Paul Goldberg

Paul Goldberg

Editor & Publisher

Paul Goldberg is the editor and publisher of The Cancer Letter. He joined the publication in 1986.

His coverage has had a profound impact on the field of oncology, leading to numerous Congressional investigations, and helped change policy, regulation, and standards of care.

Paul’s reporting has been recognized by the Washington DC Professional Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, the Gerald Loeb Awards, the Association of Health Care Journalists, and the Newsletter and Electronic Publishers Foundation.

His articles have appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and The Washington Monthly, and he has been featured on 60 Minutes, 20/20, CNN and NPR. He is also a novelist and author of nonfiction books.

His author website is www.paulgoldberg.com

Paul graduated from Duke University with a B.A. in economics in 1981.
Books
Latest Stories
The Cancer Letter Podcast nominated for 30th annual Webby Awards
Editorial
We have good news: The Cancer Letter Podcast is a nominee for The Webby Awards, which are recognized as the internet’s highest honor. 
NCI slated to get a $9 million raise as Trump’s budget proposes about 10% cut for NIH
Cancer Policy
Budgets can surprise you, and the White House budget proposal for fiscal year 2027 is more surprising than most.
The Directors: Wistar’s Altieri and ChristianaCare’s Petrelli say partnership of their institutions will go on as the guard changes
The Directors
Leadership is changing at The Wistar Institute and the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute in the months to come—but the leaders of the two institutions say that this will have little if any effect on the clinical-research collaboration that they have spent the past 15years building (The Cancer Letter, July 12, 2019). 
A new working group will conduct site visits and advise NCAB and NCI director on cancer center grants
NCI
The National Cancer Advisory Board has established an ad hoc working group that will assess cancer centers as part of the designation process. The decision was approved unanimously with one abstention at the NCAB meeting March 17. 
Break Through Cancer’s Tyler Jacks: “We’ve created a new operating model for collaborative cancer research.”
Free
Five years ago, Tyler Jacks took on a new challenge, becoming president of Break Through Cancer, a foundation that has pledged to spend at least $500 million to support research projects across top tier cancer centers.

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