- James Ewing
James Stephen Ewing (
December 25 ,1866 , Pittsburgh —May 16 ,1943 ,New York City ) was an American pathologist. He was the first Professor ofpathology atCornell University and became famous with the discovery of a form of malignantbone tumor that later became known asEwing's sarcoma .Life
James Ewing, was born in 1866 to a prominent family of Pittsburgh. He first completed his M.A. in 1888
New International Encyclopedia ] atAmherst College and then studiedmedicine at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York, from 1888 to 1891. While a student, he was tutored byFrancis Delafield (1841-1915),Theophil Mitchell Prudden (1849-1924) andAlexander Kolisko (1857-1918), and developed a strong interest in pathology. He returned to the College of Physicians and Surgeons as instructor inhistology (1893-1897), and clinical pathology (1897-1898). After a brief stint as a surgeon with the US Army, Ewing was appointed in 1899 the first professor of clinical pathology at the Medical College ofCornell University in New York. His research activities on experimentalcancer were mostly pursued at theLoomis Laboratory for Research in Experimental Pathology , together with theNew York Memorial Hospital . In 1902, Dr. Ewing helped to establish one of the first funds for cancer research, endowed by P. Huntington. With his discoveries, Ewing became the most important experimental oncologist and helped to found, in 1907, theAmerican Association for Cancer Research , and in 1913, the American Society for the Control of Cancer, now theAmerican Cancer Society . In 1931 Ewing was elected to the presidency of the Medical Board of the General Memorial Hospital for the Treatment of Cancer and Allied Diseases, and became also its director or research. He was also responsible for the creation of present-dayMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, one of the most important multidisciplinary centers devoted to oncology in the world. He worked at the Memorial until his retirement, in 1939. In 1908 he was president of theHarvey Society .James Ewing died from
bladder cancer at the age of 76.Works
Ewing was active in many fronts, including
hematology as well as oncology. A scientific breakthrough came in 1906, when Ewing and his collaborators proved for the first time that a cancer (lymphosarcoma in dogs) could be transmitted from one animal to another. In 1920 he published his first work on a new kind of malignantosteoma (cancer of thebone ), which later received his name. Ewing became known also as one of the first proponents ofradiation therapy for cancer, having founded theNational Radium Institute in 1913, together with James Douglas, a mining engineer. This knowledge became a cornerstone of cancer treatment at theMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center .In 1928 he challenged the 'seed vs soil' hypothesis of metastatic tumor dissemination, originally credited toStephen Paget and proposed thatmetastasis occurs purely by anatomic and mechanical routes.Bibliography
* Zantinga, AR; Coppes, MJ: James Ewing (1866-1943): "the chief". "Medical and Pediatric Oncology", New York, 1993, 21 (7): 505-510.
* Huvos, AG: James Ewing: cancer man. "Annals of Diagnostic Pathology", April 1998, 2 (2): 146-148.
* Ewing, J: "Clinical pathology of Blood: A Treatise on the General Principles and Special Applications of Hematology." Philadelphia and New York, 1901.
* Ewing, J: "Neoplastic Diseases: A Textbook on Tumors." Philadelphia, W. B. Saunders, and London, 1919. Fourth edition 1940.
* Ewing, J: "Causation, Diagnosis and Treatment of Cancer." Baltimore, 1931.
* Ewing, J: "Blood". Philadelphia. 1910.External links
* [http://www.cancerindex.org/bone/ewing.htm Cancer Index article on James Ewing]
* [http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/2094.html James Ewing Biography] . WhoNamedIt.
* [http://www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,1101310112,00.html Cover of Time Magazine Story on Professor James Ewing] , January 12, 1931.
* [http://books.nap.edu/html/biomems/jewing.pdf James Ewing Biography by James B. Murphy] Biographical Memoir, National Academy of Sciences Washington D.C., 1951.
* [http://www.staff.ncl.ac.uk/s.j.cotterill/ewing.htm About James Ewing ] at www.staff.ncl.ac.uk
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