Biography
Michael Campbell, Ph.D. received his doctoral degree in Cancer Biology from Stanford University where he remained as a postdoctoral fellow in Oncology. Dr. Campbell was appointed Assistant Professor of Surgery at Stanford University in 1992. He joined the UCSF faculty as Assistant Professor of Surgery in 1997.
Dr. Campbell's areas of interest in research include breast neoplasms, cancer vaccines, immunotherapy, immunologic adjuvants, immunologic and biological factors, gene therapy, immunology, and breast cancer.
Education
Education
- 1978-82, University of Puget Sound, B.S., Biology
- 1978-82, University of Puget Sound, B.S., Mathematics
- 1983-87, Stanford University, Ph.D., Cancer Biology
Publications
MOST RECENT PUBLICATIONS FROM A TOTAL OF 59
- Modulation of the immune microenvironment of high-risk ductal carcinoma in situ by intralesional pembrolizumab injection.| | PubMed
- Characterizing the Tumor Immune Microenvironment with Tyramide-Based Multiplex Immunofluorescence.| | PubMed
- Germline genetic contribution to the immune landscape of cancer.| | PubMed
- Adrenal Tumors Found During Staging and Surveillance for Colorectal Cancer: Benign Incidentalomas or Metastatic Disease?| | PubMed
- Co-expression modules identified from published immune signatures reveal five distinct immune subtypes in breast cancer.| | PubMed
- Characterizing the immune microenvironment in high-risk ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast.| | PubMed
- The prognostic implications of macrophages expressing proliferating cell nuclear antigen in breast cancer depend on immune context.| | PubMed
- Biology of breast cancer in Nigerian women: a pilot study.| | PubMed
- Elevated levels of proliferating and recently migrated tumor-associated macrophages confer increased aggressiveness and worse outcomes in breast cancer.| | PubMed
- Elevated PCNA+ tumor-associated macrophages in breast cancer are associated with early recurrence and non-Caucasian ethnicity.| | PubMed