From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 4 15:57:32 2025 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Apr 4 15:57:39 2025 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 7-11, 2025 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01DBA57A.42BA2450] DOM Week April 4, 2025 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (if you have items for DOM Week, please email amyf@uw.edu) DOM artificial intelligence symposium follow-up [A series of bright blue lights meant to represent artificial intelligence.]Earlier this year we partnered with Microsoft to present an artificial intelligence symposium to educate the department about generative AI tools and how we could use these tools to support our goals in clinical care, research, and education. A summary of the symposium, as well as several of the presenter slide decks are currently available on our intranet. AI projects: We?ve also developed a survey to gauge interest in AI and collect project ideas. Our aim is to identify shared areas of interest where potential collaborations could be explored with Microsoft. If you are interested in participating in further AI interest groups or have project suggestions, please complete this survey. Online AI training: Microsoft has offered to host an on-line training session for DOM employees to learn to create useful AI prompts on April 14, 12-1:30. If you are interested, please register for this training session. Faculty news Filippo Milano receives inaugural Endowed Chair in Cord Blood Research [Photograph of Fred Hutch's Dr. Filippo Milano, wearing a blue branded sweater]Dr. Filippo Milano, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) and director of the Fred Hutch Cord Blood Program, was just awarded an Endowed Chair in Cord Blood Research by an anonymous donor. Unrestricted funding will help grow Fred Hutch?s Cord Blood Transplant Program so that ?every patient has a donor.? Bone or stem cell transplants require a genetically compatible donor, a daunting task for those with mixed ethnic heritage due to a lower number of available matches on national donor registries. ?Cord blood transplants are perfect for patients who don?t have a conventional donor ? a matched sibling or a relative,? said Milano, who now serves as the director of the Fred Hutch Cord Blood Transplant Program. ?We use stem cells from the umbilical cord, which is considered medical waste once a child is born. These stem cells are na?ve ? they haven?t yet adapted in response to their environment ? so we don?t need to match them as we do with other transplants. Cord blood definitely expands the pool of donors for our patients.? Read the full story from Hutch News. Clinical news Harborview Mobile Health Outreach program [A group of volunteers sitting under a tent next to the UW Mobile Health Outreach van.] The Harborview Mobile Health Outreach (MHO) program, a partnership between Harborview and UW Health Sciences, is supported by volunteer students from various health sciences disciplines, as well as volunteer physicians, DNPs, and other interprofessional preceptors. This program offers outreach, engagement, and free acute medical care and referral services to residents of two tiny house villages in Seattle. The program extends its gratitude to all preceptors and would like to give special recognition to the following who volunteered for more than five outreaches in 2024: Drs. Russell Berg and Liz Snapinn (General Internal Medicine) and Laura Polito, Mariana Frias Garcia, and Martin Cahn (Dept. of Family Medicine). Learn more in their newly released 2024 Annual Report. If you are interested in volunteering with the MHO Program, please reach out to Yana Allen, Aynsley Duncan or Jocelyn James. Research news Andy Hill CARE Fund Implementation and Outcomes Research Award [Heather Greenlee]Drs. Heather Greenlee, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) and Amanda Fretts (Dept. of Epidemiology) have received an Andy Hill CARE Fund Implementation and Outcomes Research Award for their project: ?Partnering with Washington State Tribal Communities to Develop Culturally-Tailored Nutrition Resources and Reduce Cancer Health Disparities.? These grants support innovative investigators to translate promising research and scientific discoveries into the development of tools, devices, technologies, therapeutics, or interventions that have the potential to address care across the cancer continuum that will ultimately advance cancer care, lessen the burden of cancer, and improve health outcomes. ________________________________ Hartwell Innovation Fund award [Jennifer Huang]Dr. Jennifer Huang, fellow (Hematology and Oncology) has received the 2025 Hartwell Innovation Fund Swim Across America Pilot Award for her project ?Characterization of the