Philip S. Rosenberg

Senior Investigator
Division of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics, Biostatistics Br
National Cancer Institute
United States of America

Scientist Medical Sciences
Biography

Dr. Philip Rosenberg received a Ph.D. in biostatistics from Yale University. He joined the NCI as a Staff Fellow in 1988, and became a Senior Investigator within the Biostatistics Branch in 1997. Dr. Rosenberg’s research focuses on advancing medical science by testing clinical, epidemiological, and biological hypotheses using state-of-the-art statistical methods. Dr. Rosenberg has received numerous awards for his work in biostatistics, including the Howard W. Temin Award for his contribution to the development of statistical methods to monitor trends in the HIV. He has received NIH Merit Awards for his collaborative work on inherited bone marrow failure syndromes, as well as for pioneering methods and software tools to identify candidate genes and pathways.

Research Intrest

Risk Models for Inherited Bone Marrow Failure Syndromes; Descriptive Epidemiology Studies; Genetic and Environmental Epidemiology

List of Publications
Rosenberg PS, Tamary H, Alter BP. How high are carrier frequencies of rare recessive syndromes? Contemporary estimates for Fanconi Anemia in the United States and Israel. American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 2011 Aug 1;155(8):1877-83.
Rosenberg PS, Zeidler C, Bolyard AA, Alter BP, Bonilla MA, Boxer LA, Dror Y, Kinsey S, Link DC, Newburger PE, Shimamura A. Stable long‐term risk of leukaemia in patients with severe congenital neutropenia maintained on G‐CSF therapy. British journal of haematology. 2010 Jul 1;150(2):196-9.
Rosenberg PS, Che A, Chen BE. Multiple hypothesis testing strategies for genetic case–control association studies. Statistics in medicine. 2006 Sep 30;25(18):3134-49.

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