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FOUR

QUESTIONS
EVERY MED
SCHOOL
SHOULD
ANSWER.
START
NOW.
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
2014 ANNUAL REPORT
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Four Questions Every


Medical School Should Answer

1
Message from the Dean

3
How Can This Medical
School Help Change the
World for the Better?

13
How Do We Enable
Faculty and Students To
Reach Their Peak Potential?

35
How Do We Advance
Biomedical Science and
Launch the Next Big
Innovation?

51
How Can We Best
Contribute to the
Community of Which
We Are a Part?

57
Donors

69
Administration and
Departments
I
SELF EXAM

n the field of biomedicine, theres never been a better


time to ask questionsbig questions, confounding
questions, fundamental biological questions, and
paradigm-shifting clinical questions. Why now?
Because the tools and knowledge at our disposal have
never been greater or more powerful, and their
availability converges with a time of great need in this
country. We must seize this moment to seek solutions For example, weve long invested in emerging scientific
and provide answers, because the window of opportunity disciplines by creating new medical school departments in
will not always be so wide open. fields like immunology, developmental biology, biomedical
All of us at the University of Pittsburgh School of informatics, critical care medicine, computational and
Medicine are acutely aware that these are challenging systems biology, and structural biology. In parallel, weve
times in medical education and biomedical research. built interdisciplinary centers where discoveries in multiple
We stand at the most disruptive moment in American fields can lead to great leaps forward; these include our
medicine in more than a century, as the push for much- Center for Vaccine Research, Brain Institute, Drug Discovery
needed health care reform (by that, I mean improving Institute, Clinical and Translational Science Institute,
quality and lowering costs) converges with the informatics Institute for Personalized Medicine, and the Heart, Lung,
revolution, the ability to personalize medicine, and Blood, and Vascular Medicine Institute.
dramatic advances in biologic imaging. In just the past 10 years, weve constructed brick-and-
Even under intense economic pressures, however, mortar facilities that enable faculty and students to pursue
disruptive change presents unprecedented opportunities. cutting-edge biomedical research that betters the human
At Pitt, strategic decision-making over the past few condition and advances the fundamental understanding of
decades has not only placed us on an unparalleled upward medical science. Our 10-story Biomedical Science Tower 3
trajectory, it has also positioned us to take advantage of houses one of the largest zebrafish facilities in the nation,
this historic moment. enabling a wide variety of research using this important
animal model; this buildings specially constructed ground
floor holds powerful nuclear magnetic resonance imaging
and cryoelectron microscopy facilities. Nearby, both

EVEN UNDER INTENSE Magee-Womens Research Institute and Childrens Hospital


of Pittsburgh of UPMC boast new, state-of-the-art research
ECONOMIC PRESSURES, facilities of 125,000 and 300,000 square feet, respectively.

DISRUPTIVE CHANGE Students immersed in this interdisciplinary environment


among outstanding scientists, clinicians, and educators are
PRESENTS UNPRECEDENTED inspired and motivated to innovate and excel, helping to

OPPORTUNITIES. fulfill our primary mission to educate science-based, skilled,


and compassionate clinicians prepared to meet the challenges
AT PITT, STRATEGIC of practicing medicine in the 21st century.

DECISION-MAKING OVER While the challenges of the present may provide a


rationale for other institutions to scale back and lower their
THE PAST FEW DECADES sights, the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

HAS NOT ONLY PLACED remains committed to the grand visions that have brought
us this far. Jonas Salks polio vaccine, which was developed
US ON AN UNPARALLELED right here on Pitts campus, left an indelible mark on the

UPWARD TRAJECTORY, 20th century. In much the same way, we at Pitt are committed
to being a part of the next big advancements in American
IT HAS ALSO POSITIONED medicine. I invite you to join us and to learn more about our

US TO TAKE ADVANTAGE efforts in the pages of this report.

OF THIS HISTORIC MOMENT. ARTHUR S. LEVINE, MD


Senior Vice Chancellor for the Health Sciences and
John and Gertrude Petersen Dean of Medicine

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 1


SEEK SOLUTIONS
HOW CAN
THIS MEDICAL
SCHOOL
HELP CHANGE
THE WORLD
FOR THE PITT ESTABLISHES

T
BRAIN INSTITUTE

BETTER?
he University of Pittsburgh has
created a new institute to unlock
the mysteries of brain function
and develop novel treatments and
cures for brain disorders. Like a
Bell Labs for brain research, the
Brain Institute aims to enable investigators to
perform high-risk, high-impact neuroscience
STRATEGIC / INTERDISCIPLINARY / DRIVEN
that will transform lives.
Centers supported by Pitts Brain Institute
will focus on neurotechnology, neurogenetics,

WE AIM TO BRING ABOUT brain mapping, learning, and discovery in


neuroscience, according to Arthur S. Levine, MD,
TRANSFORMATIONAL senior vice chancellor for the health sciences

CHANGES IN CLINICAL CARE and Petersen Dean of Medicine.


The Brain Institute will bring University-wide
BY PREPARING THE NEXT resources to bear on some of the major health
and scientific concerns of our time, said Levine.
GENERATION OF PHYSICIANS We have the will and the skills to unravel how

AND SCIENTISTS FOR the brain works, making this a very exciting time
to conduct research in neuroscience.
THE 21ST CENTURY AND The Universitys long history of neuroscience

BY EXPLORING THE MOST research includes such significant contributions


as Pittsburgh Compound B for early detection
FUNDAMENTAL AND of Alzheimers disease, a direct brain interface
empowering a woman with quadriplegia to feed
IMPORTANT AREAS IN herself by moving a robotic arm with just her
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCE AND thoughts, and new diagnostic imaging tools being
developed to detect concussions and traumatic
MEDICINE. brain injuries.
The Brain Institutes founding scientific director
is Peter L. Strick, PhD, Thomas Detre Professor of
Neuroscience, Distinguished Professor, and chair
of neurobiology. A leading expert on the neural

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 3


S E E K SO LU TI O N S \\ TA K E N OTI C E

basis of movement and cognition, Strick pioneered the


use of viruses to reveal circuits of interconnected neurons
a brain-mapping technique widely noted as one of the most
powerful yet. His studies continue to provide insights into
a wide range of brain disorders like Parkinsons disease,
dystonia, autism, depression, and schizophrenia. Strick is
also codirector of the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition
(a joint program with Carnegie Mellon University) and is
a senior research career scientist at the VA Pittsburgh
PITT AND UPMC:
Healthcare System.
A SHARED VISION
The critical task of discovering how the brain
develops, how it functions normally, and how to alleviate
Through its affiliation with
and cure abnormal function requires a multilevel approach, UPMC (University of Pittsburgh
Strick said, adding that Pittsburghs neuroscientists form Medical Center), the University of
a phenomenal community with broad expertise in Pittsburgh offers extraordinary
bioengineering, communication disorders, computer science, opportunities for students, faculty
neurosurgery, psychiatry, psychology, and rehabilitation. members, medical residents, and
Neurodegenerative diseases and psychiatric disorders postdoctoral researchers from all of
currently have few effective treatments, Strick noted, the Schools of the Health Sciences.
adding, If we had the answers today, drug companies These opportunities include clinical
rotations, internships, hands-on
would be rushing new cures onto the market. But those
research experience, and access
answers only come from basic research.
to a substantial patient population
Centers planned for the Brain Institute include: for conducting biomedical and
clinical research. Although legally
A NeuroTech Center to restore movement to the
separate and distinct entities, the
paralyzed and vision to the blind and to develop new
Schools of the Health Sciences and
technology-based treatment approaches for motor
UPMC share an explicit interdepen-
and cognitive disorders.
dence and a common commitment
A NeuroGenetics Center to develop nonhuman to excellence in education, research,
primate models of neurodevelopmental, neuropsychiatric, clinical care, and entrepreneurship.
and neurodegenerative disorders to accelerate the We are joined at the hip
development of new treatments and cures. with UPMC in a partnership that
is critical to our academic mission
A NeuroMapping Center to unravel the complex
and momentum, says Arthur S.
circuits that form the neural bases of movement,
Levine, MD, senior vice chancellor
cognition, emotion, learning, language, and creativity
for the health sciences and Petersen
everything that makes us human. This center will explore
Dean of Medicine, explaining that
the mind-body connection that underpins the emerging
clinical revenue supports teaching
field of health neuroscience.
and research, a quality that distin-
A NeuroLearning Center to study the biological guishes UPMC from other community
bases of learning and memory, including brain changes hospital networks. The relationship
involved in learning, human development, and we have forged over the yearsand
overcoming cognitive impairment. continue to strengthenis hugely
important to UPMC, to Pitt, and to
A NeuroDiscovery Center to support particularly
the entire community, agrees
innovative, multidisciplinary neuroscience research.
UPMC President Jeffrey A. Romoff.

4
PITT RECRUITS NOTED resulting from this disease,
SICKLE CELL EXPERTS for which there is only one

T
Food and Drug Administration-
hree national leaders
approved drug.
in the research and
Katos research focuses
treatment of sickle cell
on biomarkers and mediators
disease have joined the Depart-
of vascular dysfunction in sickle DEPARTMENT OF
ment of Medicine, Division of
cell disease, particularly those IMMUNOLOGY ADDS
Hematology/Oncology, marking
a major commitment to improve
associated with pulmonary TOP INVESTIGATOR
hypertension and leg ulceration.
the care of patients with this
He has also led early-phase
devastating genetic disease
testing of investigational drugs
and promote research
for sickle cell disease. Prior
toward a cure.
to joining NHLBI, Kato was
The recruitment of
associate professor of pediatrics
Solomon F. Ofori-Acquah, PhD,
at Johns Hopkins University and
Laura De Castro, MD, MHSc,
of pediatric oncology at Johns
and Gregory J. Kato, MD,
Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.
comes nearly a year after the
His 2014 publication in the
Universitys Heart, Lung, Blood,
journal Blood describes a new
and Vascular Medicine Institute
mechanistic role for excess iron
(VMI) and UPMC helped to
in promoting the development
launch the Ryan Clark Cure
of pulmonary hypertension,
League in partnership with the
a life-limiting complication of
former Steelers defenseman.
sickle cell disease.
Kato, visiting professor of
Ofori-Acquah formerly
medicine, and De Castro, visiting
served as assistant professor
associate professor of medicine, DARIO A.A. VIGNALI, PHD
of pediatrics at Emory
are clinically associated with Professor and Vice Chair of Immunology; Coleader,
University in the Division of
the UPMC Adult Sickle Cell Cancer Immunology Program; and Codirector, Tumor
Hematology/Oncology, where
Disease Program. Ofori-Acquah, Microenvironment Center, both at the University of
he also was founding director
associate professor of medicine, Pittsburgh Cancer Institute
of the Center for Endothelial
is a research scientist.
Biology. His November 2013
Kato, former head of the
publication in the Journal Significance: Vignali is an immunology researcher
Sickle Cell Vascular Disease
of Clinical Investigation who is internationally known for his investigations into
Section at the National Heart,
demonstrated a paradigm tumor immunology, autoimmune disease, molecular and
Lung, and Blood Institute
shift in scientific understanding cellular aspects of regulatory T cell function, and immune
(NHLBI) of the National Institutes
of a life-threatening disease regulation by inhibitory receptors. He has written more than
of Health (NIH), will lead the
complication called acute 130 peer-reviewed publications and holds multiple patents
UPMC Sickle Cell Disease
chest syndrome; this research related to immunoregulatory molecules.
Research Center of Excellence.
focused on hemin, a byproduct
Ofori-Acquah will lead a newly
of hemolysis. He has received
created Center for Translational Notable: Vignali was recruited from St. Jude Childrens
a major, five-year NIH grant to
and International Hematology, Research Hospital, where he was professor of pathology
continue this line of investigation.
part of VMI, which will guide new and vice chair of immunology. He received a PhD in
Prior to joining the School
research programs and partner- immunology of infectious diseases from the London
of Medicine, De Castro was
ships with sickle cell disease School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and completed
associate professor of medicine
programs in Africa. De Castro postdoctoral fellowships at the German Cancer Research
in the Division of Hematology
will lead efforts to develop novel Center and Harvard University.
at Duke University. De Castros
clinical and translational research
research interests include
programs, along with several
investigations of sickle cell- Quotable: We currently focus on identifying and dissecting
related clinical services.
related psychosocial issues negative regulatory pathways that limit anticancer immunity.
Sickle cell disease causes
and end-organ damage. She has In moving to Pittsburgh, we hope to enhance our discovery-
abnormally shaped red blood
been a principal or coprincipal based platforms, expand our human tumor immunology
cells that can block the flow of
investigator on more than 20 programs, and gain a better mechanistic understanding of
healthy, oxygenated blood to
NIH- and industry-sponsored the tumor microenvironment.
the bodys organs and tissues.
clinical studies focusing on sickle
An estimated 2 million
cell disease as well as other
Americans carry one of the
hemoglobinopathies.
sickle cell genes. Millions of
people worldwide suffer from
sickle cell disease, anemia, or
pain and other symptoms

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 5


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Peter C. Lucas, MD, PhD, associate professor of pathology and


of pediatrics, received his MD and PhD from Vanderbilt University.
A physician-scientist arriving from the University of Michigan Medical
School, Lucas has clinical expertise in molecular anatomic and breast
surgical pathology. He studies the relationship between chronic inflamma-
tion and the development of vascular, metabolic, and neoplastic
WELCOMING diseases, particularly the role of an NF- signaling pathway controlled

PITTS FACULTY by the three-protein CBM (CARMA, Bcl10, and MALT1) complex.

RECRUITS Linda McAllister-Lucas, MD, PhD, associate professor of


pediatrics and chief, Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology,
earned her MD and PhD from Vanderbilt University and comes to
Among the newest School of Medicine recruits are Pitt from the University of Michigan Medical School, where she was
physicians and scientists whose investigations span a associate professor of pediatrics and associate director of the Medical
spectrum of biomedical research and clinical specialties. Scientist Training Program. Current research interests include molecular
mechanisms of inflammatory and neoplastic disease, with emphases
Louise DCruz, PhD, assistant professor of immunology, earned on oncoprotein promotion of lymphoid malignancy and the contribu-
her PhD in molecular biology from the Institute of Molecular Pathology tions of G-protein coupled receptor-dependent signaling in cancer
in Vienna, Austria, and completed postdoctoral training at the pathogenesis and inflammatory disease.
University of California, San Diego. Her research interests include
molecular mechanisms that regulate the development and survival Bradley Molyneaux, MD, PhD, assistant professor of neurology,
of natural killer T cells and the cells function during infection. received his MD and neurobiology PhD at Harvard, where he also was
chief resident in neurology and completed fellowships in neurocritical
Luis de la Torre, MD, visiting associate professor of surgery, care and in the Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology.
completed residencies in pediatrics and pediatric surgery at the Molyneauxs research interests include mechanisms of cerebral cortex
National Autonomous University of Mexico and a fellowship in development and repair, genes controlling the development of cortical
pediatric colorectal surgery at Schneider Childrens Hospital, Long projection neuron subtypes, and early corticospinal motor neuron
Island, N.Y. He specializes in the diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilita- specification events.
tion of children with complex colorectal conditions and pioneered a
less invasive surgical approach to the treatment of Hirschsprungs Roderick OSullivan, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacology
disease. De la Torre is the founding director of the Colorectal Center and chemical biology, earned his PhD in molecular biology from
for Children at Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, which the Institute for Molecular Pathology in Vienna, Austria, and completed
provides multidisciplinary medical and surgical care for children a postdoctoral fellowship at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.
who are born with or acquire disorders of the bowel or rectum. His investigations focus on telomere replication, disruption of ASF1
protein-mediated histone exchange, and the role of the alternative
Marijn Ford, PhD, assistant professor of cell biology, received his lengthening of telomeres (ALT) pathway for telomere homeostasis
PhD from the Cambridge (UK) Medical Research Council Laboratory in normal and cancer cells.
of Molecular Biology and completed postdoctoral training at the
University of California, Davis. His work focuses on structural biology, Inderpal (Netu) Sarkaria, MD, assistant professor and vice chair
with particular emphasis on protein X-ray crystallography and of clinical affairs, Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, received
characterization of dynamin-related protein fusion and scission. his MD from the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
and completed general and thoracic surgery residencies at NewYork
Daniel Forman, MD, visiting professor of medicine, comes to Pitt Presbyterian Hospital and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. His
from Brigham and Womens Hospital and Harvard Medical School. research focuses on minimally invasive and robot-assisted pulmonary
He trained in cardiovascular and geriatric medicine at Beth Israel and esophageal surgery, as well as molecular profiling of esophageal
Hospital. Current investigations pertain to geriatric cardiology and diseases and lung cancer.
translational work in skeletal muscle and functional capacity, along
with related benefits of exercise training. He is also studying novel Matthew Smith, PhD, assistant professor of ophthalmology,
approaches to cardiac rehabilitation to better address age-related received his PhD in neural science from New York University and
dynamics (e.g. frailty, multimorbidity, sarcopenia) affecting completed postdoctoral training at Carnegie Mellon University and
management of heart failure, myocardial infarction, and valvular the University of Pittsburgh. His research interests focus on neuro
heart disease. physiological and computational approaches to understanding the
visual system, as well as characterization of functional connectivity
Robin Lee, PhD, assistant professor of computational and among neurons and how connectivity patterns relate to visual
systems biology, received a PhD in cellular and molecular medicine perception and cognition.
from the University of Ottawa and completed a research fellowship
in cancer biology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the
Department of Genetics at Harvard Medical School. His research
focuses on understanding TNF-induced signal transduction circuits
and regulation of NF--driven transcription through competition
on target promoters.

6
DR. STARZLS CONTRIBUTIONS
TO SCIENCE AND MEDICINE
ARE EXTRAORDINARY. HE IS
A PHYSICIAN-SCIENTIST OF
THE HIGHEST CALIBER.

PITT TRANSPLANT LEGEND transplant. Thirty liver transplants were


ELECTED TO NATIONAL performed that year, launching the only
ACADEMY OF SCIENCES liver transplant program in the nation and

T
invigorating the Universitys heart and
homas E. Starzl, MD, PhD, known kidney transplant programs. In 1989, Starzl
as the father of transplantation, introduced the anti-rejection medication
joins 84 new members and FK-506, which markedly increased survival
21 foreign associates elected rates for liver and other organ transplants
to the National Academy of and led the way to other successful types
Sciences (NAS) in 2014 in recog- of organ transplants, including pancreas,
nition of his distinguished and continuing lung, and intestine.
achievements in original research. He remains active in research,
Starzl, who received the National mapping the relationship between donor
Medal of Science in 2006, is Distinguished and recipient cells and developing new
Service Professor of Surgery in the School therapeutic strategies to achieve immune
of Medicine. tolerance after transplantation with a much
Dr. Starzls contributions to science and lower risk of side effects from immunosup-
medicine are extraordinary, said Arthur S. pressive therapy.
Levine, MD, senior vice chancellor for the Known today as the nations foremost
health sciences and John and Gertrude scientific body, NAS was established in
Petersen Dean of Medicine. He is a 1863 by President Abraham Lincoln to
physician-scientist of the highest caliber. provide independent advice to the
Starzl performed the worlds first government on matters related to science
successful liver transplant in 1967 while at and technology. Election is one of the
the University of Colorado. In 1981, Starzl highest honors accorded to scientists,
joined the University of Pittsburgh School and academy members are considered
of Medicine and led the team of surgeons pioneers in their fields.
who performed the citys first liver

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 7


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EMERGENCY
PRESERVATION WE WANT TO MAKE
AND RESUSCITATION A SUBSTANTIAL
CONTRIBUTION TO
National BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH
media outlets GLOBALLY. THE GOAL
were abuzz IS NOT ONLY TO DO
with the WORLD-CLASS SCIENCE,
news of an BUT ALSO TO DO
unprecedented THE KIND OF SCIENCE
clinical trial THAT WILL LEAD TO
that aims to THE EMERGENCE
A OF A BIOTECHNOLOGY
patient with severe

buy time trauma and massive


blood loss who is
INDUSTRY IN
up to an also in the throes of cardiac
arrest needs special care.
SOUTHERN ITALY.
hour with But what to focus on? The

NO
ARTH U R S . LE VI N E , M D, PE TERS EN D E AN
quickly bleeding wound? The O F PIT T S SCH OO L O F M EDICI N E AN D
arrest? Emergency medicine TH E SCI ENTI FIC DI R EC TO R O F B R BC
physicians and trauma
surgeons could use a few
extra minutes. THE 334,000-SQUARE-FOOT
Cue EPR, emergency RESEARCH FACILITY IN CARINI

heartbeat or preservation and resuscitation. IS EXPECTED TO OPEN IN 2016.


BRBC WILL INCLUDE A CORPORATE
Pitts late Peter Safar, MD
INCUBATOR TO SHEPHERD ITS

circulation (Distinguished Professor of


Resuscitation Medicine), with
DISCOVERIES TO MARKET.

for victims colleagues, including Samuel


Tisherman, MD (former Pitt

of cardiac professor of critical care


medicine and of surgery),

arrest from developed the procedure in


preclinical studies. EPR

extreme involves flushing out the


patients blood and pumping

blood loss. cool saline into the aorta.


With no blood, brainwaves,
or breathing, this paused
state will allow surgeons to
repair damage, Tisherman
predicts. Hell know more as
clinical trials unfold at UPMC
Presbyterian and at several
other academic medical
centers.
The Department of
Defensefunded trial of EPR
officially began in April at
UPMC Presbyterian. So when
the right patient comes into
the emergency department,
the EPR team is primed to
race against the clock,
says Tisherman.

8
EXPORTING
MEDICAL EXCELLENCE
The University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine is expanding its
global reach in multiple ways. Two ongoing projects with interna-
tional partners are bringing Pitt expertisein biomedical research,
medical education, and clinical trainingto Italy and Kazakhstan.

A
CARINI, ITALY
partnership that includes Pitt, UPMC, and
the Italian government brought solid-organ
transplantation to Sicily in 1999. That project AN ARTISTS RENDERING
OF THE FUTURE HOME OF
got a permanent home in 2004, when a
NAZARBAYEV UNIVERSITY
70-bed hospital opened in Palermo. SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, WHICH
In the coming years, a similar public-private partnership IS UNDER CONSTRUCTION IN
ASTANA, KAZAKHSTAN
will result in the construction of the Ri.MED (Ricerca
Mediterranea or Mediterranean Research) Biomedical

I
Research and Biotechnology Center (BRBC) in nearby ASTANA, KAZAKHSTAN
Carini. The 334,000-square-foot research facility is expected n 2013, the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
to open in 2016. Pitts School of Medicine will be responsible was selected to guide the Republic of Kazakhstans
for the scientific direction and staffing of the center. BRBC Nazarbayev University (NU) as it establishes its own
will include a corporate incubator to shepherd its discoveries medical school, which aims to educate physician-scientists
to market. Ri.MED investigators who train in research at to become that nations next leaders in health care, medical
Pitt will ply the fields of structural biology, computational education, and biomedical research. Pitt will partner with
biology, drug discovery, vaccine development, biomedical NU to institute a U.S.-style curriculum; design and develop
device development, regenerative medicine, tissue teaching facilities; recruit and mentor school leadership and
engineering, molecular imaging, and neuroscience. faculty; plan organizational and administrative structures,
policies, and procedures; and develop courses, syllabi, and
clinical experiences with the participation of physician-
educators from hospitals in Kazakhstan.
Massimo Pignatelli, MD, PhD, a distinguished
pathologist and biomedical scientist, was recruited through
an international search process to serve as founding dean
of Nazarbayev University School of Medicine (NUSOM),
which will open with its first class of students in August 2015.
Previously, Pignatelli was at the University of Glasgow in
Scotland, where he served as head of the School of Medicine.
He is a noted physician-scientist whose research focuses on
epithelial adhesion molecules. He is also a Pitt adjunct
professor of pathology.
My hope is that NUSOM will become a model for every
medical school in the nation, said Pignatelli. This is the
goal of the projectto create the hub of medical education
and biomedical research in Central Asia. The project has
all the necessary components, including infrastructure,
resources, and political stability.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 9


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IN SUMMER 2014,
THE FIRST COHORT OF
TSINGHUA SCHOLARS
SAID FAREWELL TO
PITT AFTER TWO YEARS
OF INTENSE AND
PRODUCTIVE
RESEARCH TRAINING.

10
HISTORIC and said, Scientific thinking,
PITT-TSINGHUA of course, but also just talking
about science in English. In my
PROGRAM lab, I have learned to explain
CELEBRATES my research process and
TWO YEARS discuss.
Program director Jeremy M.

I
n August 2012, Pitts School Berg, PhD, Pittsburgh
of Medicine welcomed the Foundation Professor of
arrival of 21 students from Personalized Medicine and
Tsinghua University School associate senior vice chancellor
of Medicine in Beijing. This for science strategy and
most prestigious of Chinese planning, health sciences, has
scientific institutions had seen strong improvement in
recently entered into a the scholars ability to think
first-of-its kind agreement like researchers. Many have
with our own medical school really learned to not only take
to have its students undergo a technical challenges in stride
rigorous, two-year biomedical but also to approach a problem,
research training program in overcome obstacles, and
Pittsburgh. That first cohort ask the right questions to
of Tsinghua students arrived achieve results.
with a great deal of excitement The Pitt-Tsinghua program
and enthusiasm, plus a welcomed its third group of
measure of trepidation at students in August 2014.
the impending immersion in Also in 2012, the School of
various Pitt research labs Medicine began a collaboration
and a foreign language. with Chinas prestigious
That was two years ago. Central South University
At a spring 2014 scientific Xiangya School of Medicine.
program, 51 Tsinghua scholars Under the five-year agreement,
(the original 21, plus a second Pitt provides two years of
cohort that arrived in rigorous biomedical research
August 2013) displayed training to medical students,
posters describing their latest most of whom have already
scientific work exploring topics undergone six years of medical

MANY HAVE REALLY from dengue vaccines to DNA


repair. The scholars coauthors
school, including clinical
training. As of August 2014,

LEARNED TO NOT and mentors included


department chairs, institute
17 of these medical students
are on campus, and five have
ONLY TAKE TECHNICAL directors, one MacArthur recently returned to Changsha

CHALLENGES IN STRIDE
fellow, and recent inductees to complete medical school
to the Institute of Medicine. after their two years in

BUT ALSO TO APPROACH Their efforts have resulted in


numerous peer-reviewed
Pittsburgh. In 2014, Xiangya
Hospital formed a partnership

A PROBLEM, OVERCOME publications.


The scholars new-and-
with UPMC in order to establish
an international medical center

OBSTACLES, AND ASK improved English skills were


on full display, as well, as
that will improve access to
high-quality care for patients
THE RIGHT QUESTIONS they eagerly explained their within the region.

