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Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai company history timeline

1963

1963—Became the first to use a sequential combination regimen of chemotherapy for adjuvant treatment of breast cancer.

1969

1969—Developed an influenza vaccine—the first genetically engineered vaccine.

1985

1985—Provided the first direct evidence of the involvement of dopamine in schizophrenia.

1986

1986—Performed the first blood transfusion into the vein of an unborn fetus.

2000

2000—Became the first to use black blood magnetic resonance imaging (BB-MR) to image the human coronary artery lumen.

2004

2004—Identified the first common gene variant linked to autism.

2006

2006—Discovered a gene in the brain—OLIG2—that may play a causal role in the development of schizophrenia.

2007

In 2007, the school began accepting 140 students in each first year class and there are now more than 300 graduate students at any point in time.

2007—Proved why influenza spreads most rapidly in the cold, dry air of winter, and showed that it can be spread just in the air, without coughing, sneezing, or physical contact.

2010

2010—Performed the first United States implantation of a new device for aortic stenosis.

2012

2012—In collaboration with an international group of colleagues, discovered five new genetic mutations associated with Crohn’s disease in Jews of Eastern European descent.

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