often, even with later-stage disease. And we continue to see significant advances. And I wish people would drop the stigma. There's this idea that people have done it to themselves, and it becomes an automatic assumption—even for people who never smoked. The stigma is huge, and I wish it would stop. How are you coping with COVID-19 and physical distancing KR: We've all figured out our own spaces at home to get some work done. I'm a runner. So it's been easy to go out for a run and decrease the stress levels. I'm enjoying seeing my family a lot more than I used to. That's been a blessing in disguise. I'm spending lots of time with my 11-year-old son, Zack, and my husband, Robert. (Dr. Robert Figlin is the Stephen Spielberg Family Chair in Hematology-Oncology at Cedars-Sinai.) Read: The Weapon Inside Robert A Figlin MD IM Hematology Oncology Robert A Figlin MD IM Hematology Oncology Accepting New Patients In-person Visits 310-423-1331 Accepting New Patients Call to Schedule What are you looking forward to after the pandemic KR: Having dinner at Giorgio Baldi! It's a small Italian place that's worth going to for a big celebration. 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