Department of Psychiatry

PAYKEL LECTURE

Tuesday 27 September 2016 5 – 7pm

‘Biomarkers and the Future of Psychiatric Diagnosis’

Delivered by:

David J. Kupfer, M.D.,

Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry

University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

The Martin Cohen Lecture Theatre

Cancer Research UK Cambridge Research Institute

The Li Ka Shing Centre

Robinson Way

Cambridge Biomedical Campus

Cambridge CB2 0RE

To be followed by a wine reception

David J. Kupfer, M.D., Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, received his bachelor’s (magna cum laude) and M.D. degrees from Yale University. Following completion of an internship, Dr Kupfer continued his postgraduate clinical and research training at the Yale New Haven Hospital and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). In 1970, he was appointed Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine. DrKupfer joined the faculty at the University of Pittsburgh in 1973 as Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Director of Research and Research Training at Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic. He was promoted to Professor of Psychiatry in 1975, and held the position of the Thomas Detre Professor in Psychiatry from 1994 to 2014.


Between 1983 and 2009, Dr Kupfer served as Chair of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and Director of Research at Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic. During that time, he facilitated the coordination and expansion of investigations among the department's 200 faculty. Under Dr Kupfer's direction, WPIC became one of the nation's preeminent university-based psychiatric research centres as evidenced by the quality and number of publications as well as the amount of peer-reviewed federal funding for mental health research. A prolific writer, Dr Kupfer has authored or co-authored a combination of more than 1,120 articles, books, and book chapters. Dr Kupfer's own research has focused primarily on long-term treatment strategies for recurrent mood disorders, the pathogenesis of depression, and the relationship between biomarkers and depression.

In recognition of his contributions to the field, Dr Kupfer has been the recipient of numerous awards and honours including the A.E. Bennett Research Award in Clinical Science (1975), the Anna-Monika Foundation Prize (1977), the Daniel H. Efron Award (1979), the Twenty-Sixth Annual Award of the Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital in Memory of Edward A. Strecker,M.D. (1989), the William R. McAlpin, Jr, Research Achievement Award (1990), the 1993 American Psychiatric Association Award for Research in Psychiatry, the First Isaac Ray Decade of Excellence Award (1994), the Twelfth Annual Edward J. Sachar Award (1996), the 1996 GeraldL. Klerman Lifetime Research Award (jointly with Dr Ellen Frank), the Institute of Medicine’s 1998 Rhoda and Bernard Sarnat International Prize in Mental Health, and the American Psychopathological Association’s 1999 Joseph Zubin Award (jointly with DrEllen Frank), and the 2009 C. Charles Burlingame Award. He was the 2010 Litchfield lecturer at the Department of Psychiatry at Oxford University and the recipient of the 2010 American College of Neuropsychopharmacology Julius Axelrod Mentorship Award. Dr Kupfer was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 1990. He is the Founding President of the International Society of Bipolar Disorders. Dr Kupfer chaired the American Psychiatric Association Task Force for DSM-5.

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Programme:

The 2016 Paykel Lecture

5.00pm Refreshments will be served to guests on arrival

5.30pm Chairman’s Introduction:

Professor Ed Bullmore

5.40pm LECTURE:

Biomarkers and the Future of Psychiatric Diagnosis

Delivered by: David J. Kupfer, M.D

6.30pm Vote of thanks:

Professor Peter Jones

6.30 – 7.00pm Wine reception

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For information:

The 2015 Paykel Lecture took place on Tuesday 8th September.

The lecturer was Dr Nora D. Volkrow, M.D Director, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Bethesda, Maryland.

Lecture title: ‘Brain on Drugs: from Reward to Addiction’