John H. Sampson
John Howard Sampson, M.D., Ph.D, M.B.A, M.H.S.c, is the chief of the department of neurosurgery at Duke University where he serves as a professor of surgery, biomedical engineering, immunology, and pathology.
Education
- B.Sc, University of Manitoba 1986
- MD, University of Manitoba Faculty of Medicine, 1990
- PhD, Neuro-Oncology, Duke University Medical Center, 1994-1996
- Residency: Neurosurgery, Duke University Medical Center, 1991-1998
- Fellowship: Neurological Intensive Care, Duke University Medical Center, 1998
- MHSc, Duke University, 2007
- MBA, Duke University Fuqua School of Business, 2011
Work and research
Sampson has written a variety of papers, including a paper in Nature on his clinical trial on the treatment of glioblastoma patients and another in how tetanus toxoid and CCL3 improve dendritic cell vaccines in mice and glioblastoma patients.
Clinical interests
Newly diagnosed or recurrent primary or metastic brain tumors, including enrollment in clinical trials of new therapeutic agents (especially oncolytic poliovirus therapy, immunotherapy, vaccines and convection-enhanced delivery); posterior fossa tumors, such as acoustic neuromas or meningiomas; microsurgery for tic douloureux or trigeminal neuralgia, including microvascular decompression; microvascular decompression for hemifacial spasm, pituitary tumors, complex skull-base tumors; radiosurgery; evaluation and surgery for patients with the full spectrum of other neurosurgery pathologies.
Media
John Sampson has appeared on 60 Minutes and many other news networks for his work with glioblastoma cancer treatments.