Andrew R. Marks, MD, is the founding scientist of RyCarma Therapeutics, based on his ground-breaking work at Columbia University.
Andrew is well known for his research on coronary heart disease, having led development of novel drug-eluting stents, the first of which gained FDA approval in 2003. In addition, Andrew also designed a new class of drug, called Rycals®, that form the basis of RyCarma’s goal to treat orphan skeletal muscle and cardiac diseases.
Across his career, Andrew has gained recognition in the form of a host of awards, including the ASCI Stanley J. Korsmeyer Award (2010), the Pasarow Foundation Award for Cardiovascular Research (2011), the Ellison Medical Foundation Senior Scholar in Aging Award (2011), Glorney-Raisbeck Award from NY Academy of Medicine (2016), Columbia University Dean’s Award for Excellence in promoting Diversity (2017), the Naranjan Dhalla Award for Innovative Investigators in Cardiovascular Sciences, International Academy of Cardiovascular Sciences (2018) and Doctor of Science, Honoris causa, Amherst College (2009), and from l’Université de Montpellier (2016). He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences (2005), National Academy of Medicine (2004), and American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2005). In 2002 he founded the Summer Program for Undergraduate Rising Stars (SPURS) at Columbia University, providing mentored research training for under-represented and economically disadvantaged students primarily from the New York City public colleges and universities.
Andrew holds an undergraduate degree from Amherst College (with honors in both Biology and English), and an MD from Harvard Medical School. He received training in internal medicine and cardiology at the Massachusetts General Hospital and was a research fellow in molecular genetics at Harvard Medical School. Andrew was also the Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Clinical Investigation, and a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of Novartis for ten years, as well as serving on the advisory boards of the Gladstone Foundation (UCSF) and the Harrington Discovery Institute (Case-Western Reserve University). Andrew is Chair and Professor of the Physiology and Cellular Biophysics Department at Columbia University. Across his extensive career in research, he has published over 200 articles, contributing new understandings of fundamental mechanisms that control muscle contraction, heart function, lymphocyte activation, and cognitive function as well as discovering novel causes of human diseases including heart failure, cardiac arrhythmias, muscular dystrophy, diabetes, and neurodegenerative disorders.