TO ACHIEVE RESULTS.
projects to Pitt faculty and
students mingling in front
JEREMY M. BERG, PHD of their posters. When asked
what he has gained from the
program, one student laughed

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 11


RELEASE POTENTIAL
HOW DO
WE ENABLE
FACULTY AND
STUDENTS
TO REACH
THEIR PEAK
PITTS PROGRESS: INSTITUTE
FOR PERSONALIZED MEDICINE

POTENTIAL?
PROJECTS TACKLE INFORMATICS,

T
PHARMACOGENOMICS

ransforming the University of


Pittsburghs Institute for Personal-
ized Medicine from idea to reality
is a lot like assembling a jigsaw
puzzlethe big picture gets clearer
when pieces fit together.
INNOVATIVE / RIGOROUS / RESULTS Biology is complicated, human populations are
complicated, health care systems are complicated,
legal and ethical frameworks are complicated
and all that has to coalesce, says Jeremy M. Berg,
AT PITT, WE CULTIVATE PhD, Pittsburgh Foundation Professor of Personal-

BOTH SCIENTIFIC RIGOR ized Medicine, associate senior vice chancellor


for science strategy and planning, health sciences,
AND CREATIVITY. WE SEEK and institute founding director. Even so, Berg

COLLABORATIVE PEOPLE remains excited by the challenge, though probably


a little more humble than I was a year ago,
WITH BIG IDEAS CAPABLE he adds.
The School of Medicine and UPMC established
OF BREAKING DOWN the institute in 2013. Its mission is to apply new
BARRIERS. WE IMMERSE knowledge in genetics, genomics, and other
disciplines to promote and develop evidence-based
THESE INDIVIDUALS medicine, with the ultimate goals of improving

IN AN ENVIRONMENT disease prevention and treatments and decreasing


costs. Considerable talent and support are
WHERE THEY ARE available now, not only at Pitt, but also through
strategic alliances with academic institutions
SUPPORTED, CHALLENGED, and industries within the region and around
AND REWARDED. the world, Berg notes.
Currently, the institute is building collaborations
in pharmacogenomics and informatics.
The Pittsburgh Genome Resource Repository
is a joint effort with Pitts Departments of
Biomedical Informatics and Human Genetics,

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 13


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ P ER SO N A LIZED M ED I CI N E

University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, UPMC, and


the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) to build an
archive where large, multiple-terabyte data sets can be
stored, managed, and made available to investigators. First
up is the NIH-funded data set known as the Cancer Genome
Atlas, a project begun in 2006 to collect information on
30-plus cancers.
The idea has been to try to figure out what the mutational
spectrum looks like in different sorts of tumors. Are there
things that are common to different sorts of tumors or, more
interestingly, tumors that occur in different anatomical regions
but have more in common at the genetic and biochemical
REIS
level than you would have thought? Berg asks.
The data set encompasses hundreds of terabytes and
millions of files worth of genomic information on tissue
samples from thousands of patients. Interestingly, with
16 percent of those patients, Berg says Pitt/UPMC is
the largest single contributor to the Cancer Genome Atlas.
The Pittsburgh Genome Resource Repository incorporates
Pitts clinical data with the atlas.

THE CHALLENGE IS
TO ORGANIZE THE DATA
SO IT DOESNT TAKE
BERG

A NEW INVESTIGATOR A Science Institute; and Dietrich A. Stephan, PhD, professor


and chair of the Department of Human Genetics, Graduate
YEAR TO ASK A QUESTION. School of Public Health.
THE BIG BENEFIT HAS The project will evaluate the potential effectiveness
of certain anticoagulants used with cardiac stents based on
ACTUALLY BEEN JUST individual patients genetic profiles. Some genetic variance
GETTING THE GROUPS is known to be associated with a higher risk for nonresponse
or unwanted side effects. So its a question of doing the
TO KNOW ABOUT EACH tests and saying, Were not going to give you this drug because
OTHER AND WORK we think, based on your genetics, youre unlikely to respond.
But heres a different drug youre more likely to respond to,
TOGETHER. says Berg.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has compiled
The challenge is to organize the data so it doesnt information on genetic factors that may affect the perform
take a new investigator a year to ask a question, he adds, ance of more than 100 drugs, Berg says.
explaining that Pitt, UPMC, and PSC collaborators have been Everybody agrees on what the future looks like in
able to leverage their expertise to establish workable data the sense that all this information is going to be collected
sets. The big benefit has actually been just getting the somehow and is already sitting there in your medical
groups to know about each other and work together. record for the next time a doctor prescribes something, he
Informational sessions have been held for some interested continues. The problem is how to do it if that information
investigators and feedback has been encouraging, Berg says. doesnt already exist. There are huge possible rewards,
Also being supported through the institute is a but we need to take baby steps to get there.
pharmacogenomics-focused investigation led by Philip
Empey, PharmD, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacy
and therapeutics, School of Pharmacy; Steven E. Reis, MD,
associate vice chancellor for clinical research, health
sciences, and director of the Clinical and Translational

14
TOTAL OF $375,000 AWARDED PInCh is a celebration of the pioneering and entrepreneurial
TO SIX TEAMS OF INVESTIGATORS spirit of some of the brightest, most enterprising teams of visionary
thinkers in and around the Pittsburgh region, said CTSI director
SUCCESS A CINCH Steven E. Reis, MD, associate vice chancellor for clinical research,

FOR PINCH health sciences, and professor of medicine. We are looking


forward to using the PInCh model in the future to again tap the

W
vast bank of creativity, talent, and drive available in Western
hat happens when smart individuals get Pennsylvania.
challenged to dream up creative new ways Organizers were pleased by the large and diverse response
to help people stay healthyand have just for the first competition. They also hope that the interdisciplinary
three months to do it? At Pitt, smartphone teams that did not winmany of whom connected with each other
applications that will alert people with because of PInChcontinue brewing innovations together.
Parkinsons disease that its time to take As researchers, were not trained to think about how we
another dose of medicine and support smokers as they try to kick disseminate the discoveries that we makehow to make them
the habit and a bioactive bandage designed to hasten the healing sustainable, or scale them up so they can have a population-level
of diabetic skin ulcers have been awarded $100,000 prizes as the impact, said Ellen Beckjord, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of
first winners of the Pitt Innovation Challenge (PInCh). psychiatry, whose project is one of three $100,000 award winners.
Three additional teams of investigators received $25,000 awards She added that PInCh and commercialization-focused programs
to help advance their plans to reduce hospital readmissions, monitor offered through Pitts Innovation Institute are changing those
prescription drug adherence, and develop a text-based helpline attitudes.
focused on sexual health for teens. Were in the business to help people, and if what I do only
More than 90 teams participated in the challenge, which was helps the 100 people Ive had in my trial, I havent done my job,
sponsored by the University of Pittsburghs Clinical and Translational Beckjord said.
Science Institute (CTSI), Office of the Provost, and Innovation In addition to the cash prize, Beckjords group and the other
Institute. Each team submitted a video entry during the first phase winning teams get the assistance of a project manager to begin
of the competition. Twenty-nine teams were then asked to provide implementing their ideas.
a written description of their projects, and 10 finalists were asked
to present during the showcase, a live, Shark Tank-style judging $100,000 AWARDS:
event held in May 2014.
QuitNinja: A smartphone application to encourage smoking
cessation with real-time interventions when the urge to smoke hits
Ellen Beckjord, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of psychiatry

SPark: Will adapt smartphone motion-sensor technology to


monitor the movement of a person with Parkinsons disease and
ENVIABLE NIH STANDING
provide guidance about when to take medication
In the only truly objective metric by which the overall Samay Jain, MD, assistant professor of neurology
stature of research-focused institutions can be assessed
in a nationally competitive context, the University of Sealion: Bioactive bandages that can speed healing of skin ulcers
Pittsburgh moved into the top 10 list of recipients of and be applied weekly by patients at home
Yadong Wang, PhD, William Kepler Whiteford Professor
National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding in 1998 and
of Bioengineering, Swanson School of Engineering, associate
has remained within this enviable echelon ever since. professor of surgery
In a preliminary analysis of NIH funding for federal
fiscal year 2014, the faculty of the University of
Pittsburgh ranked fifth in dollars awarded, with more
than $450 million in NIH funding and more than
90 percent of this funding going to the Schools of the
Health Sciences. The faculty of the School of Medicine,
together with that of the Graduate School of Public
Health, also ranked fifth in fiscal year 2014, with total
NIH funding of nearly $329 million.
Overall, the University of Pittsburgh spent approxi-
mately $698 million for research of all kinds in fiscal
year 2014; more than 80 percent of this amount was for
research in the health sciences.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 15


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ FAC U LT Y AC H I E V EM ENTS

Lucky us. ( PITT MED)

16
ELITE SOCIETIES
RECRUIT
PITT CREW

H
ail to Pitts newest Turks, a bakers dozen of faculty members
tapped to join the prestigious Association of American Physicians
(AAP/Old Turks) and the American Society for Clinical
Investigation (ASCI/Young Turks).
New AAP members from the School of Medicine are
Yuan Chang, MD, Distinguished Professor of Pathology and
UPMC Professor of Cancer Virology Research; David Hackam, MD, PhD, former
Watson Family Professor of Surgery and associate dean for medical student
research; David A. Lewis, MD, Thomas Detre Professor of Academic Psychiatry SADOVSKY GETS NOD
and chair of psychiatry; Patrick S. Moore, MD, MPH, Distinguished Professor of

Y
Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Pittsburgh Foundation Professor of oel Sadovsky, MD, Elsie Hilliard Hillman
Innovative Cancer Research, and director (with Chang) of the Cancer Virology Professor of Womens Health Research;
Program, University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute; and Sally E. Wenzel, MD, professor and vice chair (research) of
professor of medicine and director of the University of Pittsburgh Asthma obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive
Institute at UPMC and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. sciences; professor of microbiology and molecular
Founded in 1885, AAP is dedicated to the pursuit of medical knowledge, genetics; and director of the Magee-Womens
experimentation and discovery in basic and clinical science, and the applica- Research Institute, has been elected to the
tion of new findings to clinical medicine. Each year, 60 people are nominated Institute of Medicine (IOM), an honor that is
for membership in recognition of excellence in their fields. Today, the considered among the highest in the field.
Sadovskys research focuses on the develop-
association represents the best medical minds and provides a forum to
ment of the placenta and the function of
promote collegiality, create and disseminate knowledge, and provide role
specialized placental cells called trophoblasts.
models for generations of upcoming physician-scientists.
Using human placental cells as well as mouse
ASCI inductees are Cristian Apetrei, MD, PhD, professor of microbiology models, he studies molecular pathways that
and molecular genetics; Carlton M. Bates, MD, professor of pediatrics and govern placental development and adaptive
chief, Division of Nephrology; Hlya Bayr, MD, professor of critical care response to stress. Primary areas of research
medicine; Peter C. Lucas, MD, PhD, associate professor of pathology; include placental uptake and processing of
Linda McAllister-Lucas, MD, PhD, associate professor of pediatrics and metabolic fuels, the role of microRNA in
chief, Division of Hematology/Oncology; Mary L. Phillips, MD, MD (Cantab), placental function, and placental injury and
Pittsburgh Foundation-Emmerling Professor of Psychotic Disorders and adaptation. Sadovsky completed his MD at
professor of psychiatry and of clinical and transla- Hebrew University Hadassah Medical School
tional science; Aleksandar Rajkovic, MD, PhD, Marcus in Jerusalem, his residency in obstetrics and
Allen Hogge Professor of Reproductive Genetics and gynecology at Washington University in St.
Louis, and his postdoctoral training at the
4 professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive
1 5 University of California, San Francisco.
3 6 sciences; and Yutong Zhao, MD, PhD, associate
2
Other prestigious honors accorded to
professor of medicine, Division of Pulmonary,
8 7 Sadovsky during 2014 were his election to
Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine.
10 9 the presidency of the Society for Gynecologic
13 The University received special recognition for Investigation for the 2016-17 term and his
11 12
its eight new inducteesat 10 percent of the total, acceptance of the Cozzarelli Prize in biomedical
more than any other single school in 2014during sciences for a paper published in the July 2013
Meet the honorees
(pictured left)
a dual ASCI/AAP meeting in Chicago. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
The eight join 41 other Pitt colleagues on the (PNAS) that demonstrated that trophoblasts
1. Chang may have a unique ability to not only block viral
membership rolls of ASCI, an organization of more
2. Hackam transmission from mother to baby, but also to
than 2,800 physician-scientists who have achieved
3. Lewis confer the trait upon other cell types.
notable success relatively early in their careers.
4. Moore The annual Cozzarelli Prize recognizes the top
Founded in 1908, ASCI is a medical honor society
5. Wenzel
with a clear preference for celebrating up-and-coming PNAS-published papers in six scientific categories
6. Apetrei that reflect excellence and originality. Sadovsky
scholarly achievement in biomedical research. New
7. Bates shares the prize with senior coauthor Carolyn
members must be 50 or younger at the time of
8. Bayr Coyne, PhD, associate professor of microbiology
their election.
9. McAllister-Lucas and molecular genetics, and colleagues from
10. Lucas the School of Medicine and the Graduate
11. Phillips School of Public Health.
12. Rajkovic
13. Zhao

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 17


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ ED U C ATI O N

who has made major contributions over a significant period


of time to medical education in North America. Kanter
has been a firm, guiding hand on the curriculum at Pitt for
23 years. From 2008 to 2012, he was editor-in-chief of Academic
Medicine, the top journal in the field. Kanter, having earned
a stellar reputation in his time at Pitt, departed in 2014 to
assume the deanship at the University of MissouriKansas
City School of Medicine.
Ann E. Thompson, MD, former associate dean for faculty
affairs, has been named vice dean of the School of Medicine.
In her new role, Thompson will serve as a senior deputy to
Arthur S. Levine, MD, Pitts senior vice chancellor for the
health sciences and John and Gertrude Petersen Dean of
Medicine, in the management and advancement of the
medical school.
Dr. Thompsons many achievements include building
and maintaining successful clinical and academic programs
with exceptional records for fellowship training and research
productivity, Levine said. She has held leadership roles as
a medical school administrator and in her clinical field of
critical care medicine and has consistently advocated for the
recruitment and promotion of outstanding women at Pitt
and in academic medicine as a whole.
Thompson is a professor of critical care medicine. She
served as chief of pediatric critical care from 1981 to 2009
and was interim chair of critical care medicine from 2006 to
THOMPSON
2008. She is a past president of the Society of Critical Care
Medicineonly the second woman to hold that position
and she is a senior editor of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine.
AWARD-WINNING Thompson received her Bachelor of Arts in biology from
EDUCATORS the University of Chicago in 1969 and her medical degree

A
from Bostons Tufts University School of Medicine in 1974.
In 2003, she received a masters degree in health care policy
few of Pitts leading medical educators
and management from Carnegie Mellon University.
brought home hardware from recent
conferences of the Association of
American Medical Colleges (AAMC).
Cynthia Lance-Jones, PhD, assistant dean
for medical education, was honored with Q&A WITH A TOP MEDICAL EDUCATOR,
the 2013 Alpha Omega Alpha Robert J. Glaser Distinguished STEVEN KANTER, MD
Teacher Award, a singular honor recognizing her role in both
curricular design and basic science education. As block How do you describe Pitts
director of the first-year basic science core curriculum, approach to medical education?
Lance-Jones oversees six courses covering principles of
We want our students to become creative and critical
anatomy, biochemistry, genetics, cell biology and pathology, thinkers. We want them to be good, collaborative problem solvers.
immunology, and microbiology. John Mahoney, MD, So weve developed different experiences around that. For example,
associate dean of medical education, earned an Outstanding we blend lectures with other types of teaching modalities like
Reviewer Award for his work on AAMCs MedEdPORTAL small-group learning and team-based learning.
publications section. The Scholarly Project is a great example. People say that medical
Finally, former vice dean of the medical school Steven school is a mile wide but only an inch deep. In some ways, it does
need to be a survey of a very broad set of information. But if thats all
Kanter, MD, was honored with the Merrell Flair Award in
you do, then youve missed opportunities. If you give med students a
Medical Education, the highest honor for medical education
few opportunities to go deep on something, they come face-to-face
awarded by AAMC. The award recognizes an individual with unanswered questions in medicine. Students ask themselves,

18
How do scientists even develop a question that is answerable?
Thats actually very difficult, and the students have a chance to
grapple with that in the Scholarly Project. They focus on an area
that intrigues them, and they design and execute meaningful,
hypothesis-driven research on that topic. [For more on the
Scholarly Project, see page 24.]

How does the curriculum react to


changing realities in medicine?
We maintain the curriculum as a living, dynamic entity
that evolves over time. The curriculum committee is charged, in
part, with viewing the curriculum in that way. Thats why a number
of new things have been introduced, even though it always involves
some rearranging. Weve developed a culture among both faculty
and studentsthis is just a part of what we do. Recently, weve
introduced sessions on health care finance. Weve introduced
interprofessional education, and were able to do that in a relatively
short period of time because thats the culture.

Students at Pitt begin clinical observation and


interacting with patients in the first few weeks of
med school. What are the benefits of that early
exposure to patients?
We started that back in the early 90s, and what
we heard from students right away was, number one, they loved it.
And they said things like, Gee, seeing patients even makes the
biochemistry seem more relevant. It was interesting to us that
there wasnt necessarily a direct relationship between the particular INAUGURAL DEANSHIP
biochemistry or cell biology or genetics they were studying that day

H
and the type of patients they were seeing. But somehow, seeing es not just senior interdisciplinary collaborations.
patients and their problems helped students make connections and vice chancellor for the At the event, Levine gave a
see a clear purpose to what they were doing in class. On some level, health sciences and dean lecture recounting both his
it made the science overall more compelling and relevant. of the med school anymore. and the School of Medicines
Arthur S. Levine, MD, is now histories, referring back to
Med students at Pitt often say that, while med school is
the John and Gertrude Petersen his great-grandfather and the
challenging and rigorous, they havent found the cutthroat
Dean of Medicine; he holds the first diploma granted by
competition they anticipated.
first endowed deanship in the the school in 1887.
history of this medical school. Levine attributed his
Why is that? Chancellor Emeritus Mark A. and the schools strengths, in
Nordenberg conferred the part, to stellar faculty, donors
Our curriculum leaders have worked hard to create a honor at a ceremony this May like the Petersens, and first-rate
collaborative, cooperative work environment. Small-group learning with a proud handshake, staff like his assistant, Gina
is a part of that. The students, to their credit, have responded by a little ribbing, and a medal Deible. He said hes a catalyst
developing a welcoming, supportive ethos. Also, we recently moved worthy of an Olympian. dependent upon substrate.
to a different grading system in the first two years. We Levine, dean since 1998, has His portrait, painted by Greg
used to have three options: honors, pass, and fail. Weve moved led the med school into the Kavalec, was unveiled after the
to just the pass/fail option for those years because, with the work ranks of the top five institutions lecture and now hangs in the
thats done in the first two years, theres a certain competency receiving NIH funding. He has Scaife Hall auditorium.
appointed 30 of 31 department
that students need to develop. But memorizing every minute detail
chairs, created 10 new depart-
may not be better than spending the evening at the theater and
ments, and lured five National
coming back refreshed.
Academy of Sciences members
to join the faculty.
The institution transcends
departments, Levine said
of the present-day school,
increasingly known for its

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 19


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ C LI N I C A L E XC EL L EN C E

WHEN IM SINGING
TO THOSE BABIES,
I THINK: IM SINGING
TO A FUTURE
IMPORTANT PERSON.
THATS THE CREDIT
I GIVE TO THEM.

20
WHAT A
WONDERFUL
WORLD

T
hirty-five years ago, as an
obstetrics/gynecology resident,
Carey Andrew-Jaja, MD, worked
with an attending physician who
loved to sing and occasionally
serenaded newborn babies
as he worked.
Andrew-Jaja, a Pitt clinical professor
of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive
sciences who is known for going about his own
work with an infectious joy and an engaging
smile, recalls what his singing colleague said
when he retired: He asked me, Andy, do you
sing to your babies? And I said, No, thats
your stuff. He said, Go ahead. Do it. And
so I took it over. He passed the baton to me.
I started to sing to my babies ever since then,
and I do it every single time.
Andrew-Jaja was just appointed president
of the medical staff at Magee-Womens Hospital
of UPMC. But he has been a memorable
influence on Pitt medical students and
residents for many years. And in summer
2014, he became a YouTube sensation when
a video from the previous year went viral.
In it, he croons Happy Birthday and What a
Wonderful World to newborns at Magee. The
video has been watched more than a million
times and was covered by news outlets around
the world. Scores of colleagues and patients
families responded with personal stories of
their meaningful interactions with the singing
doctor, as he is known around the hospital.
Of the infants he welcomes into the world,
Andrew-Jaja says, They are special. Each
of them is an individual, and Ive delivered
thousands and thousands of babies. When
Im singing to those babies, I think: Im singing
to a future important person. Thats the credit
I give to them.

WATCH THE VIDEO AT THE UPMC YOUTUBE CHANNEL.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 21


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ ED U C ATI O N

M
NORTHERN Pa. ed students choose Pitt for a lot of different reasons,
including the elite academic medical center and
EXPOSURE hospital system, top-notch biomedical research,
and the urban campus in one of Americas most livable
A RURAL ROTATION SHOWS THAT FAMILY
cities. They generally dont anticipate exposure to a
MEDICINE IS DIFFERENT OUT HERE.
small-town medical practice or the charms of rural
America. But perhaps they should.
The best med schools offer a breadth of unexpected discoveries
for the future physician, whether through varied research opportunities
or diverse clinical experiences. At Pitt, all students complete a four-week
family practice clerkship in the third or fourth year. Most students
complete this rotation in Pittsburgh, but those who elect to do so
through Dr. Jill Owens family practice in Bradford get an uncommon
experience along Pennsylvanias bucolic northern border. With fewer
than 9,000 citizens, Bradford is the largest town in McKean County,

TELEMEDICINE IS ONE which includes more than 130,000 acres of the Allegheny National
Forest, 25,000 acres of state game lands, and an extensive patchwork
TOOL THAT CAN MAKE of private farms, fields, and forests. Working and playing outdoors is a

A DIFFERENCE, AND way of life for many locals here. People fish. They hunt deer, black bear,
turkey, grouse, and other small game. Industry centers around

THIS CLERKSHIP MAY resources like timber, oil, and gas.

BE THE ONE IN WHICH


STUDENTS LEARN THE
MOST ABOUT THAT.
THEY LIVE IT.

22
The setting and the culture translate to a unique patient has developed curricular elements to supplement the clinical
population with its own set of ailments, not to mention a particular experience, which she delivers via webcam.
way of practicing medicine. With assistance from the Center for Telemedicine is one tool that can make a difference, says Maier,
Rural Health Practice on Pitts Bradford campus, students are and this clerkship may be the one in which students learn the most
immersed in the family practice run by Owens, a 1997 graduate of about that. They live it.
the School of Medicine who returned to her hometown of Bradford With a very large rural population in Pennsylvania, Maier sees
to practice family medicine. With very few specialists close by, Owens the rotation as an important training ground for future doctors and
does more than most family docs in Pittsburgh, including assisting even an opportunity for valuable research that asks, How can we
on neonatal resuscitation after other doctors perform C-sections. better deliver health care to rural areas, where outcomes for many
With no easy access to a catheter lab or cardiologist, the protocol conditions are not as good? These are important, compelling,
for handling heart attack victims is different too. She and a few and complex questions that funding organizations such as the
emergency medicine docs collectively run the small intensive care Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute are interested in
unit in Bradford. answering. A student looking for a niche in translational research
When not working, students have the chance to explore the can find more than one kind of inspiration in rural Pennsylvania.
outdoors and the unique social setting. Bradford as a community They also just get a taste of a different way to practice,
has been great, says one. Im here in summertime, so I get to be adds Maier. They frequently come back and tell us that Jill Owens
outside, which is wonderful. I imagine that those here in the winter is a rock star in that community.
will get to cross-country ski and things of that nature. But for me, I get
to see deer on my morning run. I get to go hiking on the weekends.
The program began in 2011 when Pitt was awarded a Health
Resources and Services Administration grant for education in rural
medicine. Included in the grant were resources to set up telecommu
nications with rural sites. The family medicine clerkship director,
Robin Maier, MD, from Pitts Department of Family Medicine,

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 23


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ ED U C ATI O N

65

43

13 20

14 13 12 11 10 09 08 14 13 12 11 10 09 08

FELLOWSHIPS, GRANTS, AWARDS LOCAL AWARDS


(NATIONAL OR STATE)

A GREAT MANY PITT MED STUDENTS FIND


THAT THEIR SCHOLARLY WORK LEADS TO
QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS, NOT TO MENTION,
WHEN THEY BEGIN INTERVIEWING,
THE EAGER ATTENTION OF RESIDENCY
PROGRAM DIRECTORS!

234

228

(51 SUBMITTED,
177 REVIEWED)

42 46

14 13 12 11 10 09 08 14 13 12 11 10 09 08

PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS PRESENTATIONS AT MEETINGS


(NATIONAL OR INTERNATIONAL)

24
2014 OMALLEY AWARD WINNERS

At Scholars Day 2014, five graduating MD students were


individually honored with a Bert and Sally OMalley Award for
Outstanding Medical Student Research. The best of the best
from the Class of 2014:

HEBIST BERHANE, MD
Investigating the Radioprotective Nature of
SCHOLARS JP4-039 on Human Foreskin Cell Lines Isolated
from Patients with Fanconi Anemia and
DAY Establishing the Drugs Mechanism of Action

T
MENTOR:

he best physicians have a solid grounding Joel S. Greenberger, MD, Claude Worthington
Benedum Foundation Professor and Chair of
in the scientific method. They dont have to
Radiation Oncology
be scientists, but they must understand how
RESIDENCY MATCH:
research works and how scientific discoveries
Radiation Oncology, UPMC Medical Education
become clinical medicine. At Pitt, we challenge
Program, Pittsburgh
medical students to contribute to scholarly
research during their med school years. In each graduating
class, without fail, we find med students who seize this STEPHANIE DREIFUSS, MD
opportunity and produce some stunning results. Prevalence of Endogenous CD34+ Adipose
Stem Cells Predicts Human Fat Graft Retention
Pitts innovative Scholarly Project requirement was
in a Xenograft Model
introduced a decade ago, when the Class of 2008 entered
MENTOR:
medical school. At the time, some said it would drive away
J. Peter Rubin, MD, UPMC Professor and
applicants (who didnt want to do research, presumably),
Chair of Plastic Surgery
but the opposite has proven true. Today, the Scholarly
RESIDENCY MATCH:
Project is being emulated at some of the nations other
Plastic Surgery, UPMC Medical Education
top medical schools.
Program, Pittsburgh
In 10 years of refining this element of Pitts medical
curriculum, a few key features have become critical to the
programs success. First, every med student is invited to AMANDA GELMAN, MD
take part in summer research between the first and second Racial Disparities in Awareness of HPV
and HPV Vaccine Uptake
years of medical school. Roughly 75 percent of the Class of
2014 accepted, with many students building mentoring MENTOR:
Sonya Borrero, MD, Associate Professor
relationships and exploring research topics that would
of Medicine
eventually lead to their scholarly projects.
RESIDENCY MATCH:
Students are paired with established scientists,
Primary Internal Medicine, University of
including some of our most accomplished faculty members.
Colorado School of Medicine, Denver
Depending on their interests, med students delve into
everything from wet-bench laboratory research to compu
tational biology; others explore the subtleties of the DANIEL LUDWIG, MD
doctor-patient relationship or mine public health data for Development of Magnetic Resonance
new insights into disease trends. In these and scores of other Imaging To Identify Conduction Dyssynchrony
in the Presence of Left Ventricular Scar
ways, med students build their own scientific knowledge
MENTOR:
and become the type of clinicians who can make a difficult
David Schwartzman, MD, Professor of Medicine
diagnosis and help patients make the best decisions based
on the evidence. RESIDENCY MATCH:
Diagnostic Radiology, Barnes-Jewish Hospital at
(TOP) BERHANE, Washington University Medical Center, St. Louis
DREIFUSS, GELMAN,
LUDWIG, MOREAU
JACQUELINE MOREAU, MD
Improving Early Detection of Melanoma
MENTOR:
Laura K. Ferris, MD, PhD, Associate Professor
of Dermatology
RESIDENCY MATCH:
Dermatology, Massachusetts General Hospital,
Boston

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 25


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ ED U C ATI O N

IN-DEPTH STUDY

T
FOR MED STUDENTS

hrough a raft of specialized programs,

SOME OF THE
diverse research opportunities, and areas of
concentration, med students at Pitt are able
BEST RESIDENTS to explore their medical interests in depth.