Biological Effects of BTK Inhibitors on in vivo CAR T-cell Function in Patients with Mantle Cell Lymphoma Undergoing CAR T-Cell Therapy.? Dr. Huang and co-mentors Drs. Jordan Gauthier and Mazyar Shadman will be looking at the impacts of BTK inhibitor exposure on CAR T-cell expansion and exhaustion and the serum proteomic signature in patients with mantle cell lymphoma who were treated with CAR T-cell therapy. ________________________________ American Thoracic Society Awards Peer Recognition Award [Kristina Crothers]Dr. Kristina Crothers, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is the recipient of the 2025 Assembly on Pulmonary Infections and Tuberculosis (PITB) Senior?level Peer Recognition Award from the American Thoracic Society. This annual award, selected by peers, is presented to a PITB member who has shown a strong commitment to PITB (and ATS), contributed significantly to advancing its mission, and demonstrated impactful contributions in research, clinical care, teaching, or service. Rising star award [Taylor Coston]Dr. Taylor Coston, fellow (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is the recipient of the 2025 Assembly on Pulmonary Infections and Tuberculosis (PITB) Rising Star Award from the American Thoracic Society. This award recognizes early junior faculty with a trajectory of achievements in a scientific area of the PITB Assembly who demonstrate exemplary promise of future achievement. He will present his work at the Science and Innovation Center during the ATS International Conference next month. ________________________________ Spotlight on resident scholarship: Ila Nimgaonkar [Ila Nimgaonkar]Should patients delay cancer treatment if infected with SARS-COv-2? In the latest resident scholarship spotlight, ?Does SARS-CoV-2 Infection Require Delaying Cancer Treatment?? Dr. Ila Nimgaonkar, R3, used retrospective data from Fred Hutch to compare patients whose cellular therapy was delayed due to prior SARS-CoV-2 infection versus those for whom it was not. She found that neither group experienced recrudescent SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19 complications after undergoing cellular therapy. Most of the patients were vaccinated, and many received treatment for their SARS-CoV-2 infection, either with monoclonal antibodies or Paxlovid. Her work suggests that in this setting, it is not necessary to delay cellular therapy for a mild or asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection. View spotlight. Education news [Megan Mayer]Dr. Megan Mayer, fellow (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) has been invited to serve as an apprentice on the American Thoracic Society Health Policy Committee. The Health Policy Committee serves as a resource for the staff of the ATS Government Relations Office and advisor to the ATS Executive Committee and Board of Directors on issues of policy importance and priorities for ATS action. Recent publications Dr. Rotonya Carr, associate professor and head (Gastroenterology) is senior author of ?Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease and the gut microbiome: pathogenic insights and therapeutic innovations? in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. DOM co-author is Chrstopher Damman. Dr. Connie Celum, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of ?Doxycycline to prevent bacterial sexually transmitted infections in the USA: final results from the DoxyPEP multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled trial and open-label extension? in The Lancet Infectious Diseases. DOM co-authors are Julia Dombrowski, Chase Cannon, Robert Suchland, and Olusegun Soge. Dr. Stephan Fihn, professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of ?Veterans Affairs Research Under Threat? in JAMA Internal Medicine. Dr. William Grady, professor (Gastroenterology) is co-author of ?Gastric (Foveolar) Dysplasia in Barrett's Esophagus: A Clinical, Molecular and Long-Term Outcome Study? in the American Journal of Gastroenterology. Dr. Nicholas Johnson, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is co-author of ?Patient- and Community-Level Characteristics Associated With Respiratory Syncytial Virus Vaccination? in JAMA Network Open. In the news Dr. Vishesh Kapur, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is quoted in ?More Screen Time in Bed Can Lead to Insomnia? in Everyday Health. Events of interest Quiet week: April 7-11 As we continue to rebuild resilience and focus on mental health, we would like to preserve department-wide quiet weeks throughout the year. During these weeks, we hope that individuals can limit non-essential meetings to recharge and reflect, as well as thoughtfully minimize emails. We realize that this will not be possible for everyone but encourage all to take breaks when they are able. Upcoming 2025 quiet weeks: August 4-8 November 24-28 December 22-26 Weekly Calendar, April 7-11, 2025 Our events calendar is posted on our website. