Dr. Steven T. Chen is Assistant Professor of
Dermatology at Harvard Medical School. He graduated with Honors from Johns
Hopkins University where he earned a BS in Biology. He subsequently earned a
Masters in Public Health (MPH) and a medical degree (MD) at Johns Hopkins, and
was elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society. He then pursued residency
training at Harvard, where he completed an Internal Medicine residency at Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center and a Dermatology residency in the Harvard
Combined Dermatology Program. He served as Administrative Chief Resident during
his final year of combined training. He belongs to several professional
organizations, including the American Academy of Dermatology, the United States
Cutaneous Lymphoma Consortium, and the International Society for Cutaneous
Lymphomas. He pursues clinical and education research and has co-authored
peer-reviewed articles in medical education and complex dermatology. His
clinical interests include cutaneous lymphomas, complex medical dermatology,
oncodermatology, inpatient dermatology, and medical education. He is the
Co-director of the Comprehensive Cutaneous Lymphoma Program, and serves as Vice
Chief of Education and Director of the Blistering Orders Clinic in the
Department of Dermatology.
Dr. Mai P Hoang is an anatomic pathologist specializing in dermatopathology. She is currently the director of Dermatopathology at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. She has served as the medical director of the Pathology immunohistochemistry laboratory at Mass General Hospital from 2012 to 2019 and the course director of the annual Harvard Combined Dermatopathology Update course from 2008 to 2017. She serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology and the American Journal of Dermatopathology. She has published over 190 peer-reviewed articles and has authored and co-edited five books: Melanocytic Lesions: a Case Based Approach, Vulvar Pathology, Cutaneous Hematopathology, Immunohistochemistry in Diagnostic Dermatopathology, and Hospital-Based Dermatopathology: a Guide to Diagnosis. Dr. Hoang’s research interests focus on the role of immunohistochemistry as ancillary diagnostic tools in pathology and as predictive/prognostic markers in rare cutaneous tumors including adnexal tumors, Merkel cell carcinoma, and rare melanoma subtypes.