WE GET COME FROM


Many will take a year off at some point to earn
a masters degree in public health, biomedical
PITTSBURGH, THEY ethics, or a related field; others will devote a full year to

TOLD HER DURING


research through one of the following specialized programs:
The Clinical Scientist Training Program (CSTP) offers
HER INTERVIEW. a leg up for medical students who show an interest in and

WHY IS THAT?
a talent for clinical research. Select students whose
mentored scholarly projects meet the NIH definition of
clinical research are invited to delve deeper into their
research during a fifth year of training. Interested students
apply to the CSTP in January of the year they plan to commit
RESIDENTS STAND OUT
to full-time research (typically between the third and fourth
years of medical school). Selected students are appointed as
Jacqueline Moreau chose Pitt largely because of
the Clinical Scientist Training Program (CSTP), which
research fellows for the research year, during which they
provided her with a full year of support to conduct receive a living stipend, research funds, travel funds,
research between her second and third years of health insurance, and tuition toward the graduate certificate
medical school. But her research portfolio wasnt the in clinical research. After successful completion of the
only thing that caught the attention of the dermatology fellowship year, they receive a CSTP scholarship toward
residency program directors at Massachusetts the final year of medical school. By providing formal
General Hospital (MGH). research training and partial tuition assistance, the CSTP
Some of the best residents we get come from
seeks to increase the number of Pitt graduates who choose
Pittsburgh, they told her during her interview.
clinical research careers and contribute to the vital
Why is that?
Pittsburghers are the salt of the earth, says work of translating biomedical science into clinical care.
Moreau. They are hard working. They believe
Graduates from 2014 matched to the following
in community. And they dont come in with a sense residency programs:
of entitlement. She noticed early on that the city
welcomed newcomers. (Shes originally from JAYSHIV BADLANI, MD
New England, but five years at the med school Jackson Memorial Hospital, Fla./Internal Medicine
makes you a Pittsburgher in our book.)
KYLE JACKSON, MD
Moreau has no doubt that her research experience Johns Hopkins Hospital/General Surgery
helped her land the residency she wanted. I presented
my research at a few conferences and had program IAN JOEL, MD
directors approach me afterwards to ask me to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center/Internal Medicine
interview, she says. SIMIAO LI, MD
In addition to her solid presentation skills, Moreau McGaw Medical Center of Northwestern University/
graduated with a list of publications, including a few Emergency Medicine
with Martin Weinstock, MD, PhD. Currently at Brown
University, Weinstock trained in internal medicine CONSTANTINOS MICHAELIDIS, MD
Brigham and Womens Hospital/Internal Medicine
at Pitt in the 1980s, moved to MGHs dermatology
residency program (speaking of great dermatology JACQUELINE MOREAU, MD
residents from the Burgh), and is now one of the Massachusetts General Hospital/Dermatology
worlds foremost authorities on the epidemiology
of melanoma.

26
E
The Physician-Scientist Training Program (PSTP) very year, medical
is a five-year program for exceptionally talented students students seek to continue
their training at institutions
who, in addition to the regular curriculum, undertake
across the country. University
two summers and a dedicated year of laboratory-based of Pittsburgh students joined
research training, as well as enrichment courses, to more than 16,000 others in the
prepare for careers in academic medicine. Those selected 2014 Main Residency Match,
for the program receive partial tuition assistance for the which is administered by the
National Resident Matching
four years of medical school plus a stipend during the
Program.
two research summers and the research year. At Pitt, 148 graduating med
The Class of 2014 included six graduating PSTP students matched to programs
students who matched to top residency programs in in 24 states, including the District
some of the most competitive medical specialties, of Columbia and Hawaii. Nearly
every top residency program
including internal medicine at Tufts Medical Center,
in the country welcomes one
emergency medicine at the Hospital of the University of or more new MDs from Pitts
Pennsylvania, otolaryngology at Vanderbilt University Class of 2014, including those
Medical Center, orthopaedic surgery at UPMC, at Brigham and Womens,
diagnostic radiology at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, and Massachusetts General, and
Beth Israel Deaconess Hospitals,
orthopaedic surgery at the University of New Mexico
School of Medicine. Collectively, these six graduates
have published 17 papers (four as first author),
received five national or international awards
(best poster, best talk, or travel awards), one
Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)
research fellowship, and filed two patents.

TOP STUDENTS WIN


PRESTIGIOUS FELLOWSHIPS

Two of Pitts current PSTP students were awarded


highly coveted research training fellowships through
the HHMI Medical Research Fellows Program. The
students will be supported through a one-year leave
of absence, during which they can dedicate themselves
to research projects and associated research training.
In addition, a prior HHMI fellow from Pitts PSTP, as well as universities like
Erica Nakajima, was one of only four national HHMI Johns Hopkins, Yale, Stanford,
Vanderbilt, Columbia, Michigan,
fellows chosen as Academy of Achievement delegates
and Northwestern. Forty-three
to the 2014 International Achievement Summit. matched to highly regarded
UPMC residency programs.
The award-winning students and their projects: More than a third of the class
chose primary care fields in
WAI-YING (WENDY) YAU
Characterizing the Longitudinal Relationship between 2014. Ten matched in the highly
Amyloid Deposition and Cerebral Perfusion in Humans competitive specialty of
and Transgenic Mice Carrying Mutations for Autosomal orthopaedicsa record for the
Dominant Alzheimers Disease med school. Other competitive
specialties to which Pitt students
MENTOR :
matched were radiation oncology,
William E. Klunk, MD, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry,
Professor of Neurology
otolaryngology, dermatology,
plastic surgery, and neurosurgery.
ZACHARY YOCHUM Seven Pitt couples entered the
Determining the Molecular Pathways and Domains match as pairs and successfully
of TWIST1 Required for TWIST1-Mediated Suppression of matched together. A few of those
Apoptosis in KRAS Mutant Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma couples fulfilled our longstanding
MENTOR : belief that great relationships
Timothy F. Burns, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medicine, begin in med school orientation!
Division of Hematology/Oncology

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 27


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ ED U C ATI O N

A LEADER AMONG
THE NATIONS COMBINED
MD/PHD PROGRAMS

M
atch Day is a big deal for all graduating med
students, but for those in the Medical Scientist
Training Program (MSTP), our combined MD/PhD
program, the anticipation has been building for
an especially long time. Most classmates they
entered med school with are long gone because
MSTP students begin with two years of MD training then break for
several years of PhD research before returning to complete their
clinical work. At some point, they watch the MD students they
entered with celebrate Match Day and move on to residency
positions. Match Day for MSTP students typically arrives about
seven years after they begin medical school. In 2014, Pitt said
farewell to 11 of these budding physician-scientists.
The match went quite well this year, says Richard Steinman,
MD, PhD, associate dean for the MSTP and associate professor
of medicine and of pharmacology and chemical biology. This is
a great group, and we are both proud of them and sorry to lose
them. So many could have gone to any program in the country
they wanted. They strategically chose programs that would give
them the best skills to continue the careers they want as
academic investigators.

PITTS 2014 MSTP GRADUATES

AMIN AFRAZI, MD, PHD JASON SANDERS, MD, PHD


General Surgery, University of Emergency Medicine, Harvard
Wisconsin, Madison University/Brigham and
Womens Hospital, Boston, Mass.
MAX HOROWITZ, MD, PHD
Obstetrics/Gynecology, DEEPAK SONEJI, MD, PHD
UPMC Medical Education Neurology, UPMC Medical
Program, Pittsburgh Education Program, Pittsburgh

JEFFREY KOENITZER, MD, PHD DAVID SVILAR, MD, PHD


Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Washington
Washington University in University in St. Louis/St. Louis
St. Louis/Barnes-Jewish Childrens Hospital, Mo.
Hospital, Mo.
RACHEL MARGARET
HANNAH LEE, MD, PHD WHELAN, MD, PHD
Orthopaedic Surgery, Pediatrics/Psychiatry/Child
UPMC Medical Education Psychiatry, Tulane University,
Program, Pittsburgh New Orleans, La.

JEAN LIN, MD, PHD


Internal Medicine, Yale University,
New Haven, Conn.

MEDICAL SCIENTIST TRAINING PROGRAM PAVLE MILUTINOVIC, MD, PHD


Medicine-Pediatrics, Duke
University, Durham, N.C.

VIVEK PATEL, MD, PHD


Radiology-Diagnostic, Stanford
University, Calif.

28
Other MSTP bragging points include Pitts enviable success rate Pitts MSTP has 71 students currentlybig enough to maintain
in winning F30 awards from the National Institutes of Health. Also a lively and diverse group dynamic but small enough that nobody is
known as Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards, getting lost in the mix.
F30s are granted to MSTP students who demonstrate the potential to To help everyone stay on course, we have a monthly meeting
become highly trained, productive, independent physician-scientists. with the entire MSTP student body, says Steinman. Its in a
NIHs ultimate goal with this program is to increase the number of workshop setting, with senior through beginning students mixed
future investigators with both clinical knowledge and skills in basic, together around tables. The topics may be research, or ethics, or
translational, or clinical research. Nearly two-thirds of Pitts MSTP maybe how to pick the best mentors.
students are successful in their F30 applications. We have students involved in all facets of the program.
Student reps meet regularly with me. We have students organizing
RECENT AWARDS INCLUDE: the scientific retreat. Others play a role in admissions, organize our
second look visit for accepted applicants, and help to frame the
ALYCE ANDERSON MATTHEW HEDBERG
research ethics course we run. Having students in all those roles
Defining the Role of Integrins Phosphoinositol-3-Kinase
makes for a very coherent program.
in IL-23-Dependent Intestinal Signaling and Pik3ca: Critical
Immunity Mitogenic Drivers in Head
INSTITUTE: National Institute of
and Neck Squamous Cell
Diabetes and Digestive and Carcinoma
Kidney Diseases INSTITUTE: National Cancer
MENTOR: Mandy McGeachy, PhD, Institute
Assistant Professor of Medicine MENTOR: Jennifer Grandis, MD,
and of Immunology UPMC Professor of Head
and Neck Surgical Research,
LAUREN BRILLI Distinguished Professor of
Elucidating the Mechanisms Otolaryngology
of Kidney Regeneration and
Therapeutic Augmentation ELIZABETH OCZYPOK
after Acute Kidney Injury Receptor for Advanced
INSTITUTE: National
Institute Glycation End Products (RAGE)
of Diabetes and Digestive and as an Upstream Activator of
Kidney Diseases the Th2 Inflammatory Immune
Response in Asthma
MENTOR: NeilHukriede, PhD,
INSTITUTE: National Institute of
Associate Professor and Vice
Chair of Developmental Biology Environmental Health Sciences
MENTOR: Tim Oury, MD, PhD,
TAYLOR EDDENS Professor of Pathology
Pneumocystis Antigen Discovery
and Vaccine Development JOSHUA STURM
Intrinsic Connectivity of APPROXIMATELY
INSTITUTE: NationalInstitute of the Auditory Midbrain in a TWO-THIRDS
Allergy and Infectious Diseases Mouse Model of Tinnitus OF PITTS MSTP
MENTOR: Jay Kolls, MD, Visiting STUDENTS ARE
INSTITUTE: National Institute
Professor of Pediatrics on Deafness and Other SUCCESSFUL
Communication Disorders IN THEIR F30
ANDREY FINEGERSH
Effects of Preconception MENTOR: Karl Kandler, PhD, APPLICATIONS.
Alcohol on Epigenetics and Professor of Otolaryngology
Offspring Drinking and of Neurobiology

INSTITUTE: National Institute on


Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
MENTOR: Gregg Homanics, PhD,
Professor of Anesthesiology
and of Pharmacology and
Chemical Biology

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 29


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ ED U C ATI O N

After the interdisciplinary year, each student chooses a


track and transfers into one of the degree-granting programs.
Nuschkes choice of cell and molecular pathology has led him

GRADUATE in some pretty interesting directionsthough he entered


grad school focused on science, hes learning quite a bit about
PROGRAMS health care entrepreneurship. In October 2013, he and Don

I
MEDICAL SCHOOL ISNT JUST FOR MDS Taylor, a bioengineering PhD candidate in Pitts Swanson
School of Engineering, won the Michael G. Wells Student
n addition to approximately 600 students in the Health Care Entrepreneurship Competition. The $10,000
four-year MD program, there are nearly 300 students award from Pitts Innovation Institute enables the team, with
pursuing PhD degrees in 12 programs that include their mentor Alan Wells, MD, DMS, the Thomas Gill Professor
neuroscience, biomedical informatics, computational of Pathology, to continue with research and commercialization
biology, molecular biophysics and structural biology, of their biotech innovation, an advanced wound-healing gel.
and clinical and translational science. The size and Curostem is a topical wound gel aimed at curing chronic
scope of Pitts research enterprise are significant enough that wounds that otherwise consume billions of dollars of ineffec-
graduate students in this wide a range of disciplines receive tive care that results in poor clinical outcomes. Curostem
training that allows them to work at the cutting edge of incorporates human mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) into a
biomedical science. space-filling bioengineered gel that can be topically applied
A longstanding program in integrative molecular to wounds in most clinical care settings. This bioactive product
biology has recently been updated to reflect an increasing responds to dynamic cues from the wound itself, providing
emphasis on integrative systems biology. The goal is to the necessary components to complete the healing process.
train students in emerging transformative methodologies
that emphasize genomics, proteomics, complex cellular
pathways, and the dynamics of cellular and organismal
function. Students in this program operate at the exciting THE $10,000 MICHAEL G.
WELLS AWARD WILL
interface between basic bench-top biology, computational SUPPORT FURTHER
analysis of big data sets, and the emergence of 21st century DEVELOPMENT OF THE
clinical translation. TEAMS INNOVATIVE
WOUND-HEALING GEL.
Other PhD candidates spend the first year in the inter
disciplinary biomedical graduate program before committing
to one of six participating programs. Many of these students
have interests in areas like cancer biology and infectious
diseases that lie at the intersection of multiple disciplines,
while others use the interdisciplinary program to explore
distinct scientific interests.
Its like an umbrella program, says Austin Nuschke, a PhD
candidate in pathology. You have 30 or 35 students every
year who take an introductory, interdisciplinary course called
Foundations of Biomedical Science, which covers everything
under biomedical science. During that first year, you rotate
through labs in any of the six programs under this umbrella.
The six programs are cell biology and molecular
physiology, cellular and molecular pathology, immunology,
molecular genetics and developmental biology, molecular
pharmacology, and molecular virology and microbiology. ALAN WELLS, MD, DMS
Nuschke was interested in pathology coming in, but he
appreciated the freedom of that first year, during which
he worked with three different mentors in laboratory
settings. A critical element of the program is its emphasis
on laboratory research from day one. While classroom
activities are important, the real goal is to train professional
laboratory scientists who will become the research leaders
of tomorrow.

30
Nuschke and Taylor say that no product on the market has
this dynamic wound-healing capability because no other team
has mastered the ability to keep MSCs alive and functioning
for enough time to promote wound closure and healing. The
team has already patented core aspects of this technology
and has an additional patent pending.
Curostem is aimed at patients with chronic wounds such
as pressure and diabetic ulcersa population of six million

I WOULD SAY THE BREADTH American patients annually. When Nuschke delivers his pitch
to potential investors and other partners, he says that if the
OF OPPORTUNITIES AT product reaches 10 to 20 percent of the $5 billion pressure

PITT IS EXCELLENT, SAYS ulcer wound care market in this country, that would
represent a market opportunity of $500 million$1 billion.
NUSCHKE. THERE IS A LOT Commercialization is a long road, however. Along the way

OF DIFFERENT RESEARCH to finishing his PhD around the end of 2015 (four and a half
years is pretty average for a PhD in our lab), Nuschke and his
GOING ON, AND ALL OF colleagues continue to refine the components of the product,

IT IS PRETTY HIGH QUALITY. research wound healing in animal models, explore good
manufacturing practices, work on establishing the company,
YOU CANT GO WRONG and court potential investors.

ENTERING THIS PROGRAM


BECAUSE YOU ARE
PRETTY CERTAIN TO FIND
SOMETHING THAT YOU
WILL BE COMFORTABLE
DOING. WHEN YOU LOOK
AT MEDICALLY ORIENTED
GRADUATE PROGRAMS,
THE QUALITY OF RESEARCH
HERE IS EXCELLENT AND
THE FUNDING ENVIRON-
MENT IS GOOD.

AUSTIN NUSCHKE

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 31


R E LE A S E P OTE NTIA L \\ A LU M N I

CODEBLACK Ryan McGarry, MD


DIRECTOR

32
A
riveting new documentary film
directed by Ryan McGarry, MD
(Class of 2009), Code Black, brings
the emergency department of a
major hospital serving Americas
second largest city to life in
vividsometimes jarringdetail. If youre an
outsider, this looks like total chaos, says McGarry
in a voiceover of one scene. But as a doctor, I see
unity in that chaos. Theres a team here in all that
coming together to save someones life.
As a med student at Pitt, McGarry participated
in an emergency medicine clerkship and research
rotation at Los Angeles County General. I had
no intentions of coming to LA to make a film,
McGarry told Pitt Med. It was accidental, really,
which is often how documentary films get started.
Having studied English at Penn as an undergrad
and read cinematography journals since childhood,
McGarry saw the cinematic potential of the hectic
ED environment. A few weeks into his LA rotation,
he began lugging around a 40-pound camera.
Then, when his clerkship was nearing an end, Pitt
gave him an extension to continue filming and
thereby gave the project a big boost. After earning
his MD, McGarry arrived at LA County as an
emergency medicine resident intent on completing
the film. Now, hes an assistant professor of
emergency medicine at Cornell University who
is on staff at NewYorkPresbyterian Hospital
in Manhattan.
The feature-length documentary is now
sweeping the festival circuit and earning top prizes
nationwide, including Best Documentary Feature
at both the 2013 Los Angeles Film Festival and the
2013 Hamptons International Film Festival.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 33


UNLOCK INNOVATION
HOW DO
WE ADVANCE
BIOMEDICAL
SCIENCE AND
LAUNCH THE
NEXT BIG PITT TO LEAD
NATIONAL CENTER OF

INNOVATION?
EXCELLENCE TRANSLATING

T
BIG DATA TO KNOWLEDGE

he National Institutes of
Health (NIH) has awarded
the University of Pittsburgh
an $11 million, four-year
grant to lead a Center
of Excellence for Big Data
CREATIVE / COLLABORATIVE / TRANSFORMATIONAL
Computing, which will help scientists
capitalize more fully on large amounts
of available data and make data science

WE ARE IN AN ERA OF a more prominent component of


biomedical research.
UNPRECEDENTED CHALLENGES The highly competitive process for

AND OPPORTUNITIES. EVEN grants under the new NIH Big Data to
Knowledge initiativeknown as BD2K
AS WE MAINTAIN AN ENVIABLE attracted proposals from 136 institutions
around the nation. Pitts Center for
POSITION IN RESEARCH Causal Modeling and Discovery, one

SUPPORT, WE STRIVE TO PUSH of only 11 such centers to be funded,


aims to develop new tools and
THE BOUNDARIES OF WHAT approaches to turn the tremendous

SCIENCE AND MEDICINE amount of information available to


physicians and scientistsincluding data
CAN ACCOMPLISH. from electronic health records, digital
images, and molecular analyses of genes,
proteins, and metabolitesinto discov-
eries that will benefit human health.
Individual biomedical researchers
now have the technology to generate
an enormous quantity and diversity of
data. Adequately analyzing these data
to discover new biomedical knowledge
remains a major challenge, however,

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 35


U N LO C K I N N OVATI O N \\ F U N D I N G A N D S U P P O RT

said Gregory Cooper, MD, PhD, professor and vice chair of the
Department of Biomedical Informatics, School of Medicine,
and principal investigator on the project. Our goal is to make
it much easier for researchers to analyze big data to discover
causal relationships in biomedicine.
The new center is a multidisciplinary collaboration of
researchers from Pitt, Carnegie Mellon University, the
Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, and Yale University.
Within its successful application, Pitt proposed innovative COOPER
collaborations with multiple universities.
As part of a national consortium, this Center of Excellence will put Pitt
on the map as a home of big data science, said Arthur S. Levine, MD, senior
vice chancellor for the health sciences and
John and Gertrude Petersen Dean of
THE FUTURE OF BIOMEDICAL Medicine. Our strengths in this field have
RESEARCH IS ABOUT ASSIMILATING stimulated collaborations with leading
institutions, including Harvard and Stanford,
DATA ACROSS BIOLOGICAL SCALES and now we will be able to further develop
FROM MOLECULES TO POPULATIONS. such partnerships in many more
meaningful ways.
AS SUCH, THE HEALTH OF EACH The center includes a team that will
ONE OF US IS A BIG DATA PROBLEM. develop and implement causal modeling
and discovery algorithms, or processes, to
ENSURING THAT WE ARE GETTING support the data analyses of three separate
THE MOST OUT OF THE RESEARCH investigative groups, each focusing on a
distinct biomedical problem whose answer
DATA THAT WE FUND IS A HIGH lies in a sea of data: cell signals that drive the
PRIORITY FOR NIH.
PH I LI P E . BO U R N E , PH D, N I H A S SOCIATE DI R EC TO R FO R DATA SCI E N CE
development of cancer, the molecular basis
of lung disease susceptibility and severity,
and the functional connections within the
human brain (the connectome).
Each project will act as a test bed for the development, rigorous testing,
and refinement of analytic tools. When successful, the algorithms and software
likely can be applied to other biomedical research questions. The center will
provide free, open-source software that scientists all over the world can use with
their own datasets to uncover causal biomedical relationships. Their feedback will
further enhance the algorithms and software.
The good news is that we have so much data. But the bad news is that we
have so much data, said Jeremy M. Berg, PhD, codirector of the center, Pitts
associate senior vice chancellor for science strategy and planning in the health
sciences, and Pittsburgh Foundation Professor of Personalized Medicine. Our
challenge is to find strategies that enable us to sort through all this collected
information efficiently and effectively to find meaningful relationships that
lead us to new insights in health and disease.
The center also will be a training ground for the next generation of data
scientists who will advance and accelerate the development and broader use
of big data science models and methods, said center codirector Ivet Bahar, PhD,
who is Distinguished Professor, John K. Vries Professor, and chair of the Depart-
ment of Computational and Systems Biology, School of Medicine. We will create
new educational materials as well as workshops and online tutorials to facilitate
the use of causal modeling and discovery algorithms by the broader scientific
community and to enable efficient translation of knowledge between basic
biological and applied biomedical sciences.

36
KIDNEY RESEARCH CENTER MICROBICIDE TRIALS
GETS A BIG BOOST SUPPORT HIV PREVENTION
GRANTS The Pittsburgh Center for Kidney The Microbicide Trials Network (MTN)
OF NOTE Research was awarded a five-year, received funding of $70 million to support
$5.8 million grant from the National its research into 2021, and it will continue
Early-career scientists have a lot to Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and to develop and test products that reduce
learn. Practical problems like finding Kidney Diseases. The center supports the spread of HIV. The MTN was created
the best reagents and the business four research facilities encompassing in 2006 with funding from the National
end of a pipette might be a cinch, cellular physiology, single nephron and Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
metabolomics, kidney imaging, and model (NIAID). The new funding means the
but the bottom line is this: The search
organisms at the University of Pittsburgh. MTN will continue to serve as one of five
for funding is perpetual.
Our Center for Kidney Research is NIAID HIV/AIDS clinical trials networks
Over the years, Pitt School of
designed to facilitate research that for the next seven years. The research,
Medicine researchers have been
advances our understanding of how the based at the University of Pittsburgh and
extraordinarily successful in scoring kidney works, with a goal of improving Magee-Womens Research Institute, is
financial support from many sources, how we diagnose and treat kidney diseases, focused on the development and evaluation
including foundations, industry, said Thomas Kleyman, MD, Sheldon of promising microbicides, which are
and individual philanthropy. The Adler Professor of Medicine, chief of the products applied inside the vagina or
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Renal-Electrolyte Division, and center rectum to prevent HIV transmission. Two
provides the lions share, however, director. The grant will support research groups continue to have high rates of new
with an alphanumeric soup of grants facilities, educational programs, and pilot infectionsyoung women and men who
that correspond to scientific career projects to enhance kidney-focused have sex with men, according to principal
advancement. Here are a few research at Pitt and related institutions. investigators Sharon Hillier, PhD, Richard L.
snapshots of active Pitt grants that Sweet Professor of Reproductive Infectious
Diseases and professor of obstetrics,
range from training initiatives to
PITT SCIENTISTS RECEIVE gynecology, and reproductive sciences,
independent investigations and $3.5 MILLION FOR
and Ian McGowan, MD, PhD, professor of
multicenter collaborations. BRAIN RESEARCH FROM
DSF CHARITABLE FOUNDATION medicine, Division of Gastroenterology,
Hepatology, and Nutrition. The MTN
In 2014, Pitt officials announced the network is affiliated with more than
inception of the University of Pittsburgh 25 clinical research sites in Africa, North
Brain Institute (UPBI), which will enable America, South America, and Asia.
investigators to perform high-risk,
PITT EXPERTS TO EVALUATE high-impact neuroscience, with the aim of
CARE FOR PEDIATRIC transforming lives. With a $1.75 million gift PITT STUDY EXAMINES
TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURIES
from the DSF Charitable Foundation, BENEFITS OF DEPRESSION
Researchers at Childrens Hospital of UPBI researchers will establish a Neuro TREATMENT FOR
HEART FAILURE PATIENTS
Pittsburgh of UPMC and Pitts Graduate Discovery Center, akin to a Bell Labs for
School of Public Health were selected neuroscience, and hunt for new drugs Can treating depression in patients
by the National Institute of Neurological for the treatment of neurodegenerative with heart failure help them live longer?
Disorders and Stroke to lead a $16.5 million diseases, like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Thats one of the questions that University
international study to evaluate treatments Huntingtons disease, and Parkinsons of Pittsburgh researchers hope to answer
for pediatric traumatic brain injuries (TBI). disease. Scientific director Peter L. Strick, with a new five-year, $7.3 million grant
The effort is being led by Michael J. Bell, MD, PhD, Distinguished Professor and chair, from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
professor of critical care medicine and Department of Neurobiology, will use Institute. Nearly six million Americans
of neurological surgery, and director of $750,000 of the DSF gift for a pilot fund live with heart failure, and studies confirm
Pediatric Neurocritical Care and Neuro to support especially innovative basic and that about a quarter of them suffer from
trauma at Childrens Hospital, and Stephen translational research. Another $1.8 million depression. Evidence-based depression
Wisniewski, PhD, senior associate dean, DSF gift will be used to explore the treatments clearly improve health-related
professor of epidemiology, and codirector application of a new imaging technology, quality of life, yet it is presently unknown
of the Epidemiology Data Center at Pitt high definition fiber tracking, to traumatic whether they also reduce morbidity
Public Health. The study will provide data brain injury, particularly in wounded and mortality, particularly in patients
for improved TBI research protocols that veterans of the U.S. armed forces, and to with heart failure. This trial will help us
will reduce variability in treatments and fund a project that will look for drugs that find out, said principal investigator
evaluate the effectiveness of six different can affect the function of mitochondria, Bruce L. Rollman, MD, MPH, professor of
therapies, including strategies to lower the so-called powerhouses of cells. medicine, of psychiatry, of biomedical
intracranial pressure, treat secondary informatics, and of clinical and
injuries, and deliver nutrients. translational science.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 37


