Evaluative Clinical Sciences
SRI platforms
Matthew Cheung, MD, FRCPC, SM
Haematologist
Associate scientist
Odette Cancer Centre
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
2075 Bayview Ave., Room T2-044
Toronto, ON
M4N 3M5
Phone: 416-480-4928
Fax: 416-480-6002
Email: matthew.cheung@sunnybrook.ca
Education:
- MD, 1999, University of Toronto, Canada
- FRCPC, 2002, internal medicine, U of T, Canada
- FRCPC, 2004, adult hematology, U of T, Canada
- SM (Master of Science), 2006, epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, U.S.
- Clinical and research fellowship, 2007, lymphoma, U of T, Canada
- Postdoctoral research fellowship, 2007, human immunodeficiency virus and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Canada
Appointments and Affiliations:
- Associate scientist, Evaluative Clinical Sciences, Odette Cancer Research Program, Sunnybrook Research Institute
- Professor, department of medicine, division of hematology, U of T
- Adjunct scientist, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
- Co-chair, work-up of lymphoma guideline group, ASH/CAP/ASCP
- Clinical hematologist, Odette Cancer Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
- Co-chair, hematology disease site group, Cancer Care Ontario
- Executive member, pan-Canadian Oncology Drug Review
- Executive member, hematology site group, National Cancer Institute of Canada Clinical Trials Group
- Member, committee on practice, American Society of Hematology
- Member, palliative care working group, American Society of Hematology
Research Summary:
Dr. Cheung's areas of research include economic evaluations embedded into clinical trials, health outcomes research in hematologic malignancies, and clinical trials in lymphoma. He holds peer-reviewed grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the National Cancer Institute of Canada and the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research.
Selected Publications:
See current publications list at PubMed.
- Cheung MC, Earle CC, Fischer HD, Camacho X, Liu N, Saskin R, Shah BR, Austin PC, Singh S. Impact of immigration status on cancer outcomes in Ontario, Canada. J Oncol Pract. 2017 Jul;13(7):e602–e612.
- Cheung MC, Sabharwal M, Chambers A, Han D, Sabarre KA, Chan K. Multiple dimensions of value: evaluative frameworks for new cancer therapies. J Clinical Onc. 2016 Apr 20;34(12):1428–1429.
- Cheung MC, Earle CC, Rangrej J, Ho TH, Liu N, Barbera L, Saskin R, Porter J, Seung SJ, Mittmann N. Impact of aggressive management and palliative care on cancer costs in the final month of life. Cancer. 2015 Sep 15;121(18):3307–15.
- Cheung MC, Mittmann N, Shepherd L, Risebrough N, Imrie KR, Hay AE, Djurfeldt M, Meyer RM, Chen BE, Crump M. Gemcitabine/dexamethasone/cisplatin vs. cytarabin/dexamethasone/cisplatin for relapsed or refractory aggressive-histology lymphoma: cost-utility analysis of NCIC CTG LY.12. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2015 Apr 13;107(7).
- Crump M, Herst J, Baldassarre F, Sussman J, MacEachern J, Hodgson D, Cheung MC. Evidence-based focused review of the role of radiation therapy in the treatment of early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma. Blood. 2015 Mar 12;125(11):1708–16.
- Nikonova A, Guirguis HR, Buckstein R, Cheung MC. Predictors of delay in diagnosis and treatment in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and impact on survival. British Journal of Haematology 2015 Feb; 168(4):492–500.
- Prica A, Chan K, Cheung MC. Combined modality therapy versus chemotherapy alone as an induction regimen for primary central nervous system lymphoma: a decision analysis. Br J Haematol. 2012 Sep;158(5):600–7.
Related News and Stories:
- Elevating the LGBTQ presence in science and research: Staff at Sunnybrook Research Institute talk the importance of being their whole selves at work, the need for role models and the benefits of diversity (June 3, 2019)
- Newcomers to Canada have better cancer survival rates than non-immigrants. Here's why (Global News, June 12, 2017)
- Studies help blood cancer patients make treatment decisions: New risk score is more comprehensive than previous one, and only chemotherapy in early-stage disease a viable option for some (SRI Magazine, 2016)
- A tapestry of clinical trials: High-impact findings: greater effectiveness, more precision, less harm and cost-conscious—this is what the cancer care of tomorrow looks like, emerging from the clinical trials of today (SRI Magazine, 2016)
- Avoiding invasive end-of-life care in cancer: Going gently when cure is elusive (SRI Magazine, 2016)
- Are recent immigrants to Ontario healthy? Data dig unearths unexpected findings (SRI Magazine, 2016)
- Dr. Matthew Cheung comments on a clinical trial of an immunotherapy for leukemia (CBC News, Aug. 11, 2011)
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