³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ

Dr. Simone Chevalier

Academic title(s): 

Professor

Dr. Simone Chevalier
Contact Information
Email address: 
simone.chevalier [at] mcgill.ca
Department: 
Surgery
Division: 
Urology
Degree(s): 

BSc, MSc, PhD

Area(s): 
Basic Sciences
Location: 
³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ Health Centre (MUHC - Glen) - Royal Victoria Hospital
Graduate supervision: 

Currently supervising students

Group: 
Currently Recruiting
M.Sc. Students
M.Sc. Non-Thesis projects
Ph.D. Students
Areas of expertise: 

To establish the clinical and functional significance of protein kinases implicated in the androgen-independent progression of human prostate cancer. Development of new therapeutic modalities for prostate cancer in animal models. 

Current research: 

My research focuses on prostatic diseases, benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and prostate cancers (PCa) that spontaneously arise in men 50 years or older. Our mechanistic studies involve the use of diverse in vitro and in vivo approaches to characterise key molecules of signaling pathways mediated by androgens and growth-promoting factors in heterogeneous cell populations of the human and dog prostate cells, tumours and metastases. We also focus on circulatory molecules as potential biomarkers of PCa witnessing tumor cells as they evolve with progression. To translate our findings to patients, we implemented a PCa biobank and adopted a large animal (canine) model of PCa. 

Clinical Interests: 
  • Liquid biopsies to identify new markers of lethal prostate cancer
  • Prostate cancer progression.
  • Intra-tumoral heterogeneity and diversity of prostate cell subtypes
Areas of interest: 

Prostatic diseases 

Biography: 

I joined the ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ Dept of Surgery as an Associate Professor in 1994 to become the director of new research facilities being built at the RI-MUHC of the Montreal General Hospital for the Urologic Oncology Research Team. We integrated the Cancer Research Program of the RI-MUHC at the Glen site in 2015. Being a prostate cancer scientist since the very beginning of my career, I became deeply involved in the creation of the pan-provincial PROCURE Prostate Cancer Biobank in 2007 and directed its operations for 10 years. I remain a consultant for matters related to the Biobank. We recently undertook a project aiming to prospectively interrogate tumours of specific subsets of patients in this cohort of 2,000 patients to identify molecular drivers of prostate cancer lethality and to trace best markers back in liquid biopsies throughout the disease trajectory of the same patients. This type of translational research has become of paramount importance to impact on outcome and death from prostate cancer. I am now a Senior Scientist and as such, I always gladly take time for patients who contact me to know more on ongoing research and novelties in the field of cancer, and particularly prostate cancer. 

Selected publications: 

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