U N LO C K I N N OVATI O N \\ F U N D I N G A N D S U P P O RT

GRANTS OF NOTE, CONTINUED of identifying and quantifying damage,


TEAM TBI ADVANCES
as well as a way to monitor healing,
NEW THERAPIES
said Schneider. Concussion patients
may find it a relief to be able to point to a The U.S. Department of Defense
MELANOMA PROGRAM
specific cause for symptoms that otherwise (DoD) has awarded $4.6 million to
RENEWED
might seem inexplicable. Schneider, David Okonkwo, MD, PhD, professor of
The University of Pittsburgh Cancer Michael Collins, PhD, associate professor neurological surgery, to conduct clinical
Institute (UPCI) Melanoma and Skin Cancer of orthopaedic surgery and director of interventions for traumatic brain injury
Program directed by John M. Kirkwood, MD, the concussion program at UPMC, and (TBI) patients. The project, TEAM TBI
Usher Professor of Melanoma Research, Anthony Kontos, PhD, associate professor (Targeted Evaluation, Action, and
Department of Medicine, and professor of of orthopaedic surgery and assistant Monitoring of Traumatic Brain Injury),
dermatology and of clinical and transla- research director of the concussion brings together advanced evaluation
tional science, has received renewal of its program, are coprincipal investigators methods and internationally recognized
skin cancer research through the National on the project. They received a experts to identify evidence-based
Cancer Institutes competitive Specialized $300,000 grant, with an option to therapies for patients who have sustained
Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) apply for additional funding after the a traumatic brain injury. The TEAM TBI
program. The grant is for more than opening six months of the study. clinical trials offer powerful new research
$12 million and is the fourth awarded MRI imaging techniques, including high
to UPCI through the prestigious SPORE definition fiber tracking, developed in
program (the other three are in head and PITT, UPMC RECEIVE AWARDS Pittsburgh under DoD support, which holds
neck, lung, and ovarian cancers). The TO CREATE CLINICAL DATA potential to visualize neural connections
five-year renewal of this SPORE grant RESEARCH NETWORK,
damaged by TBI, much like X-rays show
CONDUCT COMPARATIVE
for skin cancer will fund many new and fractured bones. Data will be collected to
EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH
existing projects. About 76,000 new cases establish treatment efficacy.
of melanoma are diagnosed every year in Pitt, UPMC, and their collaborators
the United States, and about 9,400 people at other academic centers have received
die every year from the disease, according three new awards from the Patient- PITT RECEIVES $10 MILLION
to the National Cancer Institute. SPORE Centered Outcomes Research Institute GRANT FROM NIMH FOR
(PCORI). The funds will be used to CONTE CENTER FOCUSED ON
grants are already making a difference
SCHIZOPHRENIA
several new therapies for melanoma have establish a new clinical data network
been approved since 2011, compared to evaluate the outcomes of health The National Institute of Mental Health
to just three agents approved in the interventions, to compare approaches has awarded a five-year, $10 million grant
30 years prior. that encourage communication between to establish the Silvio O. Conte Center
patients with mental illness and their health for Translational Mental Health Research in
professionals, and to help researchers the School of Medicines Department of
GE-NFL GRANT AWARDED select optimal methods to analyze data Psychiatry. The center focuses on cortical
TO PITT, UPMC CONCUSSION from studies in which they observed, but cells, brain circuits, neuronal connectivity,
PROGRAM TO CONDUCT INNOVATIVE
did not try to influence, outcomes. and cognition in schizophrenia.
BRAIN IMAGING RESEARCH
The projects were among 82 selected Schizophrenia is a devastating illness
General Electric and the National for a total of $191 million in funding in and major public health problem, affecting
Football League awarded one of their December 2013 by PCORI, an independent 0.5 to 1 percent of the worlds population.
inaugural Head Health Initiative grants nonprofit organization authorized by the Symptoms can include hallucinations,
to a University of Pittsburgh and UPMC U.S. Congress in 2010. The new Pitt awards delusions, disorganized thinking, and
effort in which researchers will assess build upon seven current PCORI-funded mood disturbances. Current treatments for
whether high definition fiber tracking projects totaling more than $11 million. schizophrenia have limited effectiveness,
(HDFT) can identify concussion and The University of Pittsburgh and UPMC and most were discovered by serendipity
subsequent recovery in a newly injured have built an infrastructure that encour- rather than goal-oriented, rigorous
athlete in order to safely return him or ages comparative effectiveness research, science. There is an urgent need for a
her to play. HDFT, developed by a team in which existing health interventions are new approach to developing treatments,
led by Walter Schneider, PhD, professor compared to identify the ones that do said David A. Lewis, MD, Thomas Detre
of psychology and of neurological surgery people the most good and the least harm. Professor of Academic Psychiatry,
and a senior scientist at the University PCORIs support reflects the success of chair of Pitts Department of Psychiatry,
of Pittsburghs Learning Research and these efforts, said Arthur S. Levine, MD, and director of the Conte Center.
Development Center, will be tested in Pitts senior vice chancellor for the health This innovative center will initiate drug
a one-year study to see if it can become sciences and Petersen Dean of Medicine. development methodically by first
the first imaging technique to accurately identifying molecular targets that influence
and consistently aid in the diagnosis the course of the illness, a strategy that
of concussion and injury prognosis. has been successful in other areas
HDFT could provide an objective way of medicine.

38
developing ovarian cancer. One of five
UPCI AWARDED NEARLY $2 MILLION NIH GRANT RENEWS
ovarian cancerfocused SPORE grants
$10 MILLION IN PRESTIGIOUS UPCI RESEARCH INTO VIRUSES,
NCI GRANTS TO FOSTER awarded nationally, this is the only one CANCER PATHWAYS
CANCER RESEARCH focused exclusively on immunotherapies.
Our clinical trial will explore the roles of NIH has renewed a grant for more than
The University of Pittsburgh Cancer $2 million for Patrick Moore, MD, MPH,
chronic inflammation, cancer development
Institute (UPCI) has been awarded two Distinguished Professor of Microbiology
and the bodys immune response, and
grants from the National Cancer Institute and Molecular Genetics and director of
how the immune response can be used
(NCI) that will help bring the latest the Molecular Virology Program at the
to immunize the patient against her own
research from bench to bedside. The first, University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute
cancer, said Robert P. Edwards, MD,
an NCI Experimental Therapeutics-Clinical (UPCI), who will use the money to continue
professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and
Trials Network with Phase I Emphasis research into the newest human cancer
reproductive sciences and director of the
grant, will be led by UPCI deputy director virus causing most Merkel cell carcinomas.
Ovarian Cancer Center for Excellence at
Edward Chu, MD, professor of medicine A team led by Moore and Yuan Chang, MD,
Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC.
and of pharmacology and chemical Distinguished Professor of Pathology,
biology, and is a $4.25 million, five-year discovered the Merkel cell polyomavirus
project that funds early-phase clinical $2 MILLION GRANT TO STUDY in 2008, the seventh human cancer virus
research of novel agents and drug NOVEL ANTI-INFLAMMATORY identified and the second discovered by
combination regimens. DRUG THAT MAY BE USEFUL the Moore/Chang group. The new grant
The second grant, a Lead Academic IN SEPSIS
will fund the research through March 2019.
Participating Site (LAPS) grant, is part Rama K. Mallampalli, MD, professor of Moore, Chang, and colleagues identified a
of the new National Clinical Trials Network medicine and director of the Acute Lung protein that allows the usually harmless
(NCTN), designed to accelerate the time it Injury Center of Excellence, received a polyomavirus to transform healthy cells
takes research to move from the lab to $2 million R01 grant from the National into Merkel cell carcinoma, a rare but deadly
patients through technological advances Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to study skin cancer. They hope their workwhich
and enhanced cooperation. The nearly the preclinical development of a novel emphasizes the importance of fundamental
$5 million award is led by Adam Brufsky, anti-inflammatory drug that may be useful research to medical progresscan soon be
MD, PhD, professor of medicine and UPCIs in sepsis. Mallampalli is internationally translated into human clinical trials.
associate director for clinical investigation. recognized in the area of lipid metabolism
The grant will fund the costs of maintaining and proteolysis as it relates to acute lung
a clinical trials infrastructure that permits injury from pneumonia and sepsis. His $6 MILLION NIH GRANT TO
patients to enroll in national trials led by ESTABLISH A NATIONAL INSTITUTE
laboratory has investigated the funda-
OF DRUG ABUSE CENTER OF
NCTN at more than a dozen sites across mental regulation of enzymes needed for EXCELLENCE FOR COMPUTATIONAL
the UPMC CancerCenter network. UPCI surfactant lipids and previously discovered DRUG ABUSE RESEARCH
is one of only 12 centers in the country to that the mitochondrial-specific phospho-
receive the NCI Experimental Therapeutics- Ivet Bahar, PhD, Distinguished Professor
lipid, cardiolipin, is an important mediator
Clinical Trials Network with Phase I and John K. Vries Professor and chair of
of pneumonia. His research program
Emphasis grant and the only center in computational and systems biology, and
characterized the molecular behavior
Pennsylvania to receive a LAPS grant. Xiang-Qun Xie, PhD, MBA, professor of
of orphan ubiquitin E3 ligases that target
pharmacy in the School of Pharmacy, along
key proteins for their degradation
with Carnegie Mellon associate professor
and examined how they affect the
NEW OVARIAN CANCER Eric Xing, PhD, received a five-year,
pathobiology of sepsis and pneumonia.
PROGRAM FUNDED $6 million NIH grant to establish a National
Recently, his team discovered a new class
More than 14,000 women in the U.S. died Institute of Drug Abuse Center of Excellence
of ubiquitin-based small molecule
last year from ovarian cancer, a disease for Computational Drug Abuse Research,
therapeutics that is effective in preclinical
that often isnt detected until later stages as a joint initiative between the University
models of inflammation. Mallampalli is the
when it is significantly more difficult to of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon Univer-
principal investigator of an NIH Program
treat. Now, the University of Pittsburgh sity. The investigators aim to advance and
Project Grant, four R01 grants, and a
Cancer Institute and Roswell Park Cancer implement state-of-the-art computational
Veterans Association Merit Review Award,
Institute will join forces, thanks to an chemical genomics technologies to
all of which investigate mechanisms
$11 million grant from the National Cancer facilitate drug abuse prevention and
involved in inflammatory lung injury.
Institute (NCI), to develop a deeper treatment research and to centralize the
understanding of the disease and identify chemical genomics knowledge base
ways to prevent and cure it. The five-year through a cloud computing server platform;
grant, from NCIs Specialized Program of to enable efficient information exchange
Research Excellence (SPORE), will fund among drug abuse researchers; and to
four studies examining strategies to reduce accelerate the development of novel
risk in women considered at high risk for interventions for preventing and treating
drug abuse and addiction.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 39


U N LO C K I N N OVATI O N \\ I N V E S TI GATI O N S A N D R E V EL ATI O N S

PREOPERATIVE

R L
R L

Chiasm
(A)
Optic tr.

R
L
d.

L R
ra
tic

( B) (C )
Op

40
CLINICAL INSIGHTS called optic radiation fibers had been pushed
FROM HIGH DEFINITION aside butmost criticallyremained intact.
FIBER TRACTOGRAPHY Using HDFT, surgeons planned an
intricate surgical approach to remove the
It started because a 66-year-old man tumor while preserving the optic radiation
could see only half of what he looked at. fibers, as shown in a postsurgical MRI (D).
Magnetic resonance imaging (A) revealed Patients with occipital lobe tumors are
a tumor in the left occipital lobe, displacing typically counseled not to expect much,
large portions of the visual cortex, says if any, lost vision to return after surgery.
Robert M. Friedlander, MD, Walter E. Dandy In this case, thanks to successful
Professor and chair of neurological surgery. HDFT-guided surgery, postoperative visual
Preoperative testing (B) indicated assessment and HDFT confirmed marked
partial visual field loss (black areas) in visual field improvement (E) and preserva-
both eyes consistent with the tumor location tion of optic radiation fibers (F).
and (C) high definition fiber tractography
(HDFT) technology, developed at Pitt to
enhance existing brain imaging techniques,
confirmed that important connections

POSTOPERATIVE

R L
R L

Chiasm

Optic tr.
( D)

Optic rad.
L R

( E) ( F)

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 41


U N LO C K I N N OVATI O N \\ I N V E S TI GATI O N S A N D R E V EL ATI O N S

diseases, is dean of Pitts Graduate School of Public Health,


director of the Center for Vaccine Research, UPMC Jonas Salk
Professor of Global Health, and Distinguished University
Professor of Health Science and Policy.

THE HISTORY OF The field of public health data compilation has been
fraught with redundancies. Most projects are focused on
DISEASE, IN COLOR specific questions; a researcher might toil for years answering
PITT SHARES A DATABASE THAT HELPS SCIENTISTS a question like, What effects do condom distribution programs

T
UNDERSTAND CONTAGION have on the rate of HIV infection in the rural United States?
In search of answers, investigators painstakingly build data
he Danish nobleman Tycho Brahe was among sets that often are not shared. And it can be difficult to get
the last great naked-eye observers of the funding to create archives with no specific research questions
cosmos. Before his death in 1601, Brahe passed in mind.
along his lifes work30 years of detailed Happily, both the National Institutes of Health and
observations of the night skyto his assistant, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation saw value in creating
Johannes Kepler, urging him not to let the a massive digital archive and funded Project Tycho.
fruit of his labors languish. The Project Tycho team has also been inventing new
They did not. Brahes careful observations became the methods to process and analyze public health data. In a
basis for Keplers laws of planetary motion, which would, November 2013 New England Journal of Medicine paper,
in turn, contribute to Isaac Newtons law of universal Project Tycho researchers (from Pitts public health, medicine,
gravitation. and information sciences schools, with collaborators from
Four centuries later, the Pitt researchers who created Johns Hopkins University) revealed that vaccination
Project Tycho, a digital database that provides open access programs for polio, measles, mumps, rubella, hepatitis A,
to U.S. disease surveillance data, hope they have created a diphtheria, and pertussis (whooping cough) have prevented
similar foundation for discovery. The newly built epidemio- more than 100 million cases of serious childhood infectious
logical archive chronicles reports of 56 infectious diseases in diseases since 1924. Still, some of these pathogens are
every state before, during, and after vaccination licensure reemerging. Pertussis vaccines, for example, have been
from 1888 to recent times. available since the 1920s, but the worst whooping cough
It took almost three years and more than 200 million epidemic since 1959 occurred in 2012, with more than
keystrokes to create the Project Tycho archive. Many of those 48,000 cases nationwide reported by December of that year.
workers were University of Pittsburgh undergrads as well as Parents who question the risk-benefit balance of vaccina-
students from Digital Divide Data, a social enterprise that tion may refuse or delay immunization of their children, the
provides jobs and education to young people in Cambodia, Project Tycho team reports, which leads to local variations
Laos, and Kenya. These clerks standardized and organized in vaccine coverage and increased risk of disease outbreaks.
almost 90 million cases from weekly public health records Van Panhuis admits he hopes the project will introduce
(paper and PDFs) from all U.S. states and territories, new evidence into the debate about vaccination.
including more than 3,000 American cities. What they The next big step for Project Tycho is to go global. But,
wrought: the largest centralized bank of digitized disease van Panhuis says, technological, economic, and political
surveillance data ever assembled. barriers can hinder cooperation. For instance, developing
And access to it is free, says Wilbert van Panhuis, MD, PhD, countries that rely on tourism might be wary of releasing
assistant professor of epidemiology at Pitts Graduate School information about epidemics. And they may not even
of Public Health and lead investigator for the project. Our have the means to collect data, let alone analyze them.
vision was that not only us but everybody should be able to Whats in it for us?, the gatekeepers may wonder.
use this public data for analysis and models. For instance, Well, perhaps the lives of millions. Van Panhuis remains
anybody with enough interest and access to the Interneta optimistic. He says understanding a diseases narrative,
scientist at a university or pharmaceutical company, a journalist, locally and globally, can help move the scientific field forward
an undergradcan easily track where and when the polio in developing theories about causationand then, ways to
vaccine was implemented and its efficacy in those cities. control or prevent disease.
We hope there are epidemiological, disease-curing
Keplers today who will be able to use these data to derive
important laws and insights on how epidemics arrive, leave,
and interact, says co-investigator Donald S. Burke, MD, who,
in addition to being a professor of medicine and of infectious

42
IT TOOK ALMOST
2010 THREE YEARS AND
2000
MORE THAN 200 MILLION
KEYSTROKES TO CREATE
1990
1980
1970
THE PROJECT TYCHO
ARCHIVETHE LARGEST
1960
1950
1940
CENTRALIZED BANK OF
DIGITIZED DISEASE
1930
1920
1910
SURVEILLANCE DATA
EVER ASSEMBLED.
1900
1888

CONCENTRIC CIRCLES

ER
WE

SHOW DISEASE REPORTS


AN

FE V
EH R PL A S
ST

OVER 13 DECADES,
LIC MOS

H O ID

R
NIL

VE
CO

HIO IS

WITH RED INDICATING


ED

FE
CC

T YP
SIS
ID

OW
GI

ISE

DEATH REPORTS.

R
IO

AR

VE
ST

/
AS

LL
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P

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F
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TOXIC SHOCK MEASLES

LEG ION ELLOSI S


VA RI OLOI
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IT IS
NI

ROCK
ME

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 43


U N LO C K I N N OVATI O N \\ I N V E S TI GATI O N S A N D R E V EL ATI O N S

cancer, said D. Lansing (Lans) Taylor, PhD, Allegheny


Foundation Professor of Computational and Systems Biology
and UPDDI director.
Although the gene that causes Huntingtons disease has
been identified, there is currently no treatment that can delay
onset or slow progression. UPDDI, the University of Pittsburgh
Brain Institute, the Department of Neurological Surgery,
and the Department of Computational and Systems Biology
have implemented a QSP approach to model Huntingtons
disease progression as a set of interdependent, dysregulated
pathways in an effort to identify novel therapies for a wide
range of neurodegenerative diseases.
UPDDI is at the forefront of a national focus on QSP
TAYLOR
best demonstrated by the establishment of the National Center
for Advancing Translational Sciences at NIH in 2011 to
encourage collaboration across scientific disciplines and help
speed the development of treatments for patients. Pitts own
DRUG DISCOVERY INSTITUTE, Innovation Institute, launched in 2013 with the combination
PITT INNOVATION of the Office of Technology Management, Office of Enterprise
Development, and Institute for Entrepreneurial Excellence,
INSTITUTE, AND QSP

I
leverages the Universitys expertise in teaching and
supporting entrepreneurship and transforming research
n the past year, the University of Pittsburgh Drug into innovation with commercial potential.
Discovery Institute (UPDDI) established two programs One recent example of scientific discoveries moving from
that utilize quantitative systems pharmacology (QSP) Pitt labs to the marketplace is the start-up company Complexa
to develop therapeutics for metastatic breast cancer Inc., which raised more than $8 million of venture capital to
and Huntingtons disease. QSP has emerged as a license and develop molecules discovered and patented by
powerful and increasingly affordable means of scientific advisor Bruce A. Freeman, PhD, the Irwin Fridovich
addressing the inherent complexity of human disease Professor and chair of the Department of Pharmacology and
through the integration of what have traditionally been Chemical Biology. Using naturally occurring nitro-fatty acids,
two distinct fields: pharmacology and systems biology. Freeman and his team of Pitt researchers hope to develop
Pitt is on the cutting edge of this effort to fully illuminate anti-inflammatory drugs that could reverse the effects of
the therapeutic applications of new and existing drugs for diseases such as diabetes by regulating inflammatory and
personalized medicine. A QSP approach combines computa- anti-inflammatory pathways.
tional and experimental methods to investigations and is a
major theme of UPDDIs partnership with academics and
industry. By taking a systems-level approach to translational PITT IS ON THE
science, the institute ensures that laboratory discoveries CUTTING EDGE OF
contribute to functional knowledge and improved drug
efficacy and safety. THIS EFFORT TO
The first of two UPDDI programs announced in FULLY ILLUMINATE
February is a collaboration between the Womens Cancer
Research Center of the University of Pittsburgh Cancer THE THERAPEUTIC
Institute, Magee-Womens Research Institute, and the APPLICATIONS OF
Institute for Personalized Medicine that hopes to address the
ongoing risk for relapse that faces breast cancer survivors. NEW AND EXISTING
An unbiased and comprehensive molecular profiling of DRUGS FOR
primary and metastatic tumors will help identify what drives
breast cancer growth and metastasis and why some breast PERSONALIZED
cancers produce life-threatening metastases.
The implementation of QSP for personalized medicine
MEDICINE.
is expected to increase the likelihood of discovering novel
therapeutics and diagnostic tests for metastatic breast

44
S CI ENCE TR A NS L ATIONA L

THIS JUST IN MEDICI NE


MAR 2014 | VOL 6 | ISSUE 229 |

SOME BREAST CANCER TUMORS


As one of the top NIH-funded med schools in the EVADE DRUGS BY HIJACKING
country, and one with more than 2,000 faculty EPIGENETIC MACHINERY
members, the School of Medicine is the source of an A breast cancer therapy that blocks estrogen synthesis to activate
impressive array of biomedical researchfrom the cancer-killing genes sometimes loses its effectiveness because
most basic biological science to the translational and the cancer takes over epigenetic mechanisms, including permanent
clinical research that helps us all lead healthier lives. DNA modifications in the patients tumor, once again allowing tumor
Here is a sampling of the most interesting and growth, according to an international team headed by the University
promising research publications by Pitt investigators of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute.
The finding warrants research into adding drugs that could
over the past year.
prevent the cancer from hijacking patients repressive gene regulatory
machinery, which might allow the original therapy to work long enough
to eradicate the tumor, the researchers report in their National Cancer
Institutefunded study, published in Science Translational Medicine.
Our discovery is particularly notable as we enter the era of
personalized medicine, said senior author Steffi Oesterreich, PhD,
N E W E NGL AN D JO U R N AL
OF M E DIC I N E
professor of pharmacology and chemical biology and director of
MAY 2014 | VOL 370 | ISSUE 18 | education at the Womens Cancer Research Center. Resistance
to hormonal therapy is a major clinical problem in the treatment of
PARADIGM SHIFT IN THE most breast cancers. Through testing of a tumors genetic and
TREATMENT OF SEPSIS
epigenetic make-up, we may be able to identify the patients most
Pitt has a long track record in the treatment of severe sepsisa likely to develop such resistance and, in the future, create a treatment
systemic inflammatory response to infection that is complicated by regimen tailored to giving each patient the best chance of beating
acute organ dysfunction. Each year, sepsis, the bodys response to their cancer.
severe infections, kills more people than breast cancer, prostate
cancer, and HIV/AIDS combined. Many of the top clinical research
papers in this area over the past few decades were written by Pitt S CI ENCE TR A NS L ATIONA L
investigators. The latest such contribution comes from a team of MEDICI NE
investigators led by Derek Angus, MD, MPH, Distinguished Professor, APR 2014 | VOL 6 | ISSUE 234 |

Mitchell P. Fink Professor, and chair of the Department of Critical


REGENERATING MUSCLE
Care Medicine. In one of the largest-ever randomized trials of care for
AFTER TRAUMA
septic shock, Angus and his colleagues found that early goal-directed
therapy for severe sepsisa protocol introduced in a very influential When a large volume of muscle is lost due to trauma, the human body
2001 paperactually did not change survival chances for people cannot sufficiently respond to replace it. Instead, scar tissue forms and
who develop the deadly condition. frequently impairs the recovery of strength and function. In the journal
The findings, published in a May 2014 issue of the New England Science Translational Medicine, Stephen Badylak, MD, PhD, DVM,
Journal of Medicine, are likely to change the way sepsis is diagnosed professor of surgery and deputy director of the McGowan Institute
and treated. for Regenerative Medicine, reports that damaged leg muscles grew
We found no overall differences in two protocolized approaches stronger and showed signs of regeneration in three out of five men
when compared to conventional treatment. The study provides whose old injuries were surgically implanted with extracellular matrix
strong evidence that will have immediate consequences, said Angus. (ECM) derived from pig bladder.
Many organizations have endorsed structured guidelines for sepsis Pig bladder ECM has been used for many years as the basis
treatment that often call for invasive devices early in care. But with for medical products for hernia repair and treatment of skin ulcers.
prompt recognition and treatment of the condition, we found that It is the biologic scaffold that remains after cells have been removed.
these approaches do not improve outcomes but do increase the use Previous research conducted by Badylaks team suggested that ECM
of hospital resources. also could be used to regenerate lost muscle by placing the material
The five-year, multicenter study, called Protocolized Care for in the injury site, where it signals the body to recruit stem and other
Early Septic Shock or ProCESS, was sponsored by an $8.4 million progenitor cells to rebuild healthy tissue.
grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS). J. Peter Rubin, MD, coprincipal investigator of the study and
ProCESS set out to determine whether a specific protocol would UPMC Professor and chair of plastic surgery, surgically implanted
increase the survival rates of people with septic shock. Instead, it compressed ECM sheets designed to repair the injury sites. Within
showed something far more importantthat over the past decade, 48 hours of the operation, the participants resumed physical therapy.
the care of people with sepsis has significantly improved nationwide, This new study is the first to show replacement of new functional
said Sarah Dunsmore, PhD, who managed the ProCESS trial for muscle tissue in humans, and were very excited by its potential,
NIGMS. ProCESS showed that regardless of how the delivery Badylak said. These are patients who cant walk anymore, cant get
of the interventions was monitored, sepsis patients in these clinical out of a car, cant get up and down from a chair, or cant take steps
settings are receiving effective treatments. without falling. Now we might have a way of helping them get better.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 45


U N LO C K I N N OVATI O N \\ I N V E S TI GATI O N S A N D R E V EL ATI O N S

PUBLICATIONS OF NOTE, CONTINUED


I MM U NI T Y
JUN 2014 | VOL 40 | ISSUE 6 |

QUICK-ACTING PROTEIN MAY FIGHT VIRAL INFECTIONS

N AT UR E NE U R O S C I E NC E The protein OASL boosts cellular defenses when a cell becomes


SEP 2013 | VOL 16 | ISSUE 9 | infected with an RNA virus. In the journal Immunity, Saumendra N.
Sarkar, PhD, assistant professor of microbiology and molecular
PRACTICE MAKES THE BRAINS
MOTOR CORTEX MORE EFFICIENT genetics, explained this process for the first time. OASL helps induce
interferona second protein that cells release quickly to defend
Not only does practice make perfect, it also makes for more efficient against pathogens. Sarkars laboratory is currently working to identify
generation of neuronal activity in the primary motor cortex, the brain an OASL protein fragment that could enter cells and boost the natural
region that plans and executes movement. The study, led by senior immune response. This fragment might eventually serve as the basis of
investigator Peter L. Strick, PhD, Distinguished Professor and chair treatments or vaccines for RNA viral infections, including hepatitis C,
of neurobiology, showed that practice leads to decreased metabolic West Nile, and influenza.
activity for internally generated movements, but not for visually
guided motor tasks, and suggests that the motor cortex is plastic
and a potential site for the storage of motor skills. Neuron activity was
JOU RNA L OF CLI NICA L I NVES TIGATION
comparable between monkeys that were trained to perform visually
APR 2014 | VOL 124 | ISSUE 4 |
guided and internally generated tasks. However, metabolic activity
was high for the visually guided task but only modest during the STEM CELLS FROM MUSCLE CAN
internally generated task. REPAIR NERVE DAMAGE AFTER INJURY

Stem cells derived from human muscle tissue were able to repair
nerve damage and restore function in an animal model of sciatic nerve
injury. To date, treatments for damage to peripheral nerves have not
been very successful, often leaving patients with impaired muscle
control and sensation, pain, and decreased function, according to
senior author Johnny Huard, PhD, professor of orthopaedic surgery
and Henry J. Mankin Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery Research.
This study indicates that placing adult human muscle-derived
stem cells at the site of peripheral nerve injury can help heal the
lesion, Huard said. The stem cells were able to make non-neuronal
support cells to promote regeneration of the damaged nerve fiber.
The researchers found that, with prompting from specific nerve-
growth factors, the stem cells could differentiate into neurons and
glial support cells, including Schwann cells that form the myelin sheath
around the axons of neurons, to improve conduction of nerve
impulses. The findings suggest that cell therapy for certain nerve
NAT UR E N E U R O S C I E NC E
diseases, like multiple sclerosis, might one day be feasible.
JUN 2014 | VOL 17 | ISSUE 6 |

HUNTINGTONS DISEASE PROTEIN


CAUSES DEATH OF NEURONS
BRI TI S H JOU RNA L OF P S YCH I ATRY
OCT 2013 | VOL 203 | ISSUE 4 |
Huntingtons disease patients inherit a gene that contains
too many repeats of a certain DNA sequence, resulting in the BRAIN SCANS REVEAL DIFFERENCES
production of an abnormal form of a protein called huntingtin IN DEPRESSION AND BIPOLAR DISORDER
(HTT). Senior investigator Robert Friedlander, MD, Walter E.
Brain scans measuring blood flow can help diagnose bipolar disorder
Dandy Professor and chair of neurological surgery, and
at an early stage and distinguish the condition from depression.
colleagues have identified a mechanism by which mutant HTT
Using a new imaging method, arterial spin labeling, to measure blood
can cause brain cell death. The study examined brain tissue
flow to brain regions associated with depression, researchers could
samples from both mice and human patients affected by
identify with 81 percent accuracy which patients were depressed
Huntingtons disease and found that mutant HTT collects
(unipolar depression) and which patients had bipolar depression.
in mitochondria and binds to mitochondrial proteins that
Currently, only one in five patients with bipolar disorder is correctly
transport other proteins into the mitochondria. Mutant HTT
diagnosed when first assessed by a physician, with an accurate
inhibits this process and ultimately triggers cell-suicide
diagnosis often taking up to 10 years. Earlier and more accurate
pathways. The mitochondrial dysfunction occurred more often
diagnoses can make an enormous difference for patients and their
near the synapses of neurons, likely impairing the neurons
families and may even save lives, noted Jorge Almeida, MD, PhD,
ability to communicate or signal its neighbors. We learned
assistant professor of psychiatry and lead author of the study.
that these events occur early in the disease process,
This study highlights the usefulness of neuroimaging to help identify
Friedlander said. If we can find ways to intervene at this
biological markers associated with different mental health conditions.
stage, we may be able to prevent neurological damage.
Pitt coauthors on the study include Mary L. Phillips, MD, MD (Cantab),
Pittsburgh Foundation-Emmerling Professor of Psychotic Disorders
and professor of psychiatry and of clinical and translational science.

