Get a quick breakfast snack, Continental-style, and touch base with other conference attendees who have arrived early for the short courses.
1430
1830
LC-MSMS 101 : Getting Started with Quantitative LC-MSMS in the Diagnostic Laboratory
Location: Montreal 1-2
Grace van der Gugten, B.Sc. Chemistry
Alberta Precision Laboratories
Grace discovered her love for clinical mass spectrometry when she began working at St Paul's Hospital in Vancouver in the special chemistry mass spec group with Dr. Dan Holmes in late 2010. Grace was challenged in this role but gained a wealth of knowledge and experience over her 10+ years in the SPH laboratory. She puts this experience and knowledge into use in her current role as Lab Scientist in the Newborn Screening and Biochemical Genetics lab at Alberta Precision Laboratories in Edmonton. Grace loves developing streamlined, easy to use (if possible!) clinical mass spectrometry assays; teaching others and helping others succeed; and troubleshooting (especially when the problem is solved!).
Deborah French, PhD, DABCC (CC, TC), FADLM
UCSF
Deborah French Ph.D., DABCC (CC, TC), FADLM is a Director of Chemistry and the Director of Mass Spectrometry at the University of California San Francisco Health Clinical Laboratories. Her work currently focuses on the development and validation of LC-MS/MS assays for small molecules, specifically therapeutic drug monitoring, steroid hormones and toxicology. Deborah received her Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland and then completed a postdoctoral fellowship at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, TN. She subsequently completed a ComACC Clinical Chemistry postdoctoral fellowship under the direction of Dr Alan Wu at the University of California San Francisco and is now board certified in Clinical Chemistry and Toxicological Chemistry by the American Board of Clinical Chemistry.
Jacqueline Hubbard, PhD, DABCC
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School
Jacqueline Hubbard received her BS degree in Biochemistry from the University of Vermont. She then earned her MS and PhD in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from the University of California, Riverside (UCR). Following a one year postdoc at UCR, Dr. Hubbard completed a Fellowship in Clinical Chemistry at the University of California, San Diego Health. She is board certified in Clinical Chemistry by the American Board of Clinical Chemistry. After fellowship, she took a position as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth and as the Assistant Director of Clinical Chemistry at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. There, she focused on developing and validating drugs of abuse assays and SARS-CoV-2 serology testing. Next, she briefly served as a Lab Director for a small reference laboratory in PIttsburgh, PA. She then joined Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center as the Co-Director of Clinical Chemistry and Director of Toxicology in 2024. She is also an Assistant Professor of Pathology for Harvard Medical School. Her research focus still includes mass spectrometry method development and toxicology test interpretation.
Grace Williams
VCU Health
1430
1830
LC-MSMS 203 : Validation of Quantitative LC-MS/MS Assays for Clinical and Academic Use
Location: Montreal 3
Joshua Hayden, PhD, DABCC, FACB
Norton Healthcare
Joshua is currently the Chief of Chemistry at NortonHealthcare. He earned his PhD in chemistry from Carnegie Mellon University. He conducted postdoctoral research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology before completing a two-year clinical chemistry fellowship at University of Washington and 4 years as Assistant Professor at Weill Medical College. Joshua has special expertise developing and overseeing mass spectrometry assays in the clinical laboratory.
Claire Knezevic, PhD
Lurie Childrens Hospital
Dr. Claire Knezevic is a clinical chemist in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Lurie Children's Hospital with a focus on chemistry, point-of-care testing, quality improvement, drug monitoring, and personalized medicine. She is an Associate Professor in Northwestern's Feinberg School of Medicine in the Department of Pathology. Her interests include all things small molecule, from toxicology to therapeutic drug monitoring and their impacts on clinical care.
