Photo From The Vilcek Foundation.
In a 2007 profile in Esquire magazine, she joked about her father’s policy that she and her sister either had to study math or marry a mathematician.
While you might think that science, medicine, and math just go together, Michor says that’s not the case.
“If you like science but don’t like math, you go into medicine,” she told Esquire, noting that while the people in medicine might not like math, cancer does.
If we’re going to make progress in the fight against cancer, it’s going to take math. And that’s why her passion for both is so important.
In Vienna, she studied both math and molecular biology, a somewhat unique academic path. With her options limited at home, she moved to the United States for her graduate studies.
Since graduating, Michor has become known for her unique, mathematic approach to treatment of one of life’s scariest situations: cancer.
Now a professor at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard School of Public Health, Michor incorporates quantitative methods and evolutionary biology in trying to understand what fuels cancer cells.
Photo From The Vilcek Foundation.
The trouble with treating cancer is that it doesn’t exist in a vacuum. There are treatments that can wipe out cancerous cells, but if it’s also destroying healthy cells essential to survival, that pretty obviously presents a problem.
In 2015, she received the Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science for her work developing new approaches to treating cancer.
So much of her work has centered around optimizing the scheduling and dosages used in drugs for treating cancer. Her approach has found some major success.
Vilcek Prizes are given to “immigrants who have made lasting contributions to American society through their extraordinary achievements in biomedical research and the arts and humanities.” Michor certainly fits that category.