In This Section
Thomas W. Kensler

In Memoriam: Thomas W. Kensler

(08/07/1948 - 07/11/2025)Member since 1979
Leave a remembrance below

Thomas W. Kensler, PhD, a trailblazer in cancer prevention who was among the first to conduct Westernized human clinical trials in China, died July 11, 2025, following an accident while hiking on Mont Blanc in France. He was 76 years old.

Kensler was known for his innovative research on chemoprevention of cancer using compounds found in broccoli and other cruciferous vegetables. He led several clinical trials in the Qidong region of China, including one investigating whether consumption of a broccoli sprout beverage was associated with increased elimination of benzene, an airborne carcinogen common in the area.

Born in Massachusetts in 1948, Kensler received a bachelor’s degree in biology from Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, in 1970, and obtained a doctoral degree in toxicology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1976.

After postdoctoral work at the University of Wisconsin and the National Cancer Institute (NCI), he joined the faculty of Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University in 1980, where he rose to the level of professor. In 2010, he became a professor of pharmacology and chemical biology at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and coleader of the Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention Program at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI). He later joined the Public Health Sciences Division of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, where he worked until he retired in 2024.

A loyal AACR member since 1979, Kensler provided valued service on several scientific and other committees, including as a co-chair of the Annual Meeting Program Committee (2004-2005); a member of the Cancer Prevention Committee (2001-2014) and the Special Conferences Committee (2012-2015); and a member of the steering committee of the 2016 AACR Cancer Progress Report. He also served as a senior editor of the AACR journal Cancer Prevention Research from 2012 to 2017.

He received the AACR-American Cancer Society Award for Research Excellence in Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention in 2007. Other honors include the National Friendship Award from the People’s Republic of China in 2011, the Society of Toxicology Translational Impact Award in 2009, the Oxygen Club of California and Jarrow Formulas Health Science Prize in 2012 (shared with Masayuki Yamamoto), and an NCI Outstanding Investigator Award in 2015.

“Tom Kensler was a cancer research pioneer, especially in the investigation of the mechanisms of induction of cancer by chemicals and the potential for progress in chemoprevention using naturally occurring agents,” said Margaret Foti, PhD, MD (hc), chief executive officer of the AACR. “He was greatly esteemed for his scientific brilliance, his dedication to saving lives through cancer prevention and global cancer research, and his warm and affable personality. Because of his outstanding research in addressing cancer incidence and mortality around the world, we were very proud to recognize his achievements with the AACR-ACS Award for Research Excellence in Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention. He will be dearly missed by all of us in the cancer research community.”

Kensler’s wife, Nancy E. Davidson, MD, FAACR, executive vice president for clinical affairs at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center and AACR Past President (2016-2017), said that in honor of Tom’s longstanding contributions as a dedicated AACR member, the family would welcome donations in his memory to the AACR in support of young investigators.

While Kensler’s groundbreaking research expanded the horizons of cancer prevention, his most lasting impact is on the dozens of students and fellows who worked in his laboratory. He was a devoted and effective mentor. Supporting the development of early-career scientists was the professional achievement of which he was most proud, and the achievements of this next generation of cancer scientists are his most enduring legacy.

Leave your remembrance of Dr. Kensler below (limit 1,000 characters).