Julia Levy
Julia Levy | |
---|---|
Born |
Julia Coppens 13 May 1934 Singapore |
Awards | Fellow Royal Society of Canada |
Academic background | |
Alma mater |
University of British Columbia University of London |
Academic work | |
Institutions |
University of British Columbia QLT PhotoTherapeutics |
Main interests | microbiology |
Notable works | Photofrin |
Julia Levy (born May 15, 1934) is a Canadian microbiologist, immunologist, educator and entrepreneur.[1]
Life
The daughter of Guillaume Albert and Dorothy Frances Coppens, she was born Julia Coppens in Singapore. In 1940, her father sent her mother and his two daughters from their home in Indonesia to Vancouver, British Columbia, where he joined them at the end of World War II after he was released from a Japanese prisoner of war camp.[1] Her early education was in Canada. She studied immunology and bacteriology at the University of British Columbia, earning a BA in 1955. Levy received a PhD in experimental pathology from the University of London in 1958. In 1959, she returned to the University of British Columbia as an assistant professor, later becoming full professor.[2]
Her research led her and her colleagues to participate in the development of photodynamic therapy (PDT) initially for treating cancer but more significantly as the first medical treatment of one of the leading causes of blindness among the elderly, age-related macular degeneration (AMD). In 1981, she and four colleagues founded a biopharmaceutical company Quadra Logic Technologies (later QLT Inc.). The PDT drug Photofrin was approved by the Canadian government for treatment of bladder cancer in 1993. Subsequently it has been approved in the United States and elsewhere for the treatment of several other types of cancer.
In the mid-1980s she and colleagues discovered the PDT agent, verteporfin, which QLT and its partner CIBA Vision (now Novartis Ophthalmalics) developed as Visudyne, a treatment for AMD. Visudyne was approved by the US FDA in 2001 and throughout the world thereafter. For ophthalmologists this therapy added “a technique to their treatment armamentarium for some lesions for which there has been no other proven treatment.”[3]
Initially Levy was Chief Scientific Officer of QLT, but from 1995 to 2001 she served as Chief Executive Officer and President of QLT. As a result of the success of Visudyne, QLT became one of the 21% of biotechnology companies that were profitable in the year 2000.[4]
She has expanded her methodology to treat HIV/AIDS, arthritis and age-related macular degeneration.[2]
Levy was named a fellow in the Royal Society of Canada in 1980, Pacific Canada Entrepreneur of the Year in 2000 and an Officer in the Order of Canada in 2001. She has received the Future of Vision Award from the Foundation Fighting Blindness, the Helen Keller Award for Contributions to Vision and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the British Columbia Biotechnology Association.[1][2] She has also received a number of honorary doctorates from Canadian universities.
She married Edwin Levy; the couple have two children.[1]
The Chemical Institute of Canada awards the Julia Levy Award for successful commercialization of innovation in the field of biomedical science and engineering.[5]
References
- 1 2 3 4 Shell, Barry (2006). Sensational Scientists: The Journeys and Discoveries of 24 Men and Women of Science. pp. 100–06. ISBN 1551927276.
- 1 2 3 Oakes, Elizabeth H (2007). Encyclopedia of World Scientists. pp. 450–51. ISBN 1438118821.
- ↑ Bressler, Neil M., and Susan B. Bressler. "Photodynamic therapy with verteporfin (Visudyne): impact on ophthalmology and visual sciences."Investigative ophthalmology & visual science 41.3 (2000): 624-628
- ↑ Lähteenmäki, Riku (2001). "Public biotech 200 -- the numbers". Nature biotechnology 19 (5): 407.
- ↑ "Julia Levy Award". Chemical Institute of Canada.
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