46
CA NCER RES EA R CH
2014 MAR | VOL 1 | ISSUE 74 |

SECOND-MOST COMMON BREAST


CANCER SUBTYPE A GOOD CANDIDATE FOR
A PERSONALIZED APPROACH TO TREATMENT

The second-most common type of breast cancer is very different


from the most common type and appears to be a good candidate for
a personalized approach to treatment. Invasive lobular carcinoma
(ILC), characterized by a unique growth pattern in breast tissue,
has distinct markers that indicate there may be benefits from drug
therapies beyond those typically prescribed for the more common
invasive ductal carcinoma.
PR O C E E DI NGS OF THE N ATION AL
A subset of patients with lobular carcinoma receive less benefit
A C ADE MY OF S C I E NC E S
APR 2014 | VOL 111 | ISSUE 18 | from tamoxifen than patients with ductal carcinoma, said senior author
Steffi Oesterreich, PhD, professor of pharmacology and chemical
MALFUNCTION IN MOLECULAR biology and director of education at the Womens Cancer Research
PROOFREADER PREVENTS REPAIR
Center. The study explores the function of estrogen receptors in ILC
OF UV-INDUCED DNA DAMAGE
cell lines and points to potential new targets for drug therapy in future
A malfunction in the proofreading machinery that repairs clinical trials, which Oesterreich and colleagues are developing.
DNA damage caused by ultraviolet (UV) light explains why
people with one form of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), an
inherited, incurable disease of light sensitivity, are at high risk A MERICA N JOU RNA L OF
for developing skin cancer. Normally, a repair protein called EPI DEMIOLOGY
human UV-damaged DNA-binding protein (UV-DDB) signals JAN 2014 | VOL 25 | ISSUE 2 |

for repair when two UV-DDB molecules bind to the damaged


LOW VITAMIN D LEVELS LINKED TO PRETERM BIRTH
site, said senior investigator Bennett Van Houten, PhD, Richard
M. Cyert Professor of Molecular Oncology. The new study African-American and Puerto Rican women with low levels of vitamin D
shows that UV-DDB makes stops along the DNA strand and during pregnancy are more likely to go into labor early and give birth
transiently attaches to it. When it comes to a spot that has to preterm babies. Preterm birth is the most important problem in
been damaged by UV radiation, two molecules of UV-DDB modern obstetrics and leads to higher risks of chronic lung disease,
converge and stay tightly bound to the site, flagging it for the deafness, visual impairment, and learning and cognitive disability,
attention of repair machinery. The researchers tracked a said senior author Hyagriv N. Simhan, MD, MS, associate professor
mutant UV-DDB protein associated with one form of XP and of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences and chief of
found that the mutant UV-DDB molecules can still bind to DNA the maternal-fetal medicine division. While we get vitamin D from
but continue to slide along the DNA rather than staying put to our diets, our primary source is our body making it from sunlight,
signal where the fix is needed. Without this important damage said lead author Lisa Bodnar, PhD, MPH, associate professor in
control, UV-induced errors accumulate, leading to cell Pitt Public Healths Department of Epidemiology. Among nonwhite
alterations that foster cancer development. mothers, the incidence of spontaneous, preterm birth decreased by
as much as 30 percent as vitamin D levels increased. Bodnar and her
coauthors did not find a similar relationship between maternal
vitamin D levels and preterm birth in white women.

NATU RE
A M ER IC AN JO U R N AL OCT 2013 | VOL 502 | ISSUE 7471 |

OF TR AN S PL AN TAT ION
AUG 2013 | VOL 13 | ISSUE 8 | OMICS INDICATORS IN CLINICAL TRIALS

DENDRITIC CELL THERAPY William L. Bigbee, PhD, professor of pathology and outgoing chair
of the NIH Cancer Biomarkers Study Section, is coauthor of an article
A single dose of treated dendritic cells (DCs) prevented rejection for that includes a proposed 30-point checklist of criteria for the use of
almost four months in a preclinical animal model of kidney transplan- omics-based predictors in clinical trials. The predictors are derived
tation, according to senior investigator Angus W. Thomson, PhD, DSc, from computational modeling of multidimensional genomic and
Distinguished Professor of Surgery and professor of immunology. proteomic data derived from bodily samples that is used to recommend
That finding could lay the foundation for eventual human trials of the a clinical course of action, such as cancer therapy or preventive surgery.
technique. The donor kidney was rejected after about 40 days among Omics-based tests are very powerful tools that are revolutionizing
monkeys that got only immunosuppressive drugs but survived for medicine, said Bigbee. However, there are many variables and
about 113 days in the group that had a prior infusion of treated DCs. opportunities for error, including study design, patient selection,
This study shows it is possible to prepare the patients immune biological sample integrity, and data analysis and management. The
system for a donor kidney by administering treated dendritic cells checklist is intended to provide clear expectations and guidelines for
from the donor in advance of the transplant, Thomson said. the development and implementation of omics-based tests and will
hopefully eliminate unintentional errors.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 47


U N LO C K I N N OVATI O N \\ I N V E S TI GATI O N S A N D R E V EL ATI O N S

PUBLICATIONS OF NOTE, CONTINUED

CENTER FOR VACCINE RESEARCH


YIELDS HIGH-PROFILE RESULTS

Investigations underway at Pitts Center for Vaccine Research


N AT UR E CE L L BIOLO GY
OCT 2013 | VOL 15 | ISSUE 10 | (CVR) have never been more important. Infectious diseases
that have long plagued humanitymalaria, tuberculosis, AIDS,
WHEN CELLS EAT THEIR
for examplecontinue to kill millions annually and exacerbate
OWN POWER PLANTS
poverty in the developing world. Less well-known diseases like
A mix of serendipity and dogged laboratory work allowed a team chikungunya and dengue fever are gaining footholds in the
of Pitt scientists to solve the mystery of a basic biological function: United States, demonstrating the need for focused research.
how mitochondria signal that they are damaged. The Pitt teams work As evidenced by a flurry of high-profile publications in recent
has opened the door for research into cures for disorders, like Parkinsons
months and years, the center has been particularly productive
disease, that are believed to be caused by dysfunctional mitochondria
in its mission to conduct research that supports the development
in neurons. Cardiolipins, essential lipids on the inner membrane of
of diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines for infectious agents
mitochondria, move to the outer membrane when a mitochondrion is
of global importance. In 2014, CVR entered into a collaboration
damaged, where they signal the cell to destroy the mitochondrion.
The LC3 protein binds to cardiolipin and causes a specialized structure with Sanofi Pasteur to help assess the effectiveness of the
to form around the mitochondrion to carry it to the digestive centers pharmaceutical giants dengue vaccine candidate.
of the cell. Its a beautiful, efficient mechanism that we will seek to Another aspect of our mission that is being fulfilled here
target and model in developing new drugs and treatments, said demonstrated in these discoveriesis that we have become
senior author Valerian E. Kagan, PhD, DSc, professor and vice chair of a real center of excellence for training current and future
the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Graduate infectious disease researchers, says CVR Director Donald S.
School of Public Health. Together with Charleen T. Chu, MD, PhD, Burke, MD, MPH, dean of the Graduate School of Public Health,
A. Julio Martinez Professor of Neuropathology, Department of Distinguished University Professor of Health Science and
Pathology, School of Medicine, and Hlya Bayr, MD, professor of Policy, and UPMC Jonas Salk Professor of Global Health.
critical care medicine and research director of pediatric critical care With 32,000 square feet of laboratory and administrative
medicine, Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, the three
space, including the biosafety-level-3 Regional Biocontainment
cosenior authors engaged a team of nearly two dozen scientists
Laboratory, CVR serves as a national resource for critical
to identify this novel mitophagy signal.
infectious disease research. The center has also contributed
basic research findings including the discovery of an amino acid
sequence on the tail end of HIV that allows the virus to punch
PLO S ONE
JAN 2014 | VOL 9 | ISSUE 1 | into and infect cells. Pitt investigators at CVR manufactured a
synthetic and more efficient version of this sequence; in the lab,
MOOD-STABILIZING DRUG COULD BE these engineered cationic antimicrobial peptides (eCAPs)
NEW TREATMENT FOR INHERITED LIVER DISEASE
have been shown to rapidly destroy bacteria that are otherwise
Researchers used a worm model to show that fluphenazine, resistant to most standard antibiotics. As CVR Codirector Ronald
a drug approved as a mood stabilizer for schizophrenia and dementia, Montelaro, PhD, professor of microbiology and molecular
has potential as a treatment for -1 antitrypsin (AT) deficiency, an genetics, says, The unexpected findings that come from basic
inherited disease that affects one in 3,000 births. In AT deficiency, science research are often the most transformational.
a mutation leads to production of an abnormal protein, ATZ, which is
prone to clumping. The protein aggregates accumulate in liver cells
and lead to scarring of the organ or to tumor formation.
A drug to slow or stop this process might prevent the need for
liver transplantation in these patients, explained David H. Perlmutter, MD, JOU RNA L OF CLI NICA L I NVES TIGATION
Distinguished Professor and Vira I. Heinz Professor of Pediatrics. JUN 2014 | VOL 124 | ISSUE 6 |
Perlmutters team worked with Stephen Pak, PhD, research assistant
professor of pediatrics, and Gary Silverman, MD, PhD, Twenty-Five BREAKTHROUGH IN HIV/AIDS RESEARCH
Club Professor of Pediatrics and professor of cell biology, who had Chronic activation of the immune system and inflammation are
previously screened more than 2,000 compounds in C. elegans, a major determinants of progression of HIV infection to AIDS and
microscopic worm found in soil, and found that fluphenazine could also play an important role in inducing excessive blood clotting
reduce ATZ accumulation in the worm. Follow-up studies found that and heart disease in HIV patients. Ivona Pandrea, MD, PhD, professor
fluphenazine reduced ATZ accumulation in several mammalian of pathology, and colleagues at Pitts Center for Vaccine Research
cell models of AT deficiency and reduced hepatic fibrosis in a mouse demonstrated that blocking bacteria from leaving the intestine
model in vivo. The results demonstrate the power of the worm model reduces the chronic immune activation and inflammation. We now
to rapidly screen drug candidates. have direct evidence of a major culprit in poor outcomes for some
HIV-infected people, which is an important breakthrough in the fight
against AIDS, said Pandrea. The study found that the drug Sevelamer
significantly reduces the levels of bacteria that escape from the gut
as well as health complications in nonhuman primates infected with
the simian form of HIV. The gut bacteria bind to Sevelamer, making
it more difficult for the bacteria to escape into the body.

48
NAT U R E M E DIC I N E CA NCER PRE VENTION RES EA R CH
JAN 2014 | VOL 20 | ISSUE 1 | AUG 2014 | VOL 7 | ISSUE 8 |

LUNG LESIONS IN INDIVIDUALS BROCCOLI-SPROUT BEVERAGE


WITH TB ARE VARIABLE CAN DETOXIFY POLLUTANTS

The lung lesions in an individual infected with tuberculosis (TB) Broccoli sprouts are a rich source of glucoraphanin, which creates the
are surprisingly variable, independent of whether the patient compound sulforaphane when chewed or swallowed. Corresponding
has clinically active or latent disease. The research team, author Thomas W. Kensler, PhD, professor of pharmacology and
co-led by senior investigator JoAnne L. Flynn, PhD, professor chemical biology, found that daily consumption of a broccoli
of microbiology and molecular genetics, carefully tracked sprout-derived beverage enhanced detoxification of some airborne
granulomas (lesions created by the bodys immune response pollutants in participants from the Yangtze River delta region of
in an attempt to wall off the TB bacteria) that developed in the China, an area characterized by substantial pollutant levels. The
lungs of monkeys infected with TB. The researchers found research may provide a frugal means to attenuate long-term risks,
that each granuloma starts with only one bacterium and that including lung cancer and cardiopulmonary diseases, associated
bacterial replication continues for about four weeks before the with airborne pollution.
body counters with an adaptive immune response to kill off
the invaders. Even an animal with a severe, active infection had
some sterile granulomas, indicating that the immune system A RTH RI TI S A ND RH EUM ATI SM
was capable of killing bacteria, the researchers found. To our AUG 2013 | VOL 65 | ISSUE 8 |
surprise, infected individuals have a collection of granulomas,
PREMATURE AGING OF IMMUNE CELLS
some containing live bacteria and some that are sterile because
PRESENT IN JOINTS OF KIDS WITH CHRONIC ARTHRITIS
the immune system has killed all the bacteria, said Flynn.
She adds, The next step is to understand how the body The joints of children with the most common form of chronic
sterilizes some granulomas and not others and build on the inflammatory arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, or JIA, contain
successful response for the development of more effective immune cells that resemble those of 90-year-olds, according to a
vaccines against TB. new study led by researchers at the School of Medicine and Childrens
Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC. JIA affects one of every 1,000 children
in the U.S., said senior researcher Abbe N. de Vallejo, PhD, associate
NAT U R E
professor of pediatrics and of immunology. About one-third of the
FEB 2014 | VOL 506 | ISSUE 7487 | T cells of children with JIA had shortened telomeres (the tip region
on chromosomes), and the cells had reduced or completely lost the
DISCOVERY OF IMMUNE AVOIDANCE
capacity to proliferate. It is thought that aging occurs when the
MECHANISM COULD LEAD TO TREATMENTS
telomeres become too short for DNA replication and cell division to
FOR DEADLY MOSQUITO-BORNE VIRUSES
proceed normally. Much more must be learned about the development
A mosquito-borne virus that causes a rare but deadly disease, of JIA, de Vallejo said, but these findings could point the way to
eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV), hijacks a regulatory new therapies.
system of its hosts to suppress immunity. Senior author
William B. Klimstra, PhD, associate professor of microbiology
and molecular genetics at Pitts Center for Vaccine Research,
NEU R ON
and his colleagues discovered that EEEV has a binding site in its MAY 2014 | VOL 82 | ISSUE 4 |
RNA that fits perfectly with a microRNA present in the immune
cells of the invaded organism. When the virus binds the EARBRAIN COMMUNICATION
microRNA in immune cells, it restricts its own replication, thus A precise rhythm of electrical impulses transmitted from cells
evading an immune response. Meanwhile, the virus is able to in the inner ear coaches the brain how to hear, according to
replicate and spread undetected in the hosts neurological a new study led by Pitt researchers. To investigate the importance
system and cause disease. When a manufactured mutant of the impulses, senior investigator Karl Kandler, PhD, professor of
version without the microRNA binding site was tested in the otolaryngology and of neurobiology, and his team used genetically
laboratory, the researchers found that the hosts immune engineered mice that lack a key receptor on the inner hair cells,
system was able to mount an effective response to the mutant which causes them to change their beat. The data showed that when
virus. The results suggest that the mutant virus could be the inner ear beats in a different rhythm, the brain doesnt get the
used as an EEEV vaccine and that microRNA blockers may instructions it needs to wire itself correctly. The mice can detect
have potential as a therapeutic treatment for sound, but they have problems perceiving the pitch of sounds. In
EEEV-infected patients. humans, such subtle hearing deficits are associated with central
auditory-processing disorders (CAPD), which relate to how the
brain processes sounds. The causes underlying CAPD have remained
obscure, and Kandler postulates that the findings suggest that an
abnormal rhythm of electrical impulses early in life may be an
important contributing factor in the development of CAPD.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 49


NURTURE PARTNERSHIPS
HOW CAN
WE BEST
CONTRIBUTE
TO THE
COMMUNITY
OF WHICH
WE ARE
J
CARE BEFORE THE CRISIS

ack Rozel, MD, was at an

A PART?
appointment with a health care
provider once (yes, even doctors
occasionally get sick), when a staff
person casually asked, Where
do you work? What do you do?
Oh, I work at this place called re:solve Crisis
Network, he replied.
ENGAGED / RESPONSIVE / DYNAMIC She got kind of quiet for a moment, recalls
Rozel, a Pitt assistant professor of psychiatry.
Then, she teared up a bit and said, Thank you.
A few years earlier, she was going through a really
PITTSBURGH IS UNPRETENTIOUS. bad domestic violence situation and was trying
to get out of that situation. She had some mental
ITS A CITY THAT BELIEVES IN health struggles, as well, and we were able to
ITSELF. IF YOURE WILLING TO work with her. We were able to steer her toward
the right domestic violence resources, help her get
WORK HARD ALONGSIDE YOUR into mental health treatment, and help her get out

NEIGHBORSWHETHER ITS of that bad situation. Now shes doing great. She
was able to go to technical school to get the job
SHOVELING SNOW OR RUNNING skills to be the independent person that she

A CLINICTHEYLL BELIEVE IN needed and wanted to be.


In partnership with Allegheny Countys Depart
YOU TOO. AS THE CITYS MEDICAL ment of Human Services, Western Psychiatric
Institute and Clinic of UPMC (WPIC) spearheaded
SCHOOL, WE SEEK TO IDENTIFY the creation of re:solve Crisis Network. The goal

AREAS OF NEED, CONTRIBUTE was to build a new model for crisis intervention.
Since opening in 2008, the clinic has provided more
OUR EXPERTISE AND ENERGY, than one million services to county residents.

AND HELP MAKE A MOST LIVABLE It was a very competitive process to win this
contract, says Rozel, the crisis networks medical
CITY EVEN BETTER. director since 2010. And what UPMC and WPIC
did was spend a lot of time doing focus groups

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 51


N U R T U R E PA R TN E R S H I P S \\ CO M M U N IT Y

with people living with mental health issues, with their you support and help you find your strength. If you think
family members, with inpatient and outpatient providers, its time to get back into treatment, we can work with you on
first responders, EMS, and law enforcement, to determine that. You dont necessarily need to fill an emergency depart-
what a crisis center had to be. ment slot for that.
As one of Rozels colleagues is fond of saying, The Re:solve offers 24/7 call-in, mobile, walk-in, and overnight
community designed re:solve, and UPMC built it. services, delivered with a large component of whats called
One of the questions they asked was, If you had a crisis, peer involvement.
where would you go? The number-one answer was the We have three times as many peers on our staff as we do
emergency department, says Rozel. Now, an emergency physicians, says Rozel. Our first line answering is always
department is great if you have a full-blown emergency or a one of our clinicians, but we have a peer in the phone center
life-threatening situation. But when youre feeling really who does a lot of long-term support for some of our more
stressed out and just need to be away from home because frequent callers. Peers are not at a clinician level, but they
youre so angry at someone, you can come to re:solve and are valuable members of the team. One of the job criteria is
hang out with us for a little bit. You can meet with us to talk that they are in recovery from some type of significant mental
about what is going on and how we can help. We can give health or addiction issue. They have the very challenging role
of using their own experiences in working with others.
Rozel knows of no crisis network in the country with all

THE GOAL WAS TO BUILD these services and resources in one place. We do crisis
psychiatry, he says. We encounter the full rangeup to and
A NEW MODEL FOR CRISIS including people who are acutely suicidal, acutely homicidal,

INTERVENTION. SINCE or are unable to care for themselves. But we also want to
support the people who are having a bad day at work, having
OPENING IN 2008, THE trouble in their relationships, having trouble with neighbors,

CLINIC HAS PROVIDED or who just arent feeling right. One of the original slogans we
had as we rolled out the program was, Call before a crisis
MORE THAN ONE MILLION becomes a crisis.

SERVICES TO COUNTY
RESIDENTS. ROZEL KNOWS SERVICES THAT DELIVER

OF NO CRISIS NETWORK
M
ental illness is fairly WPICs programs offer a

IN THE COUNTRY WITH prevalent, with one in


four Americans meeting
wide variety of evidence-based
practices from housing support

ALL THESE SERVICES AND the criteria for a psychiatric


diagnosis each year. Even
and medication management to
diagnostically based treatment.
RESOURCES IN ONE PLACE. more experience trauma, stress,
or life circumstances that can
For example, theres a homeless
outreach team consisting of drug
challenge ones capacity to and alcohol specialists, a clinical
cope and may or may not lead coordinator, and an outreach
to psychiatric illness. Early nurse. Pitt psychiatry faculty also
intervention, using personal help run a mobile program that
and professional support, is provides medication for seriously
important to staying mentally mentally ill individuals at high
healthy. risk for psychiatric and physical
The re:solve Crisis Network illnesses, as well as unplanned
is just one of more than 50 hospitalizations. Services are
nonhospital behavioral health offered through clinics, in schools,
services operated by Western and even in peoples homes.
Psychiatric Institute and Clinic Confidential phone counseling,
(WPIC) that address crises as support, and connections to
well as acute and chronic illness. other services are all available
Designed to treat conditions by calling re:solve Crisis Network
across the lifespan from autism at 1-888-7-YOU-CAN.
to Alzheimers, more than
400,000 of these ambulatory
services are provided annually,
ROZEL reaching more than 32,000
individuals.

52
A SAFETY NET SCHWEITZER FELLOWS medical students, which doesnt
PROMOTE TEEN HEALTH make sense to me. If youre
AT SHUMAN

J
O
interested in pediatrics and dont
n a chilly Tuesday night,
know how a school nurses office
onathan R. Pletcher, MD, associate professor of the school gym is filled
works or what they can offer to
pediatrics, recalls talking with a patient at Allegheny with middle school-aged
students, youre missing a huge
Countys Shuman Juvenile Detention Center. This girls, moving from table
chunk of what the childs life is.
young adult had hearing loss, but he did not have to table in a scavenger hunt.
Several months later, Fang and
The game helps them learn
access to hearing aids or support for accommoda- collaborators hosted a Boys
about different health topics
tions, Pletcher says. His peers would sneak up Night Out, with a similar focus
relevant to their age group like
behind him and try to scare him. One time, this kid saw on health and growing boys.
healthy lifestyles, relationships,
someone out of the corner of his eye and knocked the person Third-year medical students
and puberty. Theyre partici-
out before he could taunt him. He was charged with assault Afshan Rizvi and Daniel Suter
pating in a community program
and sent to Shuman. This is only one example of how a young were also interested in health
called Girls Night Out, an event
education and tailored their
adult could really benefit from comprehensive services organized by third-year medical
shared Schweitzer fellowship to
counseling, help with his hearing and communication, and student Nancy Fang and school
be an interactive community
support for learning accommodations. nurses from the district. The
project. Both were familiar with
These services come as part of care provided by Pletcher and program is a portion of Fangs
community work before being
a team of health care workers at Shuman. The Pennsylvania Schweitzer fellowship project,
awarded their fellowships.
Department of Public Welfare mandates that young adults in part of the U.S. Albert Schweitzer
Among other experiences, Rizvi
detention centers receive routine medical and mental health Fellows Program.
had worked in the Birmingham
Since 1997, the Pittsburgh
services. Pletcher, along with Elizabeth Miller, MD, PhD, division Free Clinic (a walk-in clinic on
Schweitzer Fellows Program,
chief and associate professor of pediatrics, is clinical director Pittsburghs South Side run by a
one of 13 program sites across the
of the Division of Adolescent Medicine. The division has community partnership between
U.S., has been involving students
provided health care services at Shuman for the past 20 years. the Division of General Internal
from various local schools in
For medical students and residents, Shuman is a place to test Medicines Program for Health
serving vulnerable individuals
their new skills. Working with experts from Pitt and Western Care to Underserved Populations
and communities and developing
and the Salvation Army) for three
Psychiatric Institute and Clinic of UPMC, they receive training students leadership skills and
years prior to medical school,
in areas like adolescent mental health and learn how social commitments to community
and Suter worked with young
services and the juvenile justice system operate. service. Competitively chosen
adults who were homeless in
With med students and other trainees at his side, Pletcher from health-focused graduate
Montral. They decided to create
tries to help young adults consider behaviors that affect their student applicants in a variety
health education sessions for
health in the short term as well as chronic health concerns like of fields, each Schweitzer fellow
beneficiaries of the residential
seizure disorders, hearing loss, diabetes, sickle cell disease, receives a $2,000 stipend
rehabilitation program at the
to create and implement a
and long-term mental health problems. He says its not unusual Salvation Army Adult Rehabilita-
program to benefit underserved
for young men at the facility to be evaluated for hypertension, tion Center (ARC), which offers a
populations in the Pittsburgh
which is a clue to how stressful their lives have been before residential work therapy program
area over the course of one year.
coming to Shuman. Pletcher credits Miller with putting an for men ages 2165 who choose
Fang and others are part of a
emphasis on trauma-informed careunderstanding the impact to seek rehabilitation for drug
many-year history of Pitt medical
of trauma and how it affects the way these young people engage and alcohol addiction. The ARC
students receiving Schweitzer
also welcomes homeless men
with the world and health care professionals in particular. fellowships for diverse projects.
into its program.
Prior trauma in this population is almost universal, and it Fang was working on
We did a needs assessment
permeates every part of their lives, says Pletcher. Many youths community-based projects with
and asked them what topics they
have intergenerational family problems, including parents Elizabeth Miller, MD, PhD,
were interested in us covering
who are missing for a variety of reasons. associate professor of pediatrics
and used that as a basis for our
Pletcher and the health care team at Shuman do their and chief, Division of Adolescent
curriculum, says Suter. We go
best to connect young adults to a safety net of services in Medicine at Childrens Hospital of
one evening a week and give
Allegheny County. Many young people at Shuman have relied Pittsburgh of UPMC, and
one-hour sessions on different
considering different ideas for
on emergency rooms for health care and have had trouble health issues. We dont claim to
her fellowship. When Miller
accessing routine care for things like chronic conditions, know all the answers, but we try
mentioned to Fang that a
mental illness, and even hearing aids. to connect them with resources
local school district needed
Working with these young adults is challenging, but it is or information.
to redevelop a curriculum on
one of the most gratifying aspects of my career, says Pletcher. puberty, Fang found her project.
The challenges they face are immense, but they respond well My main focus was to develop
to support. These kids are true heroes whose strength as a relationship with the school
survivors of trauma can be developed so that they stay out nurses and school health
of the adult prison system. programs, says Fang. I think
there are few programs that
connect school nurses with

