Charis Eng is a Singapore-born physician-scientist and geneticist at the Cleveland Clinic, notable for identifying the PTEN gene.[1] She is the Chairwoman and founding Director of the Genomic Medicine Institute of the Cleveland Clinic, founding Director and attending clinical cancer geneticist of the institute’s clinical component, the Center for Personalized Genetic Healthcare, and Professor and Vice Chairwoman of the Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine.
Eng was born in Singapore in the year 1962 and grew up in Bristol, England. She graduated from the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools and matriculated in the University of Chicago at age 16.[1] She earned her Ph.D. in Developmental Biology in 1986 and her M.D. in 1988, both from the Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago. Afterwards, she specialized in internal medicine at Beth Israel Hospital, Boston and trained in medical oncology at Harvard’s Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. She was formally trained in clinical cancer genetics at the University of Cambridge and the Royal Marsden NHS Trust, UK, and in laboratory-based human cancer genetics by Prof Sir Bruce Ponder. Following her training, Eng became one of only four formally-trained clinical cancer geneticists in the US.
Eng returned to the Farber as Assistant Professor of Medicine at the end of 1995, and in January 1999 joined The Ohio State University as Associate Professor of Medicine and Director of the Clinical Cancer Genetics Program. In 2001, she was appointed to the Davis Professorship and Co-Director of the Division of Human Genetics in the Department of Internal Medicine. In 2002, she was promoted to Professor and Division Director, holding the Klotz Endowed Chair.[1][2]
Outside of the lab, Eng acted as the primary genetics consultant to the Discovery Health Channel documentary "Curse of the Elephant Man", which traced the genetic causes of Joseph Merrick's disfiguring disorder.[5][6]
Eng’s research has been acknowledged as the paradigm for performing cancer genetics research which can be brought to clinical practice. At the clinical interface, she is acknowledged as one of the rare “go to” people on what is and how to implement genetic- and genomics-enabled personalized healthcare. She was the first to discover a link between mutations in the cancer suppressor gene PTEN and Cowden and other syndromes, which predispose patients to several types of cancer.[4][7][8]
Her scientific accomplishments have set the practice model for how to apply laboratory-based genetics and genomics in the pre-symptomatic diagnosis, counseling and management of patients and their as-yet unaffected family members. Dr Eng’s two major ground-breaking investigative models on RET and related genes in multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN 2; characterized by medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma and hyperparathyroidism), and PTEN in Cowden syndrome (high risk of breast and thyroid cancers) have been acknowledged as the paradigm for the practice of clinical cancer genetics.
Doris Duke Distinguished Clinical Scientist Award, 2002
Elected to the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2003
Elected to the Association of American Physicians (AAP), 2004
Local Legend from Ohio, bestowed by the American Medical Women’s Association in conjunction with the US Senate on women physicians who have demonstrated commitment, originality, innovation and/or creativity in their fields of medicine, 2005
American Cancer Society Clinical Research Professor, 2009
Served on US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary’s Advisory Committee on Genetics, Health and Society, 2009-2011
Elected to the National Academy of Medicine, 2010
Named as one of 400 most influential biomedical researchers in the world, 2013
American Medical Association Women Physicians’ Section Mentorship Recognition, 2013
American Medical Women’s Association Exceptional Mentor Award, 2014
University of Chicago Medical Alumni Distinguished Service Award, 2015
University of Chicago Alumni Association Professional Achievement Award, 2017