Dr. Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa is currently Director of the Brain Tumor Surgery Program at Johns Hopkins Hospital. He is also head of the Brain Tumor Stem Cell Laboratory at Johns Hopkins. In September 2016, Dr. Quiñones will become the "William J. and Charles H. Mayo Professor" and Chair of Neurologic Surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida, in connection with $100 million in major new construction projects being undertaken there, to develop new facilities and integrated services for complex cancers and for neurologic and neurosurgical care. Dr. Quiñones has been recognized with the Association of American Medical Colleges Herbert W. Nickens Award, the Johns Hopkins Hospital Department of Neurosurgery, Richard J. Otenasek, Jr, Faculty Teaching Award, the "Neurosurgeon of the Year" award from Voices Against Brain Cancer, a "Health Care Heroes Award," a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Physician-Scientist Early Career Award and various other recognitions.
Dr. Quiñones has published 295 peer-reviewed papers and over 100 book chapters (including invited reviews and letters), and has been the main editor or section editor of nine textbooks. Most notably, Dr. Quiñones is also Editor-in-Chief for one of the most well-respected and widely-read neurosurgical textbooks in the world. Dr. Quiñones is one of the few brain surgeons with multiple research grants from the National Institutes of Health, as well as the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Maryland Stem Cell Foundation. Some of his major accomplishments to date include: 1)elucidating mechanisms by which brain tumors migrate and metastasize, 2) integrating the use of stem cells into local treatment of solid tumors, 3) the concomitant use of nanotechnology and focal beam radiotherapy in the systemic treatment of solid tumors, l, and Dr. Quiñones is the Principal Investigator (PI) or Co-PI on multiple clinical trials, including novel combination therapies for brain tumors (with checkpoint inhibitors and/or various other technologies), and the first trials in the U.S. of certain technologies for more complete surgical removal of brain tumors.