About
Dr. Eliza Beal is a Surgical Oncologist on the
Gastrointestinal and Neuroendocrine Oncology and Melanoma Multidisciplinary Teams at the Barbara Ann Karmanos
Cancer Institute in Detroit, MI. She is also an Assistant Professor of Oncology and Surgery at
Wayne State University School of Medicine. She grew up in Ann Arbor, MI and did her
undergraduate studies at the University of Michigan - Ann Arbor. She attended medical school
at The Ohio State University, where she also completed internship and residency in General
Surgery, obtained a Masters of Medical Science, completed a Pelotonia Postdoctoral
Fellowship, and completed a clinical fellowship in Complex General Surgical Oncology. Dr.
Beal lives in Corktown, Detroit.
Dr. Beal has extensive training in managing gastrointestinal (GI) malignancies, sarcoma, melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers. She takes care of patients with gastrointestinal and hepato-pancreato-biliary cancers including esophagogastric, small bowel, colon, rectal, liver, pancreas, biliary and patients with sarcoma, melanoma and non-melanomatous skin cancer.
Dr. Beal's current clinical research interests include access to cancer
screening and care for high-risk patients. She uses a mixed methods approach to assess
barriers and facilitators of access to cancer screening in populations of patients with chronic
liver disease who are at high risk of developing primary liver cancer (hepatocellular
carcinoma, HCC). Current areas of investigation include patient and provider perspectives, the
role of health literacy in patient access to care and the impact of health literacy on HCC
patient outcomes. Her past work has focused on examining the use of preoperative risk
calculators in predicting operative complications; evaluating the impact of patient, provider
and institutional factors on patient outcomes in transplantation; coordination of care, quality
and patient safety; and the role of protective factors in hepatic ischemia reperfusion injury. Dr.
Beal is also engaged in translational research in conjunction with the tumor biology and
microenvironment research program at Karmanos Cancer Institute.