Aaron Hata, M.D., Ph.D.


Physician Investigator (Cl)
Cancer Center, Mass General Research Institute
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Harvard Medical School
Assistant In Medicine
Medicine-Hematology/Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital
MD Vanderbilt University School of Medicine 2007
ecdysterone; epigenetics; prostaglandin d2; prostaglandins; protein kinase inhibitors; proto-oncogene proteins c-bcl-2; ras proteins; receptors immunologic; receptors prostaglandin

The research goal of the Hata laboratory is to advance targeted therapies to benefit patients with lung cancer.

Our research focuses on understanding the biological underpinnings of sensitivity and resistance to kinase inhibitor targeted therapies in lung cancers with specific genetic abnormalities (EGFR mutations, ALK translocations, KRAS mutations, etc.).

In particular, we seek to understand how kinase inhibitors modulate signaling networks that regulate cancer cell growth and survival, and characterize the molecular mechanisms of acquired resistance to these agents.

More recently, we have begun to focus on understanding how cancer cells adapt and evolve during the course of therapy in order to identify vulnerabilities of drug tolerant cancer cells that might be exploited to prevent resistance from developing.

Our studies are highly translational, combining cell culture models, patient-derived mouse (PDX) models and assessment of clinical specimens, and are performed in close collaboration with clinicians in the Thoracic Oncology group.

Research lab website Publications
ahata@mgh.harvard.edu
6177243442

CNY-Building #149
149 13th Street
Charlestown, MA 02129