Roger Porter
Scientific Advisor, Epilepsy & Clinical Pharmacology
Adjunct Professor at Univ. of Pennsylvania & USUHS
Previously
Vice President and Deputy Head of Clinical Research at Wyeth Research
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Leadership
Chief Scientific Officer of the Epilepsy Foundation
Roger Porter
Scientific Advisor, Epilepsy & Clinical Pharmacology
Adjunct Professor at Univ. of Pennsylvania & USUHS
Previously
Vice President and Deputy Head of Clinical Research at Wyeth Research
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Leadership
Chief Scientific Officer of the Epilepsy Foundation
Roger J. Porter, M.D. is a consultant to academia and to the pharmaceutical industry, primarily in the development of anti-seizure drugs. He is also an Adjunct Professor of Neurology at the Univ. of Pennsylvania and Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology at USUHS; he has served as Chief Scientific Officer of the Epilepsy Foundation.
His education includes Eckerd College (BS, 1964), Duke Univ (MD, 1968), UCalifSD (Internship, 1968-69) and UCalifSF (Residency in Neurology, 1971-74). He spent 20 years at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), in leadership positions including Chief of the Epilepsy Branch, Chief of the Medical Neurology Branch, and Deputy Director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS). He left the NIH in 1992 to become Vice President, Clinical Pharmacology at Wyeth and was promoted to Vice President and Deputy Head of Clinical Research at Wyeth Research in January 1998. As VP and Deputy Head of Clinical Research, Dr. Porter had worldwide responsibility for numerous clinical programs including 200 persons in Europe, Canada, Latin America, and Asia, 65 in Worldwide Clinical Pharmacology and 40 in Global Health Outcomes Assessment. Dr. Porter retired from Wyeth in 2002.
Most of Dr. Porter’s research has been in epilepsy and the study of antiepileptic drugs; he has published more than 200 articles/chapters and 13 books. His other leadership positions include Chairman of the White House Committee on Brain and Behavioral Sciences (1990-1992), President, American Epilepsy Society (1989-1990), and Secretary-General of the International League Against Epilepsy (1989-1993). He is also the past President of the American Society for Experimental NeuroTherapeutics (ASENT). He is Past-Secretary of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia and a Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology. He is the recipient of numerous awards including the Service Award from the American Epilepsy Society, the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Duke Univ. Medical Center, the USPHS Distinguished Service Medal, and Doctor of Science (Hon) from Eckerd College.