Welcome to the first blog posting on our newly redesigned Web pages.

If you or a loved one have been diagnosed with breast cancer, it is our hope and intention that this website will be very helpful by providing “the science behind the diagnosis” in a clear and comprehensive way. From time to time, we will write blog posts about breast pathology and breast cancer.

We would like to introduce our pathologists at the Johns Hopkins Hospital who specialize in breast pathology and breast cancer, Dr. Ashley Cimino-Mathews, Dr. Pedram Argani, and Dr. Andrea Richardson.

Ashley Cimino-Mathews, M.D.
Ashley Cimino-Mathews, M.D.

Ashley Cimino-Mathews, M.D.

Ashley Cimino-Mathews, M.D., is an Associate Professor of Pathology and Oncology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and Director of the Johns Hopkins Hospital Breast Pathology Program and its Breast Consultation Service.

Dr. Cimino-Mathews earned her B.S. degree in biology with a minor in Spanish from Emory University, where she also studied breast cancer tumor vaccine development. She subsequently received her M.D. degree from Weill Cornell Medical College, followed by a residency in anatomic and clinical pathology at the Johns Hopkins Hospital.

Dr. Cimino-Mathews is strongly committed to women's health care and breast cancer research. Her ongoing research interests include characterization of the breast tumor immune microenvironment, the pathogenesis of breast cancer metastasis, and the breast stromal neoplasms.

Her numerous awards for scholarship and research include Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Omega Alpha, the Weill Cornell "Good Physician" Award, the Fourth Annual Safeway Breast Cancer Retreat Runner-up Poster Award in 2011, the Johns Hopkins Pathology Young Investigator's Day Top Prize in Clinical Pathology in 2011, the American Society of Clinical Pathology’s Top 40 Under Forty Honoree Award, and the 2014 and 2017 Anatomic Pathology Faculty Teaching Awards from Hopkins pathology residents.

Dr. Cimino-Mathews notes, “The aspects I enjoy best about being a breast cancer pathologist and researcher are doing work which has the potential to improve the diagnosis and quality of life of patients with breast cancer, and working so closely as a team with the breast surgeons, the oncologists and other clinicians.”

Although Dr. Cimino-Mathews was born in California, she moved often as a child and grew up in the "Space Coast" of Florida, the oldest of four girls. She lives in Baltimore with her husband, their two small children, and their dog and cat.

Pedram Argani, M.D.
Pedram Argani, M.D.

Pedram Argani, M.D.

Pedram Argani, M.D., is a Professor of Pathology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He was the principal consultant of the Johns Hopkins Breast Pathology Service from 2001-2017 and reviewed approximately 1,000 breast consultation cases each year.

Dr. Argani earned his B.A. from Princeton University and subsequently received both his M.D. and residency training in anatomic pathology from the University of Pennsylvania. He then received fellowship training in oncologic and molecular pathology at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Dr. Argani is an internationally recognized anatomic pathologist and is on the editorial board of numerous scientific journals, including the American Journal of Surgical Pathology, Modern Pathology, Advances in Anatomic Pathology, and the International Journal of Surgical Pathology. He was the recipient of the prestigious Arthur Purdy Stout Award in Surgical Pathology for his contributions to the advancement of diagnostic pathology.

Andrea Richardson, M.D. PhD.
Andrea Richardson, M.D. PhD.

Andrea Richardson, M.D. PhD.

Andrea Richardson, M.D. PhD., is an Associate Professor of Pathology at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Director of Pathology in the Johns Hopkins National Capital Region, and Director of Breast Pathology in the Johns Hopkins National Capital Region. Her clinical breast and surgical pathology practice is based at Johns Hopkins Medicine Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C. Dr. Richardson received her M.D. and Ph.D. from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical and Graduate, followed by residency training in Anatomic Pathology with subspecialty training in breast pathology and cytopathology at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) Harvard Medical School. For fifteen years prior to joining the Johns Hopkins Hospital Department of Pathology faculty in 2015, Dr. Richardson maintained both an active clinical practice on the BWH breast pathology consultation service and ran a successful translational research laboratory. She is a leader in the field of the molecular pathology of breast cancer and development of predictive biomarkers of treatment response.