1430
1830
Data Science 203 : Machine Learning : A Gentle Introduction
Location: Montreal 4
Stephen Master, MD, PhD, FADLM
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Stephen Master received his undergraduate degree in Molecular Biology from Princeton University, and subsequently obtained his MD and PhD from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. After residency in Clinical Pathology at Penn, he stayed on as a faculty member with a research focus in mass spectrometry-based proteomics as well as extensive course development experience in bioinformatics. After time as an Associate Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City, where he served as Director of the Central Lab and Chief of Clinical Chemistry Laboratory Services, he took a position at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia at Chief of Lab Medicine. One of his current interests is in the applications of bioinformatics and machine learning for the development of clinical laboratory assays. He would play with R for fun even if he weren't getting paid, but he would appreciate it if you didn't tell that to his department chair.
Randall Julian, PhD
Indigo BioAutomation
Randy Julian is the Founder and CEO of Indigo BioAutomation. Randy earned a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Purdue University. Dr. Julian worked for 14 years at Eli Lilly using mass spectrometry in natural product drug discovery, high throughput screening for RNA anti-viral compounds, and proteomics and metabolomics in animal models. Randy founded Indigo as a spin-out of Lilly. Indigo develops software that uses machine learning techniques to automatically analyze data from laboratories world-wide. Indigo's technology also drives new stand-alone medical devices, bringing advanced data analysis to every level of the clinical lab. Dr. Julian is also is an Adjunct Professor of Chemistry at Purdue.
1430
1830
Data Science 101 : Breaking Up with Excel
Location: Montreal 5
Daniel Holmes, MD, FRCPC
St. Paul’s Hospital
Daniel Holmes did his undergraduate training in Chemistry and Physics at the University of Toronto before deciding to pursue medicine as a career. He attended medical school at the University of British Columbia where pathology became his area of major interest. The strong influence of his academic mentors led him to enter the Medical Biochemistry residency training program at UBC. This allowed him to use his background knowledge of chemistry in application to medicine. Areas of clinical interest are diagnostic lipidology/endocrinology and research interests are in the utilization of mathematics and computer diagnostics to laboratory medicine.
Nicholas Spies, MD
University of Utah, ARUP Laboratories
Nick Spies, MD, is a bioinformatician-turned-laboratorian who is a medical director in the Applied Artificial Intelligence group within ARUP laboratories' Division of Research and Innovation. He is focused on applying analytical techniques to improve the way we detect laboratory errors, and hopes to spread the good word of data science and machine learning within the laboratory medicine community.
1430
1830
LC-MSMS 302 : Advanced LC-MSMS Method Development, Trouble-shooting and Operation for Clinical Analysis
Location: Montreal 6-8
Robert Voyksner, PhD
LCMS Limited
Dr. Robert D. Voyksner received his B.S. in Chemistry at Canisius College in 1978 and his Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1982. He was employed at Research Triangle Institute (RTI) from 1983-2001 as the director of the mass spectrometry facility and has been responsible for developing
extraction, separation and mass spectrometric methods for biologically and environmentally significant compounds. His work earned him the Presidents Award, the highest award within RTI. In 2001 he co-founded LCMS Limited in Durham, NC and has been the CEO of the company to date. Under his direction LCMS Limited is working on technological advancements in LC-MS/MS, offering services to pharmaceutical, clinical and agrochemical industry for solving unique problems by LC/MS/MS and offering training in LC/MS/MS and MS/MS interpretation and on LC/MS/MS instrumentation. Dr Voyksner is also an Adjunct professor at the North Carolina a School of Veterinary Medicine and at The University of North Carolina
School of Pharmacy.
Dr. Voyksner's research in mass spectrometry has resulted in over 230 publications and presentations, primarily in the area of LC-MS/MS. He has served on the Board of Directors for The American Society For Mass Spectrometry (ASMS), is on the organization committee for The Montreux LC/MS Symposium and was the organizer for the 1995, 1999, 2003 and 2007 Montreux LC/MS Symposia. Dr. Voyksner has taught over 100 courses on LC-MSMS, CE/MS and CID interpretation during the past 10 years for MSACL, ASMS, pharmaceutical companies; ISSX, PBA, HPCE and HPLC focused meetings.