My name is Enrica Marchi and I'm an MD-PhD, part of the division of hematology and oncology at the University of Virginia. I care for patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. My interest in medicine started when I was a kid, meeting my primary care doctor. I thought that doctors would be sort of, some sort of magician that could understand people's diseases, examining them, talking with them. And that's what initially intrigued me into medicine, and obviously grew with an interest that became then a scientific interest in diseases and how to treat them, and how to take care of patients with, specifically cancer. What interested me the most in medicine was what I thought, at the beginning, there were in between the most needy patients. So cancer patients for me in my mind, in my view and then as a medical student, seem to be extremely vulnerable and in need of care and better care. And that specifically interested me in the field of hematology-oncology. I'm very passionate about drug development. I'm very passionate about discovering new drugs or new combination of drug that can truly change the natural course of disease and life of my patient. Patients should come to UVA because at UVA, there is a great expertise in a number of disease. They really would find the top-notch doctors in the country here. They will find an incredibly skilled and experienced team of nurses, social workers, care coordinators, that will really be able to accompany them and lead their way through a difficult time in their life.