Franziska Wachter, MD

Attending Physician, Cancer and Blood Disorders Center
Instructor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical Schoo;
Image
Franziska Wachter, MD

Franziska Wachter, MD

Attending Physician, Cancer and Blood Disorders Center
Instructor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical Schoo;

Medical Services

Languages
English
German
Education
Medical School
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
2013
Bavaria
Germany
Graduate School
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
2014
Bavaria
Germany
Internship
Boston Combined Residency Program (BCRP)
2017
Boston
MA
Residency
Boston Combined Residency Program (BCRP)
2019
Boston
MA
Fellowship
Hematology and Oncology
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children's Hospital
2022
Boston
MA
Certifications
American Board of Pediatrics (General)
American Board of Pediatrics (Hematology-Oncology)
Professional History

Dr. Wachter is a physician-scientist committed to combining compassionate, leading-edge care of
malignancies with groundbreaking research in experimental therapeutics. She obtained my M.D. from Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, Germany and graduated summa cum laude from Irmela Jeremia’s laboratory, where I studied mechanisms of chemoresistance and the influence of p53 reactivation responses to the extrinsic apoptotic pathway agonist TRAIL. She then continued her training in Loren Walensky's laboratory, which focuses on interrogating BCL-2 family protein biology through the lens of structural and chemical biology. Dr. Wachter's particular areas of study comprised investigating inhibitory mechanisms of the pro-apoptotic effector protein BAX as well as identifying and characterizing BAX activators identified in a NMR-based fragment screen. She also validated the on-target mechanism of a p53 reactivating stapled peptide drug. Currently, she continues her postdoc scientific training in Eric Fischer’s laboratory co-mentored by Scott Armstrong and uses modern structural biology methods and biochemistry with the goal to structurally define aberrant transcription in myeloid children with high-risk myeloid malignancies.

Dr Wachter attends on the pediatric stem cell transplant service, and her clinical interest is to improve outcomes for pediatric patients with AML and MDS after stem cell transplant. Her clinical research efforts focus on the role of novel therapeutics in the treatment of high-risk acute myeloid leukemia, with a special focus on disease control prior to hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT) and maintenance treatment after HCT to reduce the risk of relapse.

Publications

ANKRD26-related Thrombocytopenia 2 with a Baseline Increase in Blasts: Implications for Clinical Surveillance. View Abstract
Umbilical Cord Blood Reduced Relapse but Increased Nonrelapse Mortality Compared to Matched Unrelated Donor Transplantation in Pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia With Active Disease: A CIBMTR 2008 to 2017 Analysis of Donor Source and Residual Disease. View Abstract
Navigating Treatment Options and Communication in Relapsed Pediatric AML. View Abstract
Effects of Total Body Irradiation on Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation Outcomes in Pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia with Prior Central Nervous System Involvement. View Abstract
Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia With Torque Teno Mini Virus::RARA Fusion: An Approach to Screening and Diagnosis. View Abstract
Structural characterization of methylation-independent PP2A assembly guides alphafold2Multimer prediction of family-wide PP2A complexes. View Abstract
Pathophysiology of Acute Myeloid Leukemia. View Abstract
Treatment of recurrent pediatric myelodysplastic syndrome post hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. View Abstract
Chemical Specification of E3 Ubiquitin Ligase Engagement by Cysteine-Reactive Chemistry. View Abstract
Impact of cytoreduction and remission status on hematopoietic cell transplantation outcomes in pediatric myelodysplastic syndrome and related disorders. View Abstract
The current landscape: Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant for acute lymphoblastic leukemia. View Abstract
Transient neonatal hemolytic anemia due to the novel gamma globin gene mutation HBG2:C.290T>C, p.Leu97Pro (hemoglobin Wareham). View Abstract
Comment on: Clinical, pathologic, and molecular features of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors in children and adolescents: ROS1-fusion inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor: ROS1-fusion inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor. View Abstract
Rapid next-generation sequencing aids in diagnosis of transient abnormal myelopoiesis in a phenotypically normal newborn. View Abstract
Molecular Characterization of Inflammatory Tumors Facilitates Initiation of Effective Therapy. View Abstract
Autoimmune hemolytic anemia complicated by parvovirus infection. View Abstract
MDM2 and MDM4 Are Therapeutic Vulnerabilities in Malignant Rhabdoid Tumors. View Abstract
Paclitaxel Reduces Axonal Bclw to Initiate IP3R1-Dependent Axon Degeneration. View Abstract
Allosteric sensitization of proapoptotic BAX. View Abstract
Mechanistic validation of a clinical lead stapled peptide that reactivates p53 by dual HDM2 and HDMX targeting. View Abstract
Cellular Uptake and Ultrastructural Localization Underlie the Pro-apoptotic Activity of a Hydrocarbon-stapled BIM BH3 Peptide. View Abstract
Inhibition of Pro-apoptotic BAX by a noncanonical interaction mechanism. View Abstract
Activation of DNA damage response by antitumor therapy counteracts the activity of vinca alkaloids. View Abstract
Cell cycle-arrested tumor cells exhibit increased sensitivity towards TRAIL-induced apoptosis. View Abstract
Impact of the p53 status of tumor cells on extrinsic and intrinsic apoptosis signaling. View Abstract
Enhanced anti-tumour effects of Vinca alkaloids given separately from cytostatic therapies. View Abstract
NOXA as critical mediator for drug combinations in polychemotherapy. View Abstract
Important role of caspase-8 for chemosensitivity of ALL cells. View Abstract
Optimized anti-tumor effects of anthracyclines plus Vinca alkaloids using a novel, mechanism-based application schedule. View Abstract