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Emily Draeger, PhD, DABR

Assistant Professor of Therapeutic Radiology
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Education

PhD
Illinois Institute of Technology, Physics (2014)


BS
University of Minnesota Duluth, Physics (2009)


About

Titles

Assistant Professor of Therapeutic Radiology

Biography

Dr. Emily Draeger received her B.S. degree in physics from the University of Minnesota, Duluth in 2009. She then pursued her Ph.D. in experimental high energy/nuclear physics at Illinois Institute of Technology. Her work contributed to the Daya Bay Antineutrino Experiment, which was awarded the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics in 2014.

After receiving her Ph.D., Dr. Draeger was accepted into the Medical Physics Post-Graduate Certificate program at the University of Pennsylvania, which she completed in 2015. She then completed a post-doctoral position at the University of Maryland, which focused on prompt gamma proton range verification. Her post-doctoral work resulted in several awards, as well as manuscripts and a patent. She then took a position as a research physicist in the Division of Translational Radiation Sciences at the University of Maryland, where she worked on irradiation protocol design for the testing of new therapeutics for cancer treatment and the mitigation of health effects caused by radiation exposure.

After her time at the University of Maryland, Dr. Draeger was accepted into the therapeutic medical physics residency program at Yale-New Haven Hospital, which she completed in 2020. She then joined Yale-New Haven Hospital as a Medical Physicist and Yale University as an assistant professor in 2021. Since joining the department, Dr. Draeger continues to support patient care, resident education, and continues to conduct research, focusing on brachytherapy applications, stereotactic radiosurgery, and Monte Carlo modeling.

Appointments

Other Departments & Organizations

Education & Training

Medical Physics Residency
Yale New Haven Hospital/Yale School of Medicine (2020)
Post-Graduate Certificate in Medical Physics
University of Pennsylvania (2015)
PhD
Illinois Institute of Technology, Physics (2014)
BS
University of Minnesota Duluth, Physics (2009)

Research

Overview

As a postoctoral fellow at the University of Maryland, Dr. Draeger investigated the use of an industrial gamma camera for prompt gamma-based proton range verification. This work resulted in several awards, including the Abell Foundation Award for Top Biotechnology Innovation and the AAMP Science Council Award for Top Abstract, as well as conference presentations, publications, and a patent for the image processing techniques created using this technology.

After completing her postdoctoral fellowship, Dr. Draeger took a position as a research scientist in the Division of Translational Radiation Sciences at the University of Maryland. During this time, she worked with her colleagues in the division to report on the quality of dosimetric reporting in radiobiology publications over a 20 year period. This work highlighted shortcoming in how dosimetric details are reported in radiobiology publications, including how lack of reporting can lead to difficulties in reproducing previous experiments. This work lead to a publication in the Red Journal, a Best Oral Presentation Award from COMP/CARO/CAMRT, and an invitation to speak at the 2021 Radiation Research Society Annual Meeting.

At Yale University and Yale-New Haven Hospital, Dr. Draeger's research has focused on brachytherapy applications, stereotactic radiosurgery, portal dosimetry, and Monte Carlo modeling. Her work in brachytherapy includes investigating the use of multiple dwell positions within Leipzig-style applicators to increase the viable treatment area for these applicators, as well as Monte Carlo modeling of various brachytherapy applicators using TOPAS. Her work with Leipzig-style applicators has lead to a publication, presentations at AAPM, ABS, and ASTRO conferences, and an invitation to speak at the 2022 AAPM Spring Clinical Meeting. Her work in stereotactic radiosurgery mainly focuses on the Gamma Knife, and includes investigating the use of inverse planning for Gamma Knife and a dosimetric comparison of a novel rotating gamma source system to the Gamma Knife Icon. She is also investigating portal dosimetry, and is focused on determining more accurate ways to perform portal dose verification that conform to AAPM TG-218.

Research at a Glance

Publications Timeline

A big-picture view of Emily Draeger's research output by year.
36Publications
247Citations

Publications

2024

2023

2022

2020

Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

  • activity

    Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics

  • activity

    Brachytherapy

  • activity

    Scientific Reports

  • activity

    IEEE Transactions on Radiation and Plasma Medical Sciences

  • activity

    American Association of Physicists in Medicine

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