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image020.png@01DBA57A.42BA2450][cid:image021.jpg@01DBA57A.42BA2450][cid:image022.jpg@01DBA57A.42BA2450][cid:image023.png@01DBA57A.42BA2450][cid:image024.png@01DBA57A.42BA2450] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. If you are not the intended recipient, or if the message has been addressed to you in error, do not read, disclose, reproduce, distribute, disseminate or otherwise use this transmission. 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Name: image023.png Type: image/png Size: 1852 bytes Desc: image023.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image024.png Type: image/png Size: 3421 bytes Desc: image024.png URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 11 15:43:40 2025 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Apr 11 15:43:48 2025 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 14-18, 2025 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01DBAAF7.B80B6480] DOM Week April 11, 2025 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (if you have items for DOM Week, please email amyf@uw.edu) New UW Medicine intranet [cid:image027.png@01DBAAF8.7B9FC080]Vitals, the new UW Medicine intranet, launched on April 9. It is a new platform for sharing important news and announcements. Please check this site for critical news, leadership messages, events, operational updates, community announcements, and more, as many critical updates will no longer be sent via email. There is also a mobile app. Staff news [Jilian Angiulo]Staff spotlight: Jilian Angiulo Our latest staff spotlight is on Julian Angiulo, program manager for the Adult Congenital Heart Disease program in the Division of Cardiology. Learn more about her on our news site. Faculty news [Neelendu Dey]Dr. Neelendu Dey, associate professor (Gastroenterology) has been selected as the inaugural holder of the Kyle Thomas Spane Endowed Chair at Fred Hutch. This is the first community funded endowed chair at the Hutch. The chair supports a faculty member working in colon cancer prevention, early detection and emerging research opportunities. Education news Empowering resident autonomy [David Rink]Resident training is rooted in the concept of graduated autonomy. This means that as residents gain more experience and demonstrate increasing competence, the level of supervision they receive is gradually reduced. However, this transition is not linear. It requires a dynamic balance between educators providing enough independence for residents to build confidence and competence while ensuring they are still adequately supported and supervised as they navigate the complexities of clinical practice. In a recent article published in ATS Scholar, lead author Dr. David Rink, internal medicine chief resident, shares his personal experiences and reflections on developing his professional identity during his training. Rink and his mentors, senior author Dr. Tyler Albert, associate professor, and co-author Dr. Gabrielle Berger, clinical associate professor (General Internal Medicine), combine their experience with an analysis of trainees' perceptions of autonomy and supervision to present a practical toolkit for empowering resident autonomy. Read the full story on our news site. ________________________________ [cid:image031.jpg@01DBAAF8.7B9FC080]2025 A?A elections The Alpha Omega Alpha (A?A) Honor Medical Society's purpose is to perpetuate excellence in the medical profession. Election to A?A is one of the highest honors that physicians can receive. It recognizes excellence in scholarly activities, humanistic qualities, leadership capacity, and exceptional patient care skills. Congratulations to the newly elected residents and fellows this year: Joey Chiang, R3, Seattle IM residency program, Tom Enright, R3, Seattle IM residency program, Sajan Gill, fellow (Cardiology), Matthew Haley, fellow (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine), Anika Kohlmeier, chief resident, Boise IM residency program, and Dan Olivieri, R3, Seattle IM residency program. ________________________________ UW Graduate Certificate in Palliative Care Applications are now open for the University of Washington's Interprofessional Graduate Certificate in Palliative Care. This 9-month virtual program is specifically designed for working professionals looking for additional training in palliative care communication, interprofessional practice, and system change. While some alumni work as members of specialty palliative care teams, most apply their skills as palliative care champions and change agents within their specialty. Apply by May 1 for