When it comes to skin cancer, most treatments focus on what happens after the disease takes hold. But Gian-Paolo Dotto – researcher, clinician and entrepreneur – aims to take a new approach, harnessing epigenetics to target the earliest cellular changes and tackle cancer at its root. Drawing on decades of experience in molecular biology and medicine, Paolo spoke to us about how his work in skin cancer brings together science, medicine, prevention and even cosmetics.
Can you tell us a bit about yourself and how you came to specialise in dermatology and cancer?
I started my medical training in Turin and then moved to New York City for a PhD in molecular biology at Rockefeller University. This led me to focus on skin: I was fascinated by how cells are organised and interact and, as a living ‘sandwich’ of cellular layers, skin offers a beautifully accessible system to explore this subject.
Through subsequent research positions at MIT, Yale, Harvard and now the University of Lausanne, my focus has remained on the skin, particularly on the earliest steps of skin cancer development. While many researchers study metastasis and the advanced stages of cancer, I’ve always been drawn to the initial cellular and molecular changes that trigger diseases – changes that can be directly observed in the skin. After all, as the body’s largest organ and its interface with the external world, skin provides a unique opportunity to study cellular structure, environmental exposure and disease development in real time.
You are the president of the International CancerPrev Institute – what is the inspiration for and aim of this foundation?
The idea for CancerPrev grew out of the realisation that research on the earliest stages of cancer was largely happening in siloes. When attending conferences on cancer, I became aware that molecular biologists such as myself and clinicians rarely engaged in dialogue. It struck me how important it was to bring these worlds together – to bridge research and prevention efforts before the disease advances to such an extent that its effects become irreversible.
Together with my colleague Cathrin Brisken at EPFL, who studies early events in breast cancer, we founded the institute to foster exactly this kind of collaboration. Our goal was modest but focused: to connect scientists, clinicians and epidemiologists in Switzerland and across Europe, encouraging a culture of cancer prevention grounded in molecular biology.
We began by organising small workshops and meetings, believing that ‘small is beautiful’ – that real progress often starts with intimate exchanges of ideas. As part of this, we also invited patient advocates and cancer survivors to share their experiences in powerful, often emotional discussions, reminding everyone involved why prevention matters.
In time, this enabled the institute to run a Marie Curie-funded European PhD programme, a junior membership programme to connect young researchers and clinicians from around the world and various public awareness campaigns around World Cancer Day. Even as we grow, we remain focused on our primary mission of promoting collaboration and early intervention in cancer.
