Honoring Dawn Hershman, MD as a Champion for Patient-Centered Care
Upon receiving ASCO's 2025 Karnofsky Award, Dr. Hershman reflects on the questions, patients, and conversations that have shaped her career.

Dawn Hershman, MD, MS, recipient of the 2025 ASCO Karnofsky Award.
Dawn Hershman, MD, MS, knows firsthand how a meaningful conversation can change someone’s life. Unlike many physicians who felt a calling to medicine early on, Dr. Hershman’s path was far from predetermined. It wasn’t until her work-study advisor – a researcher whose lab she was working in – casually suggested she apply to medical school that she even considered it. That moment of encouragement set her on a path that would make her a leading voice in cancer research and care today.
Karnofsky Memorial Award from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), one of the highest honors in oncology. The award recognizes her groundbreaking research on cancer care delivery and treatment adherence and her deep commitment to the patients she serves.
Hershman is this year’s recipient of the prestigiousIn her address at this year’s ASCO annual meeting, she will focus on a single patient—one whose journey inspired countless questions that shaped her research. For Hershman, research isn’t just about data or discoveries; it’s about listening. “The most meaningful issues patients face, they tell you,” she explains. “If that drives your research, you will have an impact.”
Putting Patients at the Center
dedicated much of her research to understanding why patients struggle to access or adhere to their treatments, whether due to side effects, financial barriers, or gaps in the healthcare system. “We have all these great therapies that work,” she says, “but people don’t get them. They can’t get them. They don’t take them. They don’t finish them. If we really want to change outcomes, we need to focus on all of that as well.”
Throughout her career, Hershman has focused on the real-world challenges that patients face—issues that are often overlooked in clinical trials. She has
Dr. Hershman emphasizes the importance of researchers to give back to their community through volunteer and advocacy.
Her work has led to concrete solutions, including strategies to improve adherence to hormone therapy in breast cancer patients—one of the most effective treatments for preventing recurrence, yet one that many patients discontinue early due to side effects or cost. Hershman is also at forefront of financial toxicity research, demonstrating how high out-of-pocket costs prevent patients from staying on life-saving treatments. Through her studies, she has worked to identify policy and healthcare system changes that can reduce these financial burdens and improve patient outcomes.
In addition to treatment adherence and access, Hershman also researches integrative approaches for symptom management, particularly acupuncture for cancer-related pain and side effects. She has led landmark clinical trials showing that acupuncture can significantly reduce joint pain in breast cancer patients undergoing aromatase inhibitor therapy—offering an effective, non-pharmacologic option for managing a side effect that often leads patients to discontinue treatment.
Putting the patient experience at the center of her research, Hershman has helped shift the conversation in oncology research, ensuring that treatment advances translate into real-world benefits for those who need them most.
Bringing Voices Together to Solve Problems

Through mentorship, Dr. Hershman elevates and advocates for new voices in cancer research.
Hershman’s impact extends beyond research and clinical care—she is also a dedicated mentor and leader. She understands, from personal experience, the power of encouragement and inclusion. “Most people doubt what they can do,” she says. “But if you can surround yourself with people who are open-minded and supportive, you realize you can do things you never thought possible.”
Hershman believes that great research happens when diverse perspectives come together, each offering a slightly different way of looking at a problem. That belief has shaped her leadership both as chief of the division of hematology/oncology and deputy director of the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Caner Center (HICCC), where she has built a collaborative, supportive environment that allows innovation to thrive.
For Hershman, the Karnofsky Award is not just a recognition of past achievements—it’s a reminder of the work ahead. “In medicine, we’re constantly trying to solve problems,” she says. “With each answer, we realize how much more there is to understand. That’s what drives me. That’s what keeps me going.”