priority admission. Upcoming virtual info sessions: April 22 and June 10, 4:30-5:30pm. Research news Everything is Tuberculosis [Everything Is Tuberculosis by John Green (book cover)]About every 20 seconds, somebody dies from tuberculosis, a disease that has had an effective treatment since 1943. Despite the scientific advancement that has occurred to develop a vaccine for TB, understand its different forms, and how to diagnose and treat those forms, current improvement upon these facets has crept along slowly due to insufficient funding and attention. The Seattle Tuberculosis Research Advancement Center (SEATRAC) is changing this through their efforts to train the next generation of TB researchers and catalyze new research areas. SEATRAC recently hosted best-selling author John Green to discuss his new book "Everything is Tuberculosis." The event was highlighted in The Daily. ________________________________ Multiple myeloma is treatable, not curable. Is that set to change? [Multiple myeloma cells]Multiple myeloma is cancer of the bone marrow; the "multiple" part refers to cancer cells that appear in various areas of the body as cancerous plasma cells overtake healthy blood cells. For years, patients have been told that multiple myeloma is treatable but not curable. Yet data continues to accumulate about a subset of patients that remains disease-free for so many years that experts, including Drs. Rahul Banerjee, Andrew Cowan, and Philip Greenberg, are wondering if a cure may in fact be possible. Some of the newer approaches include T-cell engagers, antibodies designed to guide immune system T cells to destroy cancerous cells, and CAR T-cell therapy, which similarly engineers T cells to seek out and kill identified cancer cells. Read the full story from Hutch News. ________________________________ What Influences Sleep Study Completion Among People with HIV in Care? [Zainab Al-Tameemi]Led by Dr. Zainab Al-Tameemi, R3, the research project, "What Influences Sleep Study Completion Among People with HIV in Care?" has been accepted for presentation at Sleep 2025, the annual Associated Professional Sleep Societies (APSS) conference in Seattle in June. Drs. Vishesh Kapur, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) and Stephanie Ruderman, research scientist (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are collaborators on the project. This is the first study to investigate characteristics associated with receiving sleep studies among people with HIV (PWH) engaged in care. Despite the high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea and fatigue in this population, only 4% of nearly 4,000 PWH in their cohort had undergone a sleep study between 2008 and 2023. Those who did were more likely to have bothersome fatigue, better HIV control (higher CD4 counts and viral suppression), and more comorbidities like diabetes and hypertension. Their novel findings have not been previously reported in the literature. Given that this population is both vulnerable and often underrepresented in sleep research, the researchers hope this work brings more attention to sleep health equity, encourages providers to recognize and prioritize this issue, and informs future efforts to improve access to care. ________________________________ [Pavan Bhatraju and Bill Altemeier] Drs. Pavan Bhatraju, associate professor, and Bill Altemeier, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) are Co-PIs on a four-year R01 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) for their project "Targeting Angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) in Severe Community Acquired Pneumonia". DOM co-investigators are Drs. Sina Gharib, Chi Hung, Gail Jarvik, Leila Zelnick, and Ian Stanaway. The project will use a combination of clinical and pre-clinical translational research approaches to evaluate the role of ANGPTL4 in the host response to community-acquired pneumonia caused by both bacteria and viruses. ________________________________ [Andrew Portuguese]Dr. Andrew Portuguese, assistant professor (Hematology and Oncology) is PI on a study funded by Regeneron titled "An Exploratory Study Investigating the Tumor Microenvironment and Immune Cell Profiles in Plasmacytomas of Multiple Myeloma Patients Treated with Linvoseltamab." Co-I is Dr. Andrew Cowan. BCMA-targeted bispecific antibodies (bsAbs) are a promising treatment for relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma, but they are less effective in patients with extramedullary disease (EMD). This study will analyze pre- and post-treatment biopsies from plasmacytomas to better understand how tumors and immune cells respond to linvoseltamab, a BCMA-targeted bsAb. Using advanced multiplexed immunohistochemistry, they will examine the tumor microenvironment at high resolution to