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 53


N U R T U R E PA R TN E R S H I P S \\ CO M M U N IT Y

54
FOR MANY, THE CLINIC
COMES TO REPRESENT
A SORT OF TOUCHSTONE
IN THEIR DEVELOPMENT
AS PHYSICIANSA PLACE
WHERE THEY ARE
ENTRUSTED WITH AN
OPPORTUNITY TO THE PEOPLE IN YOUR
DEVELOP INTO SKILLED NEIGHBORHOOD
AND COMPASSIONATE

T
CLINICIANS. he Birmingham Free Clinic (BFC) holds a special place
in the hearts and minds of faculty, students, and alumni of
the School of Medicine. Founded in 1994, BFC is the only
free, walk-in health clinic in Pittsburgh. It offers acute and
primary care, diagnostics, specialty care, Spanish-lan-
guage clinics, medications, health education, and
smoking cessation programs to uninsured and vulnerable people. All
clinical services at BFC are provided by a volunteer staff consisting of
University of Pittsburgh faculty, UPMC staff and residents, and
students from the Schools of Medicine and Pharmacy. The clinic is
run by Pitts Program for Health Care to Underserved Populations
(a program administratively housed within the Division of General
Internal Medicine) and the Salvation Army of Pittsburgh.
Medical students can volunteer for clinic-related duties at any
time during med school. Most students in each first-year class
volunteer. As they matriculate through med school, many students
come to feel a depth of gratitude to the patients and staff at BFC.
For many, the clinic comes to represent a sort of touchstone in their
development as physiciansa place where they are entrusted with
an opportunity to develop into skilled and compassionate clinicians.
BFC regularly hosts a traveling clinic known as the Guerrilla Eye
Service (GES), which is funded by foundation grants and UPMC
SECOND-YEAR MED and run by Evan Jake Waxman, MD, PhD, associate professor and
STUDENT PATRICK vice chair for medical and resident education in the Department of
POLSUNAS TALKS WITH A Ophthalmology. Wherever GES pops up, a rotating cadre of medical
PATIENT AT BIRMINGHAM students and ophthalmology residents offers free vision care to
FREE CLINIC.
underserved populations. They test for cataracts and glaucoma, and
they even fill eyeglass prescriptions for free. Taking care of people
who otherwise wouldnt get eye care is very important, says
Waxman, adding that its also important for med students and
residents to get involved in community outreach.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 55


N U R T U R E PA R TN E R S H I P S \\ CO M M U N IT Y

MATCH MADE found that Pittsburgh would benefit from

IN PITTSBURGH having a crisis nursery. The survey revealed


that 14 percent of caregivers had left

W
their children in high-risk situations when
hile searching caregivers needed emergency care; of
for a topic for her those children left in high-risk situations,
Scholarly Project, a 10 percent suffered an injury or
signature feature of experienced behavioral problems; and
the Pitt curriculum, 81 percent of caregivers said they would
then-medical use a crisis nursery if one were available.
student Anna Marie Lewarchik, MD, Lewarchik, Williams, and Murdock wanted
happened to be on a pediatric rotation. the crisis nursery to be a part of the
In the outpatient clinic, a mother of three community, a place where families felt
was exhausted and in obvious distress supported and where theyd receive
about how to care and provide for her nonjudgmental help in times of crisis.
children. One of the clinics pediatricians, They wanted it to be not only a safe place
who had recently moved from Minnesota, for children but a place where parents or
recommended that Lewarchik call a crisis caregivers could receive referrals to address
nursery for help. Intrigued and eager to chronic concerns to protect the long-term
help, Lewarchik learned that a crisis stability of their families.
nursery is a safe place for children to stay In April 2014, Jeremiahs Place opened
while their families negotiate tough times, (named after a child in foster care who
whether its the hospitalization of a wouldve benefited from a crisis nursery),
child and no friends or family to watch cofounded by Williams, Murdock, and Eileen
the siblings, needing to work when child Sharbaugh, educational consultant with
care arrangements fall through at the the Homeless Childrens Education Fund.
last minute, or, as in this mothers case, The nursery is free for children ages 6 and
physical and emotional exhaustion. When under and is open 24 hours a day, seven
Lewarchik discovered that Pittsburgh days a week at the Kingsley Association in
had no crisis nursery, she found both her Pittsburghs Larimer neighborhood.
Scholarly Project and a personal mission. The crisis nursery is all about protecting
Lewarchik was happy to match in children, says Murdock. We know from
Pittsburgh for a combined four-year research that toxic stress, which is sustained,
internal medicine and pediatrics residency severe stress, is not only difficult for children
so she could continue working on the to experience, but it leads to higher risks
nursery. She met with local physicians of diabetes and other diseases and changes
Lynne L. Williams, MD, PhD, and Tammy in epigenetics and the brain, among
Murdock, MD, both School of Medicine other effects.
alumnae, who helped develop the idea Im glad that my Scholarly Project
into a reality. With the help of three fellow resulted in a crisis nursery. I wish I could
residents and a Community Access to find that woman from the clinic and let her
Child Health grant from the American know we have one now, says Lewarchik,
Academy of Pediatrics, Lewarchik now chief of the combined internal
completed a needs assessment and medicinepediatrics program at UPMC.

THE CRISIS
NURSERY
IS ALL ABOUT
PROTECTING
CHILDREN.

56
With grateful appreciation for their generosity, we
acknowledge the following individual, corporate, and
foundation donors whose contributions of $500 or more
to the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,
University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, and Western
Psychiatric Institute and Clinic of UPMC between
July 1, 2012, and June 30, 2013, have supported us in
our academic, research, and clinical missions.

THANK EVERY DOLLAR


GIVEN TO THE

YOU SCHOOL OF MEDICINE


RESONATES IN
OUR CLASSROOMS,
RESEARCH LABS,
CLINICS, AND

T
YOUR CONTINUING SUPPORT
COMMUNITY.
he University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine is a WE ARE DEEPLY
dynamic institution that strives to not only keep but
also to set the pace in the field of medicine. GRATEFUL FOR
We are truly grateful for the generous support of THIS SUPPORT AND
our donors and the lasting impact that their gifts will
have on this institution. The mission of the School of PLEASED TO RECOGNIZE
Medicine is to educate the finest clinicians and investigators THOSE WHO HAVE
and to conduct cutting-edge biomedical research. To be successful
requires nothing less than outstanding creativity and leadership. We CONTRIBUTED
think strategically in order to make the most of student scholarship SO GENEROUSLY.
support and research funding. C LY D E B . J O N E S I I I
We invite you to join us as we strive to make the future brighter.
By partnering with the School of Medicine, contributors play a vital
role in the development of the medical school and the success of
students and faculty.

CLYDE B. JONES III


Vice Chancellor for Health Sciences Development
President, University of Pittsburgh/UPMC Medical
and Health Sciences Foundation

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 57


D O N O R S \\ I N D IV I D UA L

INDIVIDUALS Mary M. Berger Seth J. Brufsky Sandra S. and Richard A. Cohen


Thomas J. Berical Richard E. Buckley Andrea Cole
Suzanne A. Abla and Adnan A. Albert M. Bernath Jr., MD Diane C. Budd, RPh, and Robert William George Combs, MD
Abla, MD Dominic N. Bertucci Michael Budd, MD William S. Conover II
Sally K. Abramo Margaret J. Biddle Charitable Trust Estate of Dawn C. Bulle Vaseleke H. Constandy Memorial Trust
William J. Adams Sheryl Billman and David Karl Phillip M. Bunting Thomas G. Cooney Sr.
Vincent C. Albo, MD Billman, MD Alan P. Burckin, MD *James J. Corrigan Jr., MD
Margaret N. Alex and Howard M. Anne H. Bilos and John Bilos, MD Jane and Don Burke Charles L. Cost
Alex, Esq. Marcel Binstock, MD Tracy Robin Seewald, MD, and Joseph J. Cottrell Jr.
J. Rich Alexander Patter Birsic and Thomas E. Birsic, Esq. Steven A. Burton, MD
Patricia Krainz, MD, and Bruce M.
William C. Alexander Alice C. Bittner and L. Frank Bittner Jr. Lawrence S. Busch Coull, MD
Nicholas J. Alfano John F. Bitzer III Sylvia Amdur Busis and Sidney N. Marion L. and William U. Couzens
Busis, MD
Jane France and Christian Allison Todd S. Black Beth and Walter Cox
Ilse R. and Frank Buzzanca
Cheryl and Bruce A. Americus Ruth E. Blake James J. Coyne, MD
Ann W. Cahouet and Frank V.
Patrice and Robert Americus Terry Blechman Donald J. Crammond
Cahouet, Trustee
Frances A. Armitage and Charles S. Maryrose Benkoski Block and Leo H. Criep Jr., MD
Joseph E. Calderone Jr., MD
Armitage Sr. Robert Carl Block, MD Molly and Thomas G. Crooks
C. Dale Cameron
Falk K. Arnheim, MD Christine A. Bloom, MD Robert W. Cruickshank
Mary E. and Carl L. Campbell
Peter M. Augustine Leland S. Blough Sr., MD Paul M. Cryder
Everett A. Cantrell, MD
Alan Arthur Axelson, MD Patricia U. Bluestone and Charles D. Merit Cudkowicz
Bluestone, MD Donald C. Cappetta
Ronald Bachowski William M. Curtin, MD
Eva Tansky Blum, Esq., Trustee Janet F. Cappy
Thelma Ilyas Badwey and Robert E. *Margaret Shadick Cyert
Badwey, MD Richard M. Boccabella Christina and Carlos M. Cardoso
Mary L. Czmiel
Jason Baker Nadine E. Bognar Michael T. Carenzo
Laila M. Darhouse-Ziady
Emilie Zielinski Baker and Stephen Donald K. Boswell Beatrice Anne Carlin, MD, and
Barry Edward Carlin, PhD Randi Dauler and L. Van V. Dauler Jr.
Duane Baker, MD D.H. Bovbjerg, PhD
Victoria M. Carrigan and Patrick Jamini Vincent Davies
Airic Balestra James N. Bower, MD
John Carrigan, DMD Nancy N. Davison and Thomas M.
Aldo W. Balestra David H. Bowman, MD
*Margaret A. Carver, MD Davison, MD
Richard N. Baney, MD Sergey V. Boychuck
Joseph Eugene Casabona Michael A. Dean Jr.
Eugene Bang John E. Boyle
Margaretha L. Casselbrant, MD Randall S. Dearth
Estate of Alfred R. Barbour Susan and Michael Boyle
Richard G. Cassoff, MD *Patsy F. DeCesare
Wendy and David E. Barensfeld Dr. Rhonda Metter Brand and
Frank V. Castello, MD Nicholas J. DeIuliis
Walter D. Barker Randall E. Brand, MD
George W. Causey Trust William T. Delfyett
Raymond L. Barry Jr. William R. Brandon, MD
Robert C. Challener, MD Geraldine W. Dellenback and
Susan J. Bartlett and David L. Barry David Brause, MD Dr. Robert J. Dellenback
Bartlett, MD Denise C. Charron-Prochownik, PhD
Mark Breck Peter J. Dellovade
Edward J. Barvick, MD Estate of Margaret Chavis
Barry M. Brenner, MD Alida C. DeRubertis and Frederick R.
Alecia Moyer-Basso and Ronald Shirley M. Chervenick and Paul A.
Elizabeth R. Brenner and Richard P. DeRubertis, MD
Basso, Esq. Chervenick, MD
Brenner, MD Malindi Davies and Raj Dhaka
James E. Bauer, MD Richard A. Chesnik, Esq.
Nancy B. Brent, MD, and David A. John C. DiDonato
Marian C. Baur Brent, MD Ben Chigier
Joseph A. Dill
David J. Becker, MD Harmar D. Brereton, MD Gertrude Kalnow and Homer D.W.
Chisholm Grace D. Dimitroff and Douglas W.
Dorothy B. Beckwith and G. Janet M. Briggs Dimitroff, Esq.
Nicholas Beckwith III, Trustee Alan David Christianson, MD
Mindy K. Brodt *Lee C. Dobler, MD
Jane P. Beering and Steven C. *Edward S. Churchill
Maya M. Brooks, DMD, and Jean W. Donaldson
Beering, MD, Trustee Steven Scott Brooks, MD Roberta M. Churilla
Diemthuy Duc Bui, MD, and
Mary Ann Beers David E. Brougher, MD Patricia N. Cingle and George
Gerald Paul Douglas, PhD
Bryan S. Beimel Cingle III
Clarence W. Brown Jr., MD Sara L. Downey and James L.
Judith Crowley Bellin and Marvin L. Tanyia H. Clagette and Vaughn S.
Jeffrey S. Brown, MD Downey, MD
Bellin, MD Clagette, MD
Betsy Levine-Brown and Marc L. Kathleen W. Dunworth and Robert G.
Deborah J. Benko and Michael Susan Levis Clancy
Brown Dunworth, MD
Anthony Benko Sr., DMD Andrew J. Clark
Russell J. Bruemmer Patricia K. Eagon, PhD
Rene J. Benson Ryan T. Clark
Jill Brufsky and Adam Lowrie C. Ebbert
Michael J. Berchou Brufsky, MD, PhD Gregory J. Clawson
Kimberley Johnson Eberlein and
Malcolm Mark Berenson, MD Connie W. and Bruce T. Cleevely Timothy Joseph Eberlein, MD
Mary and Jay W. Cleveland Jr. Stephen D. Edelman
Verna Cleveland and William H. Marjorie Edelstein
Cleveland II, MD
Timothy Hammer Eisaman, MD
Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of these records. Brian T. Coen
Tracy and Lee E. Elder
Any errors or omissions may be brought to the attention of the Melissa Reimel Cognetti, MD, and
Peter G. Ellis, MD
David Michael Cognetti, MD
University of Pittsburgh and UPMC Medical and Health Sciences Laura Ellsworth, Esq.
Carrie and H. Adam Cohen
Foundation: 412-647-3379 or bac83@pitt.edu. Perry H. Engstrom Jr., MD
Leslie Ann Rodnan, MD, and John B.
Cohen, MD

58 * B E FO R E A N I N DI VI DUA L S NAM E I N DI CATE S TH E P E RS O N I S DE C EAS E D


Cheryl Entress and T. Roger Lydia C. Contis, MD, and Athan Jean A. Hartman *Judith Hoffman Kasdan and
Entress, DMD Georgiades, MD Caryn Hasselbring, MD Richard Bruce Kasdan, MD
Eric R. Erlbaum, MD Barbara S. Gerber Brockton J. Hefflin, MD Frank E. Kass
Dorothy and Mark Erwin Murry S. Gerber Ruth Champlin Hefflin Patricia J. and William E. Kassling
Karen M. Esposito Rachel L. Gerstein Barbara A. Heigl Mary Lou Katz and David Leland
Anthony B. Evnin, PhD Paula and Martin G. Giglio Katz, MD
Gertrude E. Hellerman Charitable
Grace M. Faber and Christopher N. Paul Giusti Trust Fund Ralph W. Kaufmann Charitable
Faber, MD Remainder Unitrust
Tammy S. Shields and Mark Carlos Hellmund Jr.
Lillian F. Fabry and Edward I. Thomas Gladwin, MD Estate of Dorothy P. and Ralph W.
Ricardo Hellmund
Fabry Jr., MD Kaufmann
E. Jeanne Gleason, Trustee *Theodore R. Helmbold, MD
Gloria and Michael Fader Peter J. Keim, MD
Lee Glunt and J. Roger Glunt, Trustee William F. Henkel, Esq.
James R. Faeder Amy M. and Dennis J. Kelleher
Carlotta M. Goetz Sarah J. Heppenstall and C. Talbot
Mary Snider Farley and Emerson D. Daniel L. Kelly
Julie A. Maloney and John D. Heppenstall Jr.
Farley Jr., MD Goetz, Esq. James E. Kelly, Esq.
Georgia C. Hernandez and Robert M.
Margot L. Watt and Sebastian W. Michael S. Gold, PhD Hernandez, Trustee Nancy Davidson and Thomas Kensler
Fasanello Thomas L. Kerber
Sandra Green Goodman and Lee S. Dwight E. Heron, MD
Christine M. Fulton and George A. Goodman Dusty Elias Kirk
John B. Hibbs Jr., MD
Fechter
Thomas P. Gordon J. Craig Hill Erika P. Kirwin
Gerald E. Feldman
Dale E. and Franklyn R. Gorell Margaret Hill and John Hill, MD Friends of Autumn Klein
*Albert B. Ferguson Jr., MD
Bradley Graham Thomas M. Hill Ruth Ann Eisner Klein and
Joan L. Ferlan and Lawrence Eugene J. Klein
Irene W. and Thomas C. Graham William Talbott Hillman
Ferlan, MD
Elizabeth G. Graham and William L. Kathryn and Cary Klein
Arlene Butera Ferrante Friends of Gary Wayne Hirsch
Graham, MD Renee Arturo and Geb Kleiner
Laura K. Ferris, MD, PhD, and William A. Hite
Jennifer Rubin Grandis, MD, and Anne Marie Czyz-Klemens, DMD,
Robert L. Ferris, MD, PhD, FACS *John A. Hodak, MD
Donald J. Grandis, MD and Lee James Klemens, MD
Marcia Ruth McInnes, MD, and Susan S. Hogarty
Thomas B. Grealish Dustin Kliner, MD
Rocco A. Fiato, PhD Kathleen N. and Lawrence P. Holleran
Alan Davis Greene Esther Klionsky and Dr. Bernard
Milton Fine Revocable Trust Catherine B. and Bruce E. Holman
Sara R. Greenhill, MD Klionsky
Caryn Fine, MD Sy M. Holzer, Trustee
*Mary Jane and Carl G. Grefenstette Cheryl Lynn and Douglas E. Knoch
Brett R. Finsilver Elmer J. Holzinger, MD
Edward K. Greif Koch Family
Dr. Judith Albert and Anthony B. *Thomas O. Hornstein
Dr. Elaine M. Greifenstein Valerie Koch
Fiorillo
Dr. Paul R. Hubbert Kenneth J. Kocher
Andrew C. Fisher Gary Grelick
Nancy J. Hudak Samuel A. Kocoshis, MD
Edith H. Fisher Sara M. Bradley, MD, and
Jeffrey R. Grieb Aura R. Hulme Beth Ann Hellerstedt, MD, and
Audrey Hillman Fisher and
Carl William Groppe Jr., MD Patti L. Hunt Darren Kocs, MD
Timothy O. Fisher
James R. Grundtisch *David W. Hunter George J. Koenig
James R. Fitterling
Anita P. Courcoulas, MD, and Ira J. Calvin T. Iida, MD Susan P. Kondziolka and Douglas S.
Kimdung Thi Nguyen and James P.
Gumberg, Trustee Nancy J. Ing Kondziolka, MD
Flahive
Linda J. and Richard P. Gustafson J. Fraser Jackson, MD Shirley M. Kottler and Richard J.
Sally R. Fleming
Kottler Sr.
Lore M. Flickinger Alan R. Guttman Estate of Irene Jakab
David Kremen
Edward L. Foley, MD Barney C. Guttman Beverly T. and Andrew J. Jarabak
Nancy S. Krieger
Wayne Fong Marcus J. Haemmerle, MD Adele M. Jasion
Lawrence M. Kulla, MD
Wendy B. and Stephen A. Fornoff William J. Hagenah Rosemarie C. Jew and Edward W.
Jew Jr., MD James V. Kunkel, MD
Bruce A. Foster Gretchen R. and James R. Haggerty
Farris Thomas Johnson Jr., MD Linda B. Kuzon and William M.
Steve Fox Jennifer L. Plombon and Stephen J.
Kuzon, MD, PhD
Haines, MD Janis C. Johnson and Jonas T.
James W. Fredlock Thomas A. Labert
Lynn Hudson Hale and Wayne Johnson, MD
Christina C. Friday Fadi G. Lakkis, MD
Andrew Hale, MD LaVonne C. and Glen R. Johnson
Thomas P. Frizzell Richard D. Lalley
Walter Haleski Loretta Johnson
Hilda Pang Fu, MLS, MPM, and Verna R. Laman and David Laman, MD
Roy Wyatt Haley Gerald S. Johnston, MD
Freddie H. K. Fu, MD
Vicki B. and F. Robert Hall Marilyn S. Johnstone and Graham F. Frances S. Lancaster and Stewart L.
Frank B. Fuhrer III Lancaster, MD
Anthony Halli Johnstone, MD
Robert Scott Furman, MD Margaret D. Larkins-Pettigrew, MD
Hamill Revocable Trust Kamal K. Kalia, MD
Jill Fusaro Leslie Rodgers Laufman, MD
Nancy Hamilton Gayle Louise Tissue and Yiannis
Jennifer A. Gabler Kaloyeropoulos Brenda Ross, MD, and Charles
Tasi Handelsman and Gordon L.B.
Henry J. Gailliot Elaine Scheiner Kamil, MD, and Edward Laurito, MD
Handelsman, MD
Lisa and Stephen D. Gallagher I. Jeffery Kamil, MD Lynn M. and Dale S. Lazar
Andrea G. and *Bruce E. Haney
Patrick A. Gallagher Anisa Ibrahim Kanbour, MD John Stephen Lazo, PhD
Barbara J. and Robert W. Hannan
William R. Gallagher Irene Getzie Kane, PhD, and Mark R. Leadbetter, MD
Judith Puckett Hannon and
Glenn D. Gardner, MD Kevin M. Kane, MD Herschel Ronald Leapman, MD
Michael John Hannon, Esq.
James D. Garraux, Esq. Timothy L. Kane Steffi Oesterreich, PhD, and Adrian
Charles W. Harbaugh
Kathleen Geffel James D. Kang, MD Lee, PhD
John L. Harrington, MD
Thomas R. George George S. Kappakas, MD Alberta M. Lee
C. Scott Harrison, MD
Rita Karp Kathleen M. Lee and Robert E. Lee, MD

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 59


D O N O R S \\ I N D IV I D UA L

HOWARD N. LANG, MD, AND CAROL E. LANG, MS


IN SUPPORT OF OUTSTANDING EDUCATION

T
he days rain and clouds soften the light passing pathology at UPMC Presbyterian for 34 years and especially
through the living room where Howard and Carol enjoyed the study and treatment of swallowing disorders.
Lang stand in front of a piano. Theyre narrating I enjoyed doing the testing and the therapy and working
the details of several photographs on the wall. with stroke patients, she says. I worked in every unit in the
They pause at a portrait of a bride sitting in a hospital, but my primary assignment was neurology and
stunning white dress and long veil and remark neurosurgical services.
that the print shows no signs of aging. Shes a frustrated neurologist, Dr. Lang teases.
As they talk, the couple radiates a quiet adoration for Both attribute their career successes to the quality of
each other. They met at the University of Pittsburgh as education they received, and they want to support others
graduate studentshe in medical school and she in speech who seek the same outstanding education. They are
pathology and audiologyafter Dr. Lang and his best friend long-time donors to Pitt and have endowed scholarships in
switched lists of potential girlfriends. The name Carol both the Schools of Medicine and of Health and Rehabilita-
was at the top. tion Sciences for students from Southwestern Pennsylvania.
They married, graduated, and eventually moved to We were fortunate to attend grad school when we did,
New York City. There, Dr. Lang finished his residency and says Mrs. Lang. Its such an expensive proposition now.
Mrs. Lang worked with stroke patients as a speech patholo- Dr. Lang agrees and says, It was the right thing for
gist at New York Universitys Rusk Institute. Dr. Lang then us to do.
served in the U.S. Air Force Strategic Air Commands medical In the meantime, the Langs will continue pursuing their
corps in Plattsburgh, N.Y., and after leaving the service, love of travel, spending time with familyand their devotion
moved his family back to Pittsburgh. to each other.
The Langs have lived and worked in Pittsburgh ever since,
enjoying rewarding careers. Dr. Lang, an internist, joined a
practice with an active allergy program, and after further
specialized training, he became board certified in that area.
When I started out, we still made house calls, he says.
I enjoyed the interaction with patients. I practiced for so
long that Id take care of generations of families. Thats a
very satisfying experience.
Dr. Lang was on the staff of UPMC Presbyterian and
Montefiore and was a clinical associate professor of medicine
at the University of Pittsburgh. When her daughter was
4 and her son was a year-and-a-half, Mrs. Lang returned
to work outside the home. She and her husband sometimes
ran into each other at the hospital. She worked in speech

