Research Faculty
Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: The mechanisms through which stem cells differentiate into progressively specialized cell types and to harness this knowledge to artificially generate pure populations of desired cell types from stem cells.
Professor of Urology and Developmental Biology
Research Area: The role of Hedgehog and other signaling pathways in normal and pathologic function of stem cells in adult organs, including bladder and prostate. Molecular mechanisms of Hedgehog signal transduction.
Clinical Instructor of Urology
Research Area: Operational planning, improvement work and clinical research with a particular interest focused on clinical trials.
Keith and Jan Hurlbut Professor and Vice-Chair of Urology
Research Area: Discovery of biomarkers of Prostate Cancer risk and progression, understanding of the genetic and epigenetic regulators of Prostate Cancer.
Clinical Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Development of technological medical advancements.
Professor of Urology and, by courtesy, of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Research Area: Using various animal models of Bladder Outlet Obstruction as a representation of Human Prostatic Disease, investigating how intervening with pharmacotherapy, neuromodulation, and other novel therapies may help to reverse the adverse changes in the bladder due to the obstruction.
Clinical Associate Professor of Urology
Program Director, Residency Program
Research Area: Population health sciences research in Urinary Stone Disease. Medical and surgical education research.
Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Basic science, clinical and translational research in overactive / underactive bladder and radiation cystitis. Urine biomarkers of compensated and decompensated detrusor dysfunction. Animal models of voiding and pelvic floor dysfunction. Pharmacologic modulation of lower urinary tract function and fibrosis.
Professor of Urology and, by courtesy, of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Research Area: Research efforts include surgical innovation, epidemiologic studies, and basic science discoveries to improve the treatments, outcomes, and lives of infertile men.
Associate Professor of Urology and, by courtesy, of Obstetrics and Gynecology (Urogynecology)
Research Area: Refractory overactive bladder in elderly and frail patient populations, detrusor underactivity, quality of life, patient outcomes, quality improvement, patient satisfaction, and shared decision making.
Clinical Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: His research relates to the development of clinically driven biomedical instrumentation and medical devices. His primary work is currently focused on image guided detection and treatment of prostate cancer, including MR-US fusion, focal therapies, embedded systems and robotics.
Kathryn Simmons Stamey Professor of Urology, Emeritus
Research Area: Imaging of Prostate Cancer using MRI, focal and minimally invasive treatments of Benign Prostate Hypertrophy.
Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Basic science, clinical, and translational research in congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract. Animal models of congenital urinary obstruction. Stem cell therapies and biomaterials for the treatment of congenital renal anomalies.
Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Her current research is focused on understanding why health elementary schoolchildren develop new bladder and bowel problems.
Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Her research is focused on developing and integrating cutting-edge technologies in biomedical imaging, artificial intelligence, and spatial omics to decipher and predict how cells and tissues are spatially organized and orchestrated in their native tissue microenvironment and how this organization regulates biological function, disease progression, and response to therapy.
Professor of Urology and, by courtesy, of Nephrology
Research Area: The Leppert Lab is working to identify novel biomarkers of Urologic Cancers, as well as studying the comparative effectiveness and epidemiology of Kidney, Prostate, and Bladder Cancers.
Kathryn Simmons Stamey Professor
Director of Research
Vice-Chair of Academic Affairs
Research Area: Translational research to develop new in vitro and in vivo diagnostic tools for diseases of the urinary tract based on micro- and nanotechnology. Developing an integrated biosensor platform optimized for point-of-care urinary diagnostics, particularly for Urinary Tract Infections and Bladder Cancer.
Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Basic, translational, and clinical research in bladder cancer, urothelial cell development and differentiation, direct conversion of fibroblasts to bladder urothelial progenitor cells for regeneration or replacement of the bladder urothelium for benign and malignant disorders of the urothelium
Clinical Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Improving patient reported outcomes following surgery for pelvic organ prolapse, and innovations in the medical and surgical management of neurogenic bladder and complex voiding dysfunction.
Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Bio-innovation pediatric device development to address common urologic problems, including but not limited to, surgical stone management and neurogenic incontinence.
Clinical Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Translational and clinical research in bladder cancer. Biomarker development and design of artificial intelligence systems for improved bladder cancer detection and management.
Associate Professor of Urology and,
by courtesy, of Radiology (Body MRI)
Cortlandt T. Hill Memorial Scholar
Research Area: Cost-effectiveness analysis, Healthcare informatics for quality improvement, Patient-reported outcomes.
Clinical Assistant Professor of Urology
Research Area: Paraneoplastic predictors of oncologic outcomes, prostate MRI in men with previous negative biopsies, knowledge deficiencies in sexual health among students, effectiveness of sling-incision slings.
Clinical Associate Professor of Urology
Research Area: Cost-effectiveness analysis, Healthcare informatics for quality improvement, Patient-reported outcomes.