Dr. Rebecca Troisi and collaborators examined associations of chromosomal and non-chromosomal congenital anomalies with cancer incidence in a large Nordic population-based case-control study.
DCEG investigator Neal Freedman helped to create—in record time—a national dashboard of COVID seroprevalence studies to better assess the effect of the pandemic on the U.S. population.
DCEG provides countless opportunities for fellows to obtain integrated scientific and career training.
Current fellowship training opportunities offered by the NCI Division of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics
Careers in the Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics
DCEG sponsors seminars by inhouse experts, lectures by visiting scholars, and informal meetings—all on a wide range of scientific topics.
DCEG Fellowship Program Video
Learn more about the experience of our fellows in DCEG at the National Cancer Institute.
Photographs of common moles; dysplastic nevi (DN); and melanomas that arose from DN. Each case series shows changes in an individual pigmented lesion over a number of years and across the spectrum of changes typically seen in U.S. melanoma-prone families.