60 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE


Susan Leff and Louis E. Leff, MD Joseph C. Maroon, MD Cedric B. Miller, MD John E. Ott, MD
Stanley J. Lehman, Esq. Helen B. and Curtis R. Marquard Barbara T. Miller and Charles J. Charleen T. Chu, MD, PhD, and
Marina Persic Lehn, Esq., and Marian K. Marquis, MD, and Miller, DDS Tim D. Oury, MD, PhD
Kenneth M. Lehn, PhD William Edward Marquis Edward E. Miller Sr. Joyce A. Pacek and Robert Francis
Anne Gendler and David Leib Amy K. Marsh Linda Perlstein and John Miller Pacek, MD
Cynthia M. Leive Joan Marshall Natalie D. Miltenberger Arnold Palmer 2005 Revocable Trust
Diane M. Faust and Barry C. Marjorie H. Marshall Raj Mittal, MD Arnold D. Palmer
Lembersky, MD Sheldon Marstine Barbara Belle Mittleman, MD Mary Panitch and Howard Barry
Carol Lentz Panitch, MD
Shirley Hobbs Martin Memorial Fund Sheila M. Mollica
Lori E. Lesser Vicki Parada
James C. Martin Jeffrey L. Moody
Margaret M. LaManna, MD, and Kathleen and Demetrios T. Patrinos
*Virginia M. Martin Ernest E. Moore Jr., MD
Manuel M. Levin Suzanne O. Paul and Richard Paul, MD
Josephine B. Martinez Yuan Chang, MD, and Patrick S.
Janet M. Levin Moore, MD Guy M. Pauline
John Mary
Kerry Allison Bron, MD, and Delynne J. Myers, MD, and John Lynda and Kenneth Payne
Gail Reede Jones, MD, and
Robert C. Levin Jefferson Moossy, MD Arthur E. Pellegrini, MD
Jesse Mason
Sally M. Levin Joseph T. Moran, Esq. Grace Guo and Lee Peng
Mark E. Mason
Sandra Levin *Vickie A. and Gary Morrell Susan J. and Gregg Martin Perelman
Steven M. Massaro
Linda S. Melada and Arthur S. BeeJee Morrison Anna A. Peris, PharmD, and Marshal D.
James Matheny
Levine, MD Peris, MD
Carol E. Roach Mattes, MD Douglass A. Morrison, MD, PhD
Claire B. and Larry Levine Dolores Nejak Perri and John A.
Frederick S. McAlpine, MD Donald A. Mosites
Jordan A. Levy Perri, MD
Clyde Edward McAuley, MD Eileen T. and Robert W. Moulton
Lois Galtz Levy Rahman M. Perveiz
Jackson H. McCarter, MD Elizabeth H. Moy, MD
Stanley Hurwick Levy, MD Teresa I. Peters and Jeffery David
Bruce A. McClane, PhD Ryan E. Moynihan
Thomas J. Lewis Jr., MD Peters, Esq.
A. Gregory McClure, MD Patricia Anne Petrick, MD, and
Barbara Barnes, MD, MS, and Terrie and Rod L. Piatt
William W. Mullins Jr., MD
Richard Ley Kevin M. McCluskey, MD Kenneth R. Piercy
Ronald V. Mumbray Jr.
Henry M. Liao John R. McConaghy, MD Diane M. and Michael P. Pochron
*Alvin S. Mundel
Cynthia P. Liefeld, PhD, and Paul Anne B. and William O. McConnel Stephen J. Pollack, MD
Anita Cecilia Murcko, MD
Albert Liefeld, MD Barbara McCormick Kristen M. Pollock and Bruce E.
Larry A. Murdock
*Thomas E. Lietman The Honorable Samuel A. Pollock, MD
McCullough Patricia Randolph and Ernest M.
Laura E. Lillien, PhD Barbara G. Poolos and C. James
Myers, MD
Shelley Lipton, PhD, and Jeffrey Nancy A. McDonald Poolos, MD
J. Joseph Myers
Marc Lipton Antoinette J. McGinley Alissa H. Porter, MD, and Dr. Everett F.
Barbara Deutsch Nadel and Porter
Timothy Yen-Chia Liu, MD Frances G. and James W. McGlothlin
Alan Marc Nadel, MD
Penny Loeb, MD, and John Maxwell James J. McGrath Palmer F. Posvar and Wesley W.
Marlene Naft Posvar Jr.
Loeb, MD Jane Love McGraw and James H.
James H. Nassif James L. Poth Jr., MD
Michael J. Lonsway McGraw IV
Joseph P. Nedresky, MD Janet M. Potter
Shelley and Douglas J. Lucas Carol Z. McGrevin, PhD, and
Gene R. McGrevin Patricia A. Newingham Kimberly L. Potts
Gary R. Luchini
Christine L. McHenry, MD Ann K. and William Rankin Newlin Deborah L. and Anthony M. Prentiss
Jill Noaker Luck and Henry E. Luck Jr.
David McKamish Joseph T. Newsome, DVM Frederick A. Prinz
Patricia E. Sudnik and William V.
Luneburg Thomas J. McKinney John A. Nice Donna Puleio, MD
Julianne M. Lunsford and L. Lisa K. McLain Gene A. Niethamer Dale Pysher
Dade Lunsford, MD Julie S. McLaughlin and Mark R. Theresa L. Nimick-Whiteside, PhD Mindy Goldstein Rabinowitz and Jay
Sherwood S. Lutz McLaughlin, MD Estate of Jeanne L. Noaker Steven Rabinowitz, MD
William J. Lyons Martha H. McLaurin Denis L. Nolan Ronald Rabinowitz, MD
Kathryn L. Macielak and James R. Deborah K. McMahon, MD Megan M. Noll Dr. Margaret V. Ragni, MD, MPH
Macielak, MD Heather McMillen Kevin Nord Lubna Rahman and Mohammed
Doreen A. MacMillan Kathleen K. McMillen and Stuart Nord Pervaiz Rahman, MD
Michael D. Magidson Robert E. McMillen, MD John L. Norris, MD Dorothy L. Raizman, Esq.
Joan Magister Patric R. McPoland, MD Dennis E. Notareschi Barbara Burnham Rankin and
George Jerome MaGovern Jr., MD Kathleen and David McSorley Fred Martin Rankin III
Barbara and Michael Novogradac
Reena Mahal and Baljeet S. Bryan J. McVerry Vesna Rapic-Otrin, PhD
John S. Oehrle, MD
Mahal, MD George E. Meanor David Rath
James F. OKeefe Jr., MD
Amy Malaney William J. Medica Diana Mrvos Rath and Frank
Lois A. Pounds Oliver, MD
Stephanie F. Mallinger and Eugene Rath Jr.
John L. Mehltretter Eric C. Olson
Bernard Mallinger, OD Lillian Spang Rath
Richard Melman Brian J. OMara
Henry J. Mankin, MD Norman C. Ray Trust
Mary Ann Wolak Michelis, MD Ellen M. Ormond, PhD
Gavin Mann James I. Raymond, MD
Dominic and Jean Migliorato Mark B. Orringer, MD
Richard M. Mann, MD Family Trust Margaret E. Reidy, MD
Jonathan Ira Orwitz, MD
Diane A. and Chronis Hazi Manolis Philip J. Migliore, MD Scott C. Reinhart, MD
Sally Goodyear Osborne, MD
Alvin Markovitz, MD Katherina A. Miller Trust David O. Remmert
Kathleen A. Osterrieder
Stanley and Nikol Marks Wendy Jacobson, MD, and Andrew H. Emelie Renziehausen Trust
Sandy and Gene OSullivan
Frank Irwin Marlowe, MD Miller, MD Robert T. Resley

* B E F OR E A N I N DIVI DUA LS NAME I N D I CATES TH E P ERS ON I S D EC EAS ED 61


D O N O R S \\ I N D IV I D UA L

Susan Lynn Greenspan, MD, and Stewart Sell, MD Susan R. Stewart and George L. Friends of Kathy Vetere
Neil M. Resnick, MD Thomas J. Semanchik Stewart II Jay Vetere
Alene G. Reynolds Trust Katherine A. Servich Mary N. Stewart RoxAnne and David K. Voelker
Barry R. Reznick, MD Michael Sewell Marcia M. Stewart and Mervin S. Ryan Vogel
James H. Rice Stewart, MD
Patricia A. Shaffer Kathryn and William Voss
Anthony R. Ricottone, MD Glenn E. Stinson
Joan D. Shanahan Justin J. Vujevich, MD
Harold Riggle Bertrand L. Stolzer, MD
William Guy Sharra, MD Christopher J. Walsh, MD
C. Daniel Riggs Kerry B. Stone, MD, and Frank Stone
Michael A. Shay Teri R. Walsh and Daniel Bernard
Estate of Paul M. Rike, MD H. Donald Stork Walsh, MD
Barbara S. Shear and Herbert S.
Robert C. Douthitt Shear, Trustee Carol A. Strausbaugh Deborah A. Walsh
Julie S. Roberts Stanley E. Shearer John W. Struzziery Mason Walsh Jr.
Jennifer G. Gotto, MD, and Jason P. Sheehan, MD Laura A. Sudarsky, MD, FACS Dean E. Walters
Mark Roberts, MD Bonnie E. Shelkrot and Joel W. Brian Sukitch Anne L. Washburn, MD, and W.
Marc B. Robertshaw Shelkrot, MD Nancy Nan-Szu Sun, MD Kenneth Washburn Jr., MD
Janet C. Rocco Gracia Venetos Sheptak and Peter E. Elizabeth Lindsay and John P. Surma Jonathan H. Waters
David M. Roderick Jr. Sheptak, MD Robert J. Swansiger, MD Lee A. Wawrzynski and Paul E.
Roesch Family Charitable Trust Gene V. Sherman, MD David P. Swanson Wawrzynski II, MD
Jane Roesch Cynthia M. Shestak and Kenneth C. Nancy M. Swensen, MD, and Harold E. Jonathan T. Webber
Shestak, MD Swensen, MD Lawrence R. Wechsler, MD
Ann A. Rogers
Paul R. Shine Christine A. Sypien Janet F. Wei and Lawrence M.
Sandra B. Rogers
Mercedes G. Shoemaker Bradley Taback Wei, MD
Sharon C. and James Edward Rohr
Ivan A. Shulman, MD Cynthia L. Talmadge Jesse Allen Weigel, MD
Stefania Ferrarese Romoff and
Jeffrey A. Romoff William J. Siar, MD Rita J. Tansky and Burton M. Tansky, Joan I. Weinstein and Sheldon A.
Rachel M. Sideman-Kurtz Trustee Weinstein, MD
Greta Rooney and Arthur J. Rooney II
Estate of Judith E. Siegel Baum Judith Tapper and Alan James Judith Weintraub
Maxine Kahn Rosen and Ronald
Rosen, MD Lance H. Sieger, MD Tapper, MD Gisela Weis and Konrad M. Weis, PhD
Louisa S. Rosenthal Susan Siems Barry S. Tatar, MD Arlene P. Weisman and Richard A.
Marcia J. Taub Weisman, MD
Cynthia L. Roth Judy A. Sigal
Ronald H. Taub Laura Stevenson Weiss and Kurt R.
Diane D. Rowe and Clifford R. Laura Jean Sill and David C. Sill, MD
Weiss, MD
Rowe Jr. Benjamin Silverman Esther F. Teplitz Trust
Marilyn B. and Norman B.
John P. Rumschik Virginia C. Simmons and Richard P. Robert G. Terreberry
Weizenbaum
Timothy G. Rupert Simmons, Trustee Joyce and Vincent Tese
Patience D. Wessel
Jane Curle Rust and James O. Rust Karen Rebecca Simon, MD Harold D. Thomas Jr., MD
Joan Wheeler
Richard J. Saab, MD Gurmukh Singh, MD, PhD, MBA Ann E. Thompson, MD
Nancy E. Wheeler
Karl William Salatka, MD Sheila Small and Dr. Bernard E. Small Sara B. Thompson
R. James White III, MD, PhD
E. Ronald Salvitti, MD Walter C. Smith Diane S. Thompson, MD, and
Marina V. N. Whitman, PhD, and
Pablo Jose Sanchez, MD Edgar M. Snyder, Esq. Todd Thompson, MD
Robert F. Whitman, PhD
Athena Sarris Sally M. and Lee F. Snyder John A. Thonet
Dr. Alan L. Whitney
Belinda Savage-Edwards, MD Sandy Gerson Snyder Arlyn Thorson
Margaret and James E. Wilkes
Robert A. Savarino Judith Soberman, MD Susan Mitchell Dunmire, MD, and
Gloria Kohl Wilkins and Robert H.
Samuel Aaron Tisherman, MD
Marion Weinman Schafer and Lenette M. Solano and Francis X. Wilkins, MD
Irwin A. Schafer, MD Solano Jr., MD Leigh Tison Charitable Trust
Sheila Duignan and Michael I. Wilkins
Michael J. Scheel, MD Therese and Gene A. Solomon Janet Gillespie Titus, MD
Charles C. Williams Jr., MD
Mikell Schenck and A. William Salvador Somaza, MD Laura Tomko
Valerie Trott-Williams and John P.
Schenck III Emily M. and Nicholas A. Kathy P. Tosh and Joseph N. Williams, MD
Nancy Bernstein and Robert E. Soonthornchai Tosh III, Esq.
John S. Williamson Jr.
Schoen, MD, MPH Kenneth J. Spangler Richard T. Trackler, MD
James Arthur Wilson, MD
Seth E. Schofield Jeffrey W. Spear, Esq. Michael Tranovich, MD
Libby F. Wilson, MD
Kimberly B. Schriver Elaine Specter, Esq., and Thomas J. Tredici, MD
Robert R. Winter
Daniel G. Schultz, MD Howard Alan Specter, Esq. Estate of Alma N. Trench
F. Thomas Witomski, MD
Joel S. Schuman, MD Dr. Thallam Srinivasan Barbara B. Troianos and
Charles L. Wood Jr.
Glen E. Schumann Jack Stabile Christopher A. Troianos, MD
Jennifer E. Woodward, PhD
Thomas A. Schwab Valerie J. Stabile Priscilla Tsao, MD
Emma Jane Griffith Woolley, MD
Allan G. Scott, MD Karen Staley and John A. Staley V Jalit Tuchinda, MD
Eleanore G. Wyckoff
Evelyn Steranka Scott, MD, and Marisa S. Steele, MD Jacqueline Peterson Tulsky, MD
Helen M. Wyckoff and Francis J.
Craig H. Scott, MD Adam Steinfurth Eli Ungar
Wyckoff, MD
Marilyn Scott James Steinfurth Robert v.d. Luft
Linda Darby Yankes and Joseph
Bonnie Seaton Richard A. Steinman, MD, PhD Thomas C. Valenza, MD Robert Yankes Jr., MD
Johnette M. Seecof and Richard Susan L. Stepchuk Victoria M. Woshner and Bennett Stephen Yeonas
Mark Seecof, MD Van Houten
Deborah Shapira and Barry Perry W. Younger, MD
Tracy and Evan J. Segal Stern, PhD Bethann Vanscoy and Gordon J.
Betty Lou Yount Trust
Susan L. Seigel and Charles J. Vanscoy, PharmD, MBA, CACP
Rebecca A. and Lawrence D. Stern A. Williams Yousem, MD, and
Seigel, MD Laura Vassallo
Samuel A. Yousem, MD

62
WILLIAM G. AND SUE GIN McGOWAN
ENABLING INNOVATION

A
major gift from William G. and Sue Gin Institutes of Health, and National Science Foundation.
McGowan launched one of the first In 2005, the McGowan Fund challenged other funders to
regenerative medicine institutes in the match its 10-year, $7.5 million pledgea strategy that has
world. Established in 1992 as the McGowan led to millions more for regenerative medicine research.
Center for Artificial Organ Development, The fund and the institute grew up together, and we
the center became the McGowan are grateful for all the help we have received from the
Institute for Regenerative Medicine in 2001. University to become a strategic grant maker, said Diana
The McGowans were drawn to the entrepreneurial Spencer, executive director of the McGowan Charitable
spirit of the original venture: to exploit new technologies Fund since 2006.
and recent scientific advances to develop innovative Initially, Bill was a grateful patient who had a strong
therapies such as artificial hearts for patients with heart relationship with his surgeons, said Sue Gin, president of
failure. Their initial investment has been combined with the McGowan Fund. Over time, as we interacted with the
generous ongoing support from the William G. McGowan scientific leadership at Pitt, we developed a deep belief in
Charitable Fund to enable clinicians, engineers, and their vision of how regenerative medicine could radically
scientists working in the areas of tissue engineering, improve therapies for some patients.
cellular therapies, and artificial and biohybrid organ
devices to translate scientific discoveries from the
[As this report was being prepared for publication, we were
laboratory to the clinic. In addition to the artificial heart saddened to learn of the death of Sue Gin, president of the William G.
program, clinical procedures pioneered at the McGowan McGowan Charitable Fund.]
Institute include regenerative therapies for burns and
traumatic tissue loss.
The McGowan Charitable Fund provides financial
support to organizations that reflect the visions, concerns,
and life experiences of its benefactor, Bill McGowan, a
risk-taking industrialist and the driving force behind the
success of the telecommunications giant MCI. Mr. McGowan
died in 1992 after a six-year fight against heart disease that
included a heart transplant at UPMC, but the continued
support of the fund has enabled the institute that bears
his name to thrive and garner additional research funding
from agencies like the Department of Defense, National

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 63


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STERN FAMILY FOUNDATION


PART OF THE TEAM

H
aving a conversation with Lawrence and The great part about being involved with Pitt is this
Rebecca Stern of the Stern Family Foundation ability to work with people who are leaders in the field,
is like talking to bench scientists: The Sterns who are both creative and team-oriented, says Mr. Stern.
know firsthand how science and research can Theyre looking not just for our support but for our
help save peoples lives. Mr. Stern, a chemical mindshare.
engineer, ran a biotech company called Talecris That team includes Arthur S. Levine, MD, senior vice
Biotherapeutics (now owned by global health care company chancellor for the health sciences and Petersen Dean of
Grifols). The company produced lifesaving plasma therapeu- Medicine; Jeremy M. Berg, PhD, associate senior vice
tics for patients with rare genetic diseases and disorders, chancellor for science strategy and planning, health
including hemophilia, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, and sciences, professor of computational and systems biology,
primary immunodeficiency. School of Medicine, Pittsburgh Foundation Professor and
It was a great thing to be involved in the health care Director, Institute for Personalized Medicine; A. Everette
side of business where we felt we were saving lives, James, JD, MBA, associate vice chancellor for health policy
says Mr. Stern. and planning for the health sciences, M. Allen Pond
Through their philanthropy, they want to define and Professor of Health Policy and Management, Graduate
pilot best practices for the evolution of health, education, School of Public Health, and executive director of Pitts
and welfare programs. Mrs. Stern, a teacher for many Health Policy Institute; and Robert M. Arnold, MD, professor
years, now uses her background in special education for a of medicine and Leo H. Creip Professor of Patient Care.
nonprofit she created, Yes, You Can Dance, which provides An initial meeting with Dr. Levine and a tour of the School
ballroom and social dance experiences for adults with of Medicines key initiatives in personalized medicine,
special needs, older adults, and other populations. She pharmacogenomics, palliative care, and health policy
leverages world-class talent on her board, which includes impressed the Sterns. They asked Dr. Levine to use their
Anthony Delitto, PhD, professor of physical therapy support to fund projects he knows will create value but are
and associate dean for research, School of Health and difficult to get funding for through normal grant processes.
Rehabilitation Sciences (SHRS), and Ronna Delitto, MS, Take what Dr. Levine has done to make the School of
adjunct assistant professor of physical therapy, SHRS, Medicine a powerhouse of innovation, says Mr. Stern. Its
to develop research that measures the benefits people as impressive as anything Ive seen around the country, and
receive when they get involved with social dance. Ive seen a lot. Some support from Becky and me can help
The Sterns describe themselves as involved philanthro- launch initiatives that we hope will help attract additional
pists and enjoy learning the complexities, execution plans, capital and investment to further put Pitt on the map.
and interim results from the research they support at Pitt.
Since moving to Pittsburgh in 2000, theyve created a
team-like relationship with the University.

64
Lin Zhang, MD, and Jian Yu, PhD American College of Surgeons Binational Science Foundation College of American Pathologists
Jian-Min Yuan American Diabetes Association bio Theranostics Inc. The Community Foundation for
Deborah E. Yudes and Alfred E. American Federation for Aging The Birmingham Foundation Greater Atlanta
Yudes Jr. Research Bison Baseball Inc. Community Foundation of Western
Kimberly Sue YunKun American Foundation for Suicide PA & Eastern OH
BJALCF Foundation
Fr. Kenneth Zaccagnini Prevention Community Human Services
BK Medical
American Geriatrics Society Corporation
Ornella Zarour and Hassane M. Blue Devil Enterprises
Zarour, MD Incorporated Comptec Inc.
Blue Marlin Systems Inc.
Kathryn H. Zavadak and Daniel G. American Heart Association Inc. Condron Partnership Ltd.
Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals
Zavadak, MD American Liver Foundation ConMed Linvatec
Inc.
Zella Zeigler, MD American Lung Association John B. Conomos Inc.
Bombardier Transportation, USA Inc.
William B. Zeiler, MD The American Orthopaedic Society Nancy T. and William S. Conover II
Bond Schoeneck & King PLLC
Robin C. and Gary J. Zentner for Sports Medicine Fund
Boston Scientific Cardiac Rhythm
Anne Lewis and C. James Zeszutek American Parkinson Disease Constellation Energy Group
Management
Association Inc. Foundation Inc.
Min Sun, MD, and Wen Zhu, MD Boston Scientific Corporation
The American Physiological Society Continental Real Estate Company
Margaret R. Zinsky and Paul J. Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
Zinsky, MD American Psychiatric Association Cook Group Incorporated
Eli and Edythe L. Broad Foundation
Suzanne D. Zitelli and Basil John American Society for Gastrointestinal Corcept Therapeutics
Endoscopy Bronder Technical Services
Zitelli, MD Cost Company
American Society of Maxillofacial The Brooklyn Brothers LLC
Thomas R. Zugger, CLU, CHRC The Cottrell Foundation
Surgeons Brookville Equipment Corp.
Wallace H. Coulter Foundation
American Society of Nephrology Philip V. & Anna S. Brown Foundation
Council of Three Rivers American
American Society of Transplantation The William Brown Foundation Inc. Indian Center Inc.
CORPORATIONS,
American Surgical Association Buffalo Bills Inc. Covidien
FOUNDATIONS,
Foundation The Jack Buncher Foundation
& ORGANIZATIONS Crawford Consulting Services
American Textile Company The Burroughs Wellcome Fund S.M. Cristall Company Inc.
Anchor Seals Inc. Butterfly Bandits Crohns and Colitis Foundation of
A Glimmer of Hope Foundation ANH Refractories Company Cadence Pharmaceuticals America
A.C. Dellovade Inc. Anonymous The Ann & Frank Cahouet Foundation CSL Behring LLC
AAA East Central The Anspach Effort Inc. Calgon Carbon Corporation Cubist Pharmaceuticals Incorporated
Abbott Laboratories Aptalis Pharma US Inc. CareFusion Corporation CullenDykman LLP
AbbVie Inc. ARCS Foundation, Pittsburgh Chapter Carl Zeiss Meditech Inc. Curbell
Accenture LLP Arthritis Foundation Carnegie Mellon University Cyert Family Foundation
ACell Inc. ArthroCare Corporation Caroselli, Beachler, McTiernan, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
Active Media Services Inc. Arthur Vining Davis Foundations Conboy Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
Ethel & Philip Adelman Charitable Association of American Medical Carr Textile Corporation Therapeutics Incorporated
Foundation Inc. Colleges Carson City Saloon Dana Foundation
AdrenoMed AG Astellas Pharma US Incorporated Caruso Chiropractic & Rehab. Inc. Doni Darling Foundation
AEC Group Inc. AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP Catherine Beth Designs LLC dck worldwide LLC
Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation Athersys Inc. Celgene Corporation Delaware Community Foundation
AK Sales Inc. Autism Speaks Inc. Central Indiana Community Delaware North Companies Inc.
Alcatel-Lucent AVI Foodsystems Inc. Foundation Deloitte Services LP
Alcon Laboratories Inc. Avon Foundation for Women Century Steel Erectors Dendreon Corporatoin
Alcon Research Ltd. The Ayco Charitable Foundation CET Training LLC Denises People
William C. Alexander & Company B & R Pools & Swim Shop Champalimaud Foundation P.J. Dick/Trumbull
Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc. B. Braun Medical Inc. Champs Sports Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote PC
Alexs Lemonade Stand Foundation The Bachmann-Strauss Dystonia & Chapman Properties J&M DiDonato Family Foundation
Allegheny County Health Parkinson Foundation Inc. CHDI Foundation Inc. The Dow Chemical Company
Department Staff Bank of America Foundation The Chicago Community Foundation Foundation
Allegheny Technologies Inc. Bank of America NA Chris4Life Colon Cancer Foundation Dow Chemical Company PAC
Allergan Medical The Bank of New York Mellon Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DSF Charitable Foundation
Alleva LLC Corporation Disease Foundation Inc. Duquesne University
Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy BNY Mellon Foundation of CIM Investment Management Inc. Easley & Rivers Inc.
Altoona Ophthalmology Associates PC Southwestern Pennsylvania
CJL Engineering Eatn Park Hospitality Group Inc.
ALung Technologies Inc. BNY Mellon Wealth Management
Clean Fun Promotional Eisai Inc.
AMAG Pharmaceuticals Inc. Bassi, McCune & Vreeland PC Marketing LLC
Eli Lilly and Company
American Bridge Company Baxter Healthcare Corporation The Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Elliott Ebara Group
American Cancer Society The Breast Cancer Research The Cleveland Foundation
Foundation The Ellison Medical Foundation
Incorporated Climatech Inc.
Beckwith Family Foundation Emergency Medicine Foundation
American College of Laboratory CNS Therapeutics Inc.
Medicine Foundation Bee Cee Enterprises Endo Pharmaceuticals
Cohen & Grigsby PC
American College of Medical BG Books Endocrine Fellows Foundation
Cohen Placitella & Roth PC
Toxicology BGI Millwork The Paul Esposito Foundation for
Colgate-Palmolive Company Bile Duct & Liver Cancer
American College of Rheumatology BHNT Architects PC

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 65


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Ethicon Endo-Surgery The Gordon Foundation International Mental Health Research Lung Cancer Research Foundation
Ethicon Inc. W.L. Gore & Associates Organization Marc Lustgarten Pancreatic Cancer
EV3 Inc. Goya Foods Great Lakes International Society for the Study of Foundation
the Lumbar Spine Lymphoma Research Foundation
Evans Bank Gray Matters
International Society of Arthroscopy, The M & T Charitable Foundation
Evans City Elementary and Graycor Industrial Constructors Inc.
Knee Surgery
Middle Schools Greater Pittsburgh Mustang Club M & T Bank
Intuitive Surgical Operations Inc.
Export Fuel Co. Inc. Greentree Rotary Club M & T Insurance Agency Inc.
Jacobs Foundation
Eye & Ear Foundation Greer Laboratories Inc. Major League Baseball
Jaeckle Fleischmann & Mugel LLP
Eyemaginations Inc. Guttman Oil Company H. Mak Inc.
James Services
Fanconi Anemia Research Fund Inc. Hackers for Hope Malignant Hyperthermia Association
Janssen Biotech Inc. of the United States
Fayette Regional Health System Hadley Exhibits Inc.
Jentoe Corporation Edward Mallinckrodt Jr. Foundation
Federated Investors Incorporated Haleski Foundation
Jewish Federation of Greater Maquet Cardiovascular US Sales LLC
FedEx Trade Networks Transport Inc. The Hartwell Foundation Pittsburgh
The Fashion Footwear Charitable March of Dimes Foundation
Hatch Associates Consultants Inc. Jewish Healthcare Foundation
Foundation of New York Inc. Marstine Family Foundation
The Hawksglen Foundation of Pittsburgh
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Mascaro Construction Company LP
Health Research Inc. Johnnies
The Fine Foundation Massachusetts Medical Society
HealthNow New York Inc. Roy F. Johns Jr. Associates
Fingertip Formulary Mataya Family Foundation
Hearing Health Foundation Jones Day
Fire Cracker 250 Tractor Pull G. Harold & Leila Y. Mathers
H.J. Heinz Company Foundation Juvenile Diabetes Research
First Commonwealth Bank Charitable Foundation
The Heinz Endowments Foundation
FISA Foundation Mauna Kea Technologies
Henderson Brothers Incorporated Max Kade Foundation Inc.
Fiserv Inc. McGladrey LLP
Heritage Valley Medical Group Kadmon Pharmaceuticals LLC
Foot Locker Inc. James & Frances G. McGlothlin
C. William Hetzer Inc. Kaneka North America LLC
Foundation
Foundation for Accelerated Karl Storz Endoscopy-America Inc.
Hibiscus Biotherapeutics Inc. The McKamish Family Foundation
Vascular Research
The Hillman Company Edward & Bethel Kean Charitable
Foundation for Anesthesia Education MedAssets
Foundation
& Research The Matthew Hillman Fisher MEDRAD Inc.
Foundation Inc. Kennametal Foundation
The Foundation for Jewish Medtronic Inc.
The Audrey Hillman Fisher Kennametal Inc.
Philanthropies Mellam Family Foundation
Foundation Kimberly-Clark Corporation
Fountainhead Foundation Menasha Corporation Foundation
Hillman Foundation The Gloria and Thomas R. Kitchen
Michael J. Fox Foundation for Menlo Worldwide Logistics
Henry L. Hillman Foundation Memorial Foundation
Parkinsons Research
The Lenore and Howard Klein Merck & Company Incorporated
Francis Family Foundation William Talbott Hillman Foundation
Foundation Inc. Michael Baker Corporation
Fraternal Order of Eagles PA State The Hinchman Foundation
KLS-Martin LP Migraine Research Foundation Inc.
Auxiliary Hockey Western New York LLC
KPMG LLP Miles Against Melanoma PA
Fraydun Foundation Inc. Emma Clyde Hodge Memorial Fund
Kvaerner North American Millennium Pharmaceuticals
Freight Management Plus Inc. Hologic Inc.
Construction Incorporated
Henry Clay Frick Rodgers Trust Homebuilding Community
L.B. Foster Company Milliken & Company
Fundacion MCHB Foundation
Ladies Auxiliary Department of Mohawk Global Logistics
Wayne Fusaro Pancreatic Cancer Hoops for Hudes
Pennsylvania Moniteau School District
Research Fund Hospira Inc.
Ladies Auxiliary Post 764 Moody Associates Inc.
Gabes Collision Howard Hanna Real Estate Services
The Laerdal Foundation for Acute Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC
Shawn Gaertner Foundation Howard Hughes Medical Institute Medicine
Multiple Myeloma Research
Gailliot Family Foundation The Roy A. Hunt Foundation Landau Building Company Foundation
Gambro Renal Products Inc. The IAC Foundation Inc. Laniere De Picardie Inc. Musculoskeletal Transplant
Scott A. Garet Memorial Foundation IBEW Local Union No. 5 LANXESS Corporation Foundation
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation IBM Corporation Dorothy L. Lappin Foundation Musella Foundation
Gateway Financial Group Inc. IBM Employee Services Center Lawley Service Insurance NARSAD Research Institute Inc.
GE Foundation IBM International Foundation H. Lazar & Son Inc. National Basketball Association
Genentech Incorporated IITC Life Science Inc. Lee Industries Inc. National Football League Players
General Nutrition Centers Inc. Ikaria The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Incorporated
Genomic Health Incorporated Industry-Railway Suppliers Inc. Levin Furniture Inc. National Hockey League Foundation
Genzyme Corporation Inferno Baseball Inc. LIA Agency Inc. National PKU Alliance
Law Office of Michael C. George Institute for Innovative Technology Liberty Mutual Insurance The Craig H. Neilsen Foundation
Georgiades Surgical Associates in Medical Education The Nemeroff Law Firm
Life Raft Group
The Gerber Foundation The Institute for Transfusion Medicine New Age Media of Tallahassee LLC
LifeCell
Get Noticed Promotions Inc. InStore Displays & Packaging New Era Cap Company Inc.
Lifelong Vision Foundation
John J. Ghaznavi Foundation Inc. Integra LifeSciences New Pig
Lippes Mathias Wexler Friedman LLP
Gibraltar Industries Intermodal Air Inc. The New York Mets Foundation Inc.
Little League Baseball Incorporated
Gilead Sciences Incorporated InterMune Incorporated New York Yankees
Logix Guru LLC
Given Imaging Inc. International Association for NFL Foundation
Love Family Foundation
the Study of Pain
Goldman Sachs & Company Jim Ludtka Sporting Goods Inc. NFL Ventures LP
International Continence Society
Gordon Food Service Luitpold Pharmaceuticals Inc. Nico Corporation

66
TERRY BLECHMAN
FAITH IN PITTSBURGH

T
erry Blechman and her husband, Donald, During those five and a half years, the cancer returned
were eating dinner in an Italian restaurant in at times. Dr. Luketich and colleagues formed a treatment
Pittsburgh. The seating area was small, and plan, and the Blechmans returned regularly to Pittsburgh for
they overheard a conversation at the next table. medical care. Their experiences solidified Pittsburgh as their
A couple was discussing which hospital they medical home. Mrs. Blechman still comes here for her own
should go to for a particular treatment, and health care.
none they listed was in Pittsburgh. Mrs. Blechman says her I cant begin to tell you how impressed I am,
husband never stuck his nose in other peoples business, Mrs. Blechman says. Everyone has such concern, such
but he said to them, Why go somewhere else? Dont you heart, and skill. Its the kind of care everyone hopes for
know you have the best hospitals in the country right here? when theyre sick.
The Blechmans had good reason to have such faith in Eventually, Mr. Blechmans treatments stopped
Pittsburgh. In their hometown of Miami Beach, Fla., working, and he died in 2010after 53 years of marriage
Mr. Blechman had received a grim diagnosis: He had to Mrs. Blechman, two children, and four grandchildren.
esophageal cancer and six weeks to live. He was told there Because she was so grateful for the time and quality of life
was nothing to do, other than to get his affairs in order. he had in his final years, Mrs. Blechman established the
But, soon after, a stunned Mrs. Blechman received a friends Donald Blechman Lecture in Surgical Oncology. Attending
recommendation to call James D. Luketich, MD, the Henry T. the yearly lecture makes her optimistic.
Bahnson Professor and chair, Department of Cardiothoracic I go to the lectures, which are filled with all these
Surgery at Pitts School of Medicine. Mrs. Blechman says people in white coats, and think, One of these days,
they didnt know anyone in Pittsburgh and had never been someone in here is going to have a light bulb go off,
there, but they went for tests, consultation, and surgery says Mrs. Blechman. Someones going to find the answer
the week after speaking to Dr. Luketich. were all looking for.
We didnt accept six weeks, says Mrs. Blechman. Mrs. Blechman doesnt regret the decision to come
We fell in love with Dr. Luketich right away because neither to Pittsburgh sight unseen and has recommended it to
did he. He knew what he was doing. other people looking for world-class health care.
Six weeks turned into five and a half good, quality She says, You have to have faith that what youre doing
years, as Mrs. Blechman describes them. The couple took a is right and not be afraid to do it. We were never afraid.
six-week cruise to Vancouver via the Panama Canal, enjoyed And I got five more good years with my husband.
grandchildrens high school and college graduations, and
traveled regularly to the Bahamas so Mr. Blechman could
fly fish.
Donald never looked sick, Mrs. Blechman recalls.
He thought his hair would fall out, so he shaved his head.
But it never fell out! We knew how it was going to end, but
we didnt dwell on it. We couldnt live like that. Donald
could cope, so that made it possible for me to cope.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 67


D O N O R S \\ CO R P O R ATE , FO U N DATI O N , & O RGA N IZ ATI O N

NLMK USA Plum Running Mustangs Scleroderma Foundation of The TJX Companies Inc.
Norfolk Southern Corporation Alumni Assn. Inc. Greater Washington D.C. Truist
Normandy Industries Inc. PNC Charitable Trust Scoliosis Research Society Tube City IMS LLC
North American Refractories Co. PNC Financial Services Group Search Services LLC UB Foundation Activities Inc.
Incorporated Select Services Inc.
The Northeastern Section of the UCB Inc.
American Urological Assn. The PNC Foundation Shadyside Hospital Foundation Uniland Development Corporation
Norwin Elks Lodge No. 2313 Power Piping Company Sheldon Gantt Inc. Union Real Estate Company
Novartis The T. Rowe Price Program for Shire Pharmaceuticals Inc. Uniontown Hospital
Charitable Giving
Novo Nordisk Inc. Shirlie and Owen Siegel Foundation United Business Systems Inc.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Novogradac Rivers Foundation Sigma-Tau Pharmaceuticals Inc. United Negro College Fund
The Procter & Gamble Fund
Obesity Society Silk Road Medical Inc. United Parcel Service
Prometheus Laboratories Inc.
OBlock Jr. High School Ben Silverman Foundation Inc. United States Steel Corporation
ProStrakan
Oc Business Services Inc. Simmons Mesothelioma Foundation United States Steel Foundation Inc.
The Prudential Foundation
Olde Line Tattoo Gallery LLC The Juliet Lea Hillman Simonds United Steelworkers
Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation Foundation Inc.
Olympus United Way of Allegheny County
Pyrotechnic Management Inc. Simons Foundation
OMI Refractories LLC United Way of Butler County
Quaker Capital Management Sisterson & Company LLP
On LLC United Way of Greater Philadelphia
Quality IT Partners Smith & Nephew Inc.
Orbital Engineering Inc. and Southern New Jersey
Quest Diagnostics Incorporated SML Group
Owens-Illinois United Way of Midland County
Questcor Pharmaceuticals The William I. and Patrica S.
Oxford Development Company UPMC
Incorporated Snyder Foundation
Pajunk Medical Systems LP Urology Care Foundation
Radelet McCarthy Polletta Inc. Society for Academic Emergency
Michael J. Parada Walkathon The V Foundation for Cancer
The Rainwater Charitable Foundation Medicine
Paragon Wholesale Foods Research
Reed Smith LLP Society for Vascular Surgery
Paralyzed Veterans of America Vandebilt Catholic High School
John Nesbit Rees and Sarah Henne Solot Family Foundation
Parkinsons Action Network Vanguard Charitable Endowment
Rees Charitable Foundation Solving Kids Cancer
Parkinsons Disease Foundation Verizon Foundation
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. Songer Steel Services Inc.
Frank J. & Sylvia T. Pasquerilla Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated
Rehabilitation & Neurological SonoSite
Foundation Services LLC The Ethel Vincent Charitable Trust
South Fayette Track & Field
Joseph A. Patrick Foundation Inc. Relevent Wabtec Foundation
Association
T.D. Patrinos Painting & Contracting Renaissance Charitable Walsh Construction Co.
Southwest PA AHEC
Company Foundation Inc. Weavertown Transport Leasing Inc.
The Frank E. Rath Spang & Company
Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler Rensch Electrical & Home West Herr Automotive Group
Charitable Trust
PB Foundation Inc. Improvement LLC Westmoreland Country Club
Charles F. Spang Foundation
Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of Research to Prevent Blindness Inc. Wheeler Family Charitable
Speed Motor Express of W.N.Y. Inc.
North America Ri.MED Foundation Foundation
The Spencer Foundation
Pennsylvania Breast Riggs Family Foundation Whemco Inc.
Cancer Coalition Spend a Day at the Keys
Rita Allen Foundation Whitehall Foundation Incorporated
Pennsylvania Interscholastic Splash Water Sports Inc.
Robertshaw Charitable Foundation William G. McGowan Charitable
Hockey League St. Jude Medical Inc.
Sanford N. and Judith Robinson Fund Inc.
Pennsylvania Lions Hearing The Stanley Medical Research
Family Foundation Hilda M. Willis Foundation
Research Foundation Institute
Roche Organ Transplantation Willowbrook Country Club
Peoples Natural Gas Co. LLC Stanley Research Foundation
Research Foundation Wilson Family Foundation
Performance Dynamics Inc. Stantec Consulting Services Inc.
RockTenn Phillip H. and Betty L. Wimmer
Perlow Family Foundation State Street Foundation
Ross Stores Inc. Family Foundation
Pezzone Gastroenterology Sterling Mets LP
RSNA Research & Education Samuel and Emma Winters
Associates PC Lawrence and Rebecca Stern
Foundation Foundation
The Pfizer Foundation Inc. Family Foundation Inc.
RTI International Metals Inc. Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin
PGT Trucking Inc. Stork Foundation
Running for Parkinsons WNED
Philips Healthcare Stryker Corporation
Sage Products Inc. Woodings Industrial Corporation
The Philadelphia Phillies Stryker Endoscopy
SAI Consulting Engineers Inc. World Wide Technology Inc.
Phillips Lytle LLP Support Technology Inc.
Saint Baldricks Foundation WPH Airport Associates
Pittsburgh Cure Sarcoma Synthes USA
Saint Clair Hospital Stephen G. Yeonas Company
Pittsburgh Emergency Medicine The Nancy Taylor Foundation for
Salix Pharmaceuticals Inc. Yough HS Cheerleaders
Foundation Chronic Diseases Inc.
H. Glenn Sample Jr. MD Youngstown Area Jewish Federation
The Pittsburgh Foundation Teva Neuroscience Inc.
Memorial Fund Z Custom Homes Inc.
Pittsburgh Pirates TEVA Pharmaceuticals
Sam-Son Distribution Center Inc. William & Sylvia Zale Foundation
Pittsburgh Plastic Surgery Thermo Fisher Scientific
Sauer Corporate Services LLC Zissu Family Foundation
Alumni Society Thompson Hine LLP
Savient Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Pittsburgh Steelers LLC Thompson Public School
Scaife Family Foundation
Plastic Surgery Educational District No. 61
Foundation Schulze & Burch Biscuit Co.
Thoratec Corporation
Platsky Company Inc. Schwab Charitable Fund
The Tippins Foundation
Plum Borough School District Tissue Source LLC

68
UNIVERSITY OF
PITTSBURGH SCHOOL
OF MEDICINE

SENIOR VICE CHANCELLOR FOR THE INSTITUTES AND CENTERS


HEALTH SCIENCES AND JOHN AND GERTRUDE
PETERSEN DEAN OF MEDICINE: AGING INSTITUTE
Arthur S. Levine, MD DIRECTOR: Charles F. Reynolds III, MD
VICE DEAN: Ann E. Thompson, MD, MCCM
BRAIN INSTITUTE
DIRECTOR: Peter L. Strick, PhD
ASSOCIATE DEANS:
Admissions and Financial Aid CENTER FOR MILITARY MEDICINE RESEARCH
Beth M. Piraino, MD DIRECTOR: Rocky S. Tuan, PhD
Continuing Medical Education
Barbara E. Barnes, MD, MS CENTER FOR VACCINE RESEARCH
Global Health Education DIRECTOR: Donald S. Burke, MD
Peter J. Veldkamp, MD, MS
Graduate Medical Education CLINICAL AND TRANSLATIONAL
SCIENCE INSTITUTE
Rita M. Patel, MD
DIRECTOR: Steven E. Reis, MD
Graduate StudiesJohn P. Horn, PhD
Medical EducationJohn F. Mahoney, MD DRUG DISCOVERY INSTITUTE
Medical Scientist Training Program DIRECTOR: D. Lansing Taylor, PhD
Richard A. Steinman, MD, PhD
Medical Student Research HEART, LUNG, BLOOD, AND
Donald B. DeFranco, PhD; Gwendolyn A. VASCULAR MEDICINE INSTITUTE
Sowa, MD, PhD DIRECTOR: Mark T. Gladwin, MD
Physician Scientist Training Program
INSTITUTE FOR CLINICAL
Richard A. Steinman, MD, PhD
RESEARCH EDUCATION
Postdoctoral AffairsDarlene F. Zellers, PhD DIRECTOR: Wishwa N. Kapoor, MD, MPH
Student AffairsJoan Harvey, MD
INSTITUTE FOR PERSONALIZED MEDICINE
DIRECTOR: Jeremy M. Berg, PhD
ASSISTANT DEANS:
Academic AffairsSaleem Khan, PhD MAGEE-WOMENS RESEARCH INSTITUTE
AdmissionsKanchan H. Rao, MD DIRECTOR: Yoel Sadovsky, MD
Faculty DevelopmentOra A. Weisz, PhD
MCGOWAN INSTITUTE FOR
Faculty DiversityChenits Pettigrew Jr., EdD REGENERATIVE MEDICINE
Graduate Medical EducationFrank J. DIRECTOR: William R. Wagner, PhD
Kroboth, MD
Medical EducationCynthia Lance-Jones, PhD PITTSBURGH INSTITUTE FOR
NEURODEGENERATIVE DISEASES
Medical Education TechnologyJames B.
McGee, MD DIRECTOR: J. Timothy Greenamyre, MD, PhD

Medical Student Research THOMAS E. STARZL


Margaret Conroy, MD; Rebecca P. TRANSPLANTATION INSTITUTE
Hughey, PhD; Philip Troen, MD
DIRECTOR: Fadi G. Lakkis, MD
Student AffairsChenits Pettigrew Jr., EdD
Veterans AffairsAli F. Sonel, MD UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
CANCER INSTITUTE
DIRECTOR: Nancy E. Davidson, MD

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 69


D E PA R TM E NT S \\ U N IV ER S IT Y O F PIT TS B U RG H

UNIVERSITY OF
PITTSBURGH SCHOOL
OF MEDICINE
DEPARTMENTS

DEPARTMENT OF ANESTHESIOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF DERMATOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF NEUROBIOLOGY


CHAIR: Marshall W. Webster, MD (interim) CHAIR: Louis D. Falo Jr., MD, PhD CHAIR: Peter L. Strick, PhD
VICE CHAIRS:

Basic SciencesYan Xu, PhD DEPARTMENT OF DEVELOPMENTAL DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGICAL


Clinical OperationsMark E. Hudson, MD, MBA BIOLOGY SURGERY

Clinical ResearchJacques E. Chelly, MD, CHAIR: Cecilia Lo, PhD CHAIR: Robert M. Friedlander, MD
PhD, MBA VICE CHAIR: Neil Hukriede, PhD VICE CHAIRS:
EducationRita M. Patel, MD Academic AffairsIan F. Pollack, MD
Faculty DevelopmentAndrew Herlich, DEPARTMENT OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE ResearchC. Edward Dixon, PhD
DMD, MD
CHAIR: Donald M. Yealy, MD EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR / ASSISTANT CHAIR:
Pain MedicineAjay D. Wasan, MD, MSc David J. Bissonette, PA-C, MBA
EXECUTIVE VICE CHAIR: Clifton W. Callaway,
MD, PhD
DEPARTMENT OF VICE CHAIRS: DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGY
BIOMEDICAL INFORMATICS
Clinical OperationsCharissa B. Pacella, MD CHAIR: Lawrence R. Wechsler, MD
CHAIR: Michael J. Becich, MD, PhD
Graduate EducationAllan B. Wolfson, MD VICE CHAIRS:
VICE CHAIR: Gregory F. Cooper, MD, PhD
Patient Safety and QualityPaul E. Academic AffairsJ. Timothy Greenamyre,
Phrampus, MD MD, PhD
DEPARTMENT OF ResearchSteven H. Graham, MD, PhD
CARDIOTHORACIC SURGERY
DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY MEDICINE Veterans AffairsPaula R. Clemens, MD
CHAIR: James D. Luketich, MD
CHAIR: Jeannette E. South-Paul, MD
VICE CHAIRS:
DEPARTMENT OF OBSTETRICS,
Victor O. Morell, MD
DEPARTMENT OF IMMUNOLOGY GYNECOLOGY, AND REPRODUCTIVE
Academic Affairs SCIENCES
Jonathan DCunha, MD, PhD CHAIR: Mark J. Shlomchik, MD, PhD
CHAIR: W. Allen Hogge, MD
Clinical AffairsInderpal Sarkaria, MD VICE CHAIR: Dario A.A. Vignali, PhD
EXECUTIVE VICE CHAIR:

Gynecological ServicesRobert P. Edwards, MD


DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE
DEPARTMENT OF CELL BIOLOGY VICE CHAIRS:
CHAIR: Alexander D. Sorkin, PhD CHAIR: John J. Reilly Jr., MD
Clinical AffairsIsabelle Wilkins, MD
VICE CHAIRS:
VICE CHAIR: Simon C. Watkins, PhD Clinical OperationsDennis English, MD
Clinical AffairsVacant
Community PracticesEdward A. Sandy II,
EducationWishwa N. Kapoor, MD, MPH MD, MBA
DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTATIONAL
AND SYSTEMS BIOLOGY Faculty DevelopmentOra A. Weisz, PhD EducationGabriella Gosman, MD
CHAIR: Ivet Bahar, PhD Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Faculty DevelopmentSharon Hillier, PhD
Gary S. Fischer, MD
Obstetrical ServicesHyagriv Simhan, MD
ResearchRama Mallampalli, MD
DEPARTMENT OF ResearchYoel Sadovsky, MD
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
CHAIR: Derek C. Angus, MD, MPH DEPARTMENT OF MICROBIOLOGY
AND MOLECULAR GENETICS DEPARTMENT OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
VICE CHAIRS:
CHAIR: Thomas E. Smithgall, PhD CHAIR: Joel S. Schuman, MD
Academic AffairsMichael R. Pinsky, MD
VICE CHAIRS:
Clinical OperationsArthur J. Boujoukos, MD
Business AffairsAlex Anetakis, MD
Professional DevelopmentVacant
Clinical OperationsJenny Yu, MD
ResearchJohn Kellum, MD
Medical and Resident EducationEvan L.
Waxman, MD, PhD
ResearchRobert L. Hendricks, PhD

70
DEPARTMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY
ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY
CHAIR: David H. Perlmutter, MD CHAIR: David A. Lewis, MD
Freddie H. Fu, MD, DSci (Hon),
CHAIR:
VICE CHAIRS: VICE CHAIR:
DPs (Hon)
Basic ResearchGary A. Silverman, MD, PhD Clinical AffairsKenneth C. Nash, MD, MMM
EXECUTIVE VICE CHAIRS:
Clinical AffairsA. Kim Ritchey, MD
Clinical ServicesJames D. Kang, MD
Clinical ResearchAlejandro Hoberman, MD DEPARTMENT OF RADIATION
Orthopaedic ResearchRocky S. Tuan, PhD
Postgraduate EducationMark E. Lowe, ONCOLOGY
VICE CHAIRS:
MD, PhD CHAIR: Joel S. Greenberger, MD
Assistant Residency Program Director
VICE CHAIRS:
MaCalus V. Hogan, MD
DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY Clinical AffairsDwight E. Heron, MD
Community OutreachMark E. Baratz, MD
AND CHEMICAL BIOLOGY ResearchMelvin Deutsch, MD
Education/Residency Program Director
CHAIR: Bruce A. Freeman, PhD
Vincent F. Deeney, MD
VICE CHAIRS:
Musculoskeletal Cellular Therapeutics DEPARTMENT OF RADIOLOGY
Johnny Huard, PhD AcademicsPeter Friedman, PhD
CHAIR: Jules Sumkin, DO
Pediatric Orthopaedic Surgery EducationDonald B. DeFranco, PhD
W. Timothy Ward, MD Graduate EducationPatrick Pagano, PhD
DEPARTMENT OF STRUCTURAL
DIRECTOR: Regulatory AffairsQiming Jane Wang, PhD BIOLOGY
Clinical TrialsJames Irrgang, PhD ResearchEdwin Levitan, PhD CHAIR: Angela Gronenborn, PhD

DEPARTMENT OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY


CHAIR: Jonas T. Johnson, MD AND REHABILITATION
CHAIR: Timothy R. Billiar, MD
VICE CHAIRS: CHAIR: Michael L. Boninger, MD
VICE CHAIRS:
VICE CHAIRS:
Clinical OperationsRobert L. Ferris, MD, PhD Clinical Services Andrew B. Peitzman, MD
EducationDavid Eibling, MD Clinical Outcomes and Quality Care
Transplantation SurgeryAbhinav Humar, MD
Gwendolyn A. Sowa, MD, PhD
Quality and Patient Safety
Carl H. Snyderman, MD, MBA Clinical Program Development
Michael Munin, MD DEPARTMENT OF UROLOGY
ResearchVacant
Clinical Services at UPMC Mercy CHAIR: Joel B. Nelson, MD
Gary Galang, MD EXECUTIVE VICE CHAIR: Michael C. Ost, MD
DEPARTMENT OF PATHOLOGY Medical EducationWendy Helkowski, MD VICE CHAIRS:
CHAIR: George K. Michalopoulos, MD, PhD Neuropsychology and Rehabilitation Clinical OperationsRonald M. Benoit, MD
EXECUTIVE VICE CHAIRS: Patricia Arenth, PhD
Quality Improvement and Patient Safety
Clinical PathologyAlan Wells, MD, DMS Outpatient ServicesMegan Cortazzo, MD Timothy D. Averch, MD
Anatomic PathologySamuel A. Yousem, MD Pediatric Rehabilitation
Amy Houtrow, MD, MPH
VICE CHAIRS:
ResearchAmy K. Wagner, MD
Medical Education Program
Trevor Macpherson, MD
Molecular Genomic Pathology DEPARTMENT OF PLASTIC SURGERY
Yuri Nikiforov, MD, PhD CHAIR: J. Peter Rubin, MD
VICE CHAIR: Joseph E. Losee, MD

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 71


CREDITS PHOTOGRAPHERS
AND ILLUSTRATORS

This report was produced by Terry Clark, page 7


the Office of Academic Affairs, CIDDE, pages 10, 27
Health Sciences. Joshua Franzos, pages 1, 14
(bottom), 16, 17, 18, 30, 31,
Margaret C. McDonald, PhD, MFA 44, 60, 64
Associate Vice Chancellor for
Academic Affairs Jim Judkis, page 14 (top)
Greg Kavalec, page 19
Lisa K. Barsom, PhD Richard Mia, Cover,
Assistant Vice Chancellor for pages 2, 12, 34, 50
Academic Affairs IN MEMORIAM
Annie ONeill, pages 5, 25, 54 ROSS H. MUSGRAVE, MD
Lisa Lorence Kevin Sprouls, page 36 19212014

R
Director of Academic Programs Riccardo Vecchio, page 52
oss Musgrave, Class
Chuck Staresinic Linda Wallen, page 72 of 43, spent 60 years with
Director of Communications Pitts School of Medicine,
OTHER IMAGES COURTESY OF:
from student to resident to
STAFF Page 8: HOK JV Distinguished Clinical Professor
Deb Anderson, JD, MPH Page 9: Perkins+Will of Surgery. He also served on
Michele Baum Page 20: UPMC the med schools Board of Visitors
and as executive director of the
Brittany Boyd Page 22: Michael Giordano
Medical Alumni Association for
Keith Gillogly Pages 3233: Long Shot Factory 12 years. Musgrave trained 125
Nathan Kosub Pages 40, 41, 46: Robert surgeons; he himself was the
Brandon Millward Friedlander second resident to graduate from
Page 43: Project Tycho Pitts plastic surgery program.
Maureen Passmore, MA, MFA
Page 47: Bennett Van Houten During his long and distin-
Teekie Smith, MSW
guished career, he was governor of
Wendy Spigle Page 56: Amanda King
the American College of Surgeons,
Cathy Steinitz Page 63: William G. McGowan president of the American Cleft
Charitable Fund Palate-Craniofacial Association,
Carol Tatrai
Page 67: Shadyside Hospital president of the American Society
Special production assistance Foundation of Plastic Surgeons, and director
provided by Sandra Honick and of the American Board of Plastic
Lindsay Evanish, Office of Faculty The following articles
Surgery. The school continues
Affairs, School of Medicine, were reprinted from Pitt Med
to honor Musgrave through
University of Pittsburgh, and magazine: Emergency
the annual Ross H. Musgrave
Beth Ann Conway and Mary Kate Preservation and Resuscitation
(page 8) and Inaugural Lectureship, as well as the newly
MacKenzie, Medical and Health named Ross H. Musgrave Chair
Sciences Foundation, University Deanship (page 19), both by
Robyn K. Coggins, Summer 2014; in Pediatric Plastic Surgery. A new
of Pittsburgh and UPMC.
What a Wonderful World namesake award for medical
University of Pittsburgh (page 21), by Chuck Staresinic, student excellence is also in
School of Medicine Fall 2014; Code Black (page 32), the works.
401 Scaife Hall by Jenelle Pifer, Spring 2014;
3550 Terrace Street The History of Disease, in Color
Pittsburgh, PA 15261 (page 42), by Brett Murphy,
Spring 2014
412-648-8975
www.medschool.pitt.edu Designed by Landesberg Design,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
The University of Pittsburgh
is an affirmative action, The report is printed on
equal opportunity institution. environmentally responsible,
FSC-certified Domtar Cougar
opaque paper. Printing by
Broudy Printing, Pittsburgh, Pa.

72
BOARD OF VISITORS (as of September 30, 2014)

Robert J. Alpern, MD
Dean and Ensign Professor of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine

Nancy C. Andrews, MD, PhD


Dean and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, Duke University School of Medicine

Karen H. Antman, MD
Provost, Boston University Medical Campus; Dean, Boston University School of Medicine

G. Nicholas Beckwith III


Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Arch Street Management, LLC
President and Trustee, Beckwith Family Foundation; Chairperson, Board of Directors, UPMC

Edward J. Benz Jr., MD


President and Chief Executive Officer, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Jordan J. Cohen, MD
President Emeritus, Association of American Medical Colleges

Catherine D. DeAngelis, MD, MPH


University Distinguished Service Professor Emerita and Professor of Pediatrics Emerita,
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Jonathan D. Gitlin, MD
Senior Scientist, Marine Biological Laboratory

Lee Goldman, MD, MPH


Harold and Margaret Hatch Professor, Executive Vice President for Health and
Biomedical Sciences, and Dean, Faculties of Health Sciences and Medicine,
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

Antonio M. Gotto Jr., MD, DPhil


Dean Emeritus, Cochair of the Board of Overseers, and Lewis Thomas University Professor,
Joan and Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Vice President and Provost for Medical Affairs Emeritus, Cornell University

J. Larry Jameson, MD, PhD


Executive Vice President, University of Pennsylvania for the Health System, and Dean,
Raymond and Ruth Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania

William K. Lieberman
President, The Lieberman Companies

James L. Madara, MD
Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer, American Medical Association

Henry J. Mankin, MD
Edith M. Ashley Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery Emeritus, Harvard Medical School

Arthur H. Rubenstein, MBBCh


Professor of Medicine, Raymond and Ruth Perelman School of Medicine,
University of Pennsylvania

Jack D. Smith, MD
Director of Orthopedics, Excela Health
Chair, Excela Health Orthopedic Surgery

Allen M. Spiegel, MD
Marilyn and Stanley M. Katz Dean, Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University

Steven A. Wartman, MD, PhD


President and Chief Executive Officer, Association of Academic Health Centers
School of Medicine
Web medschool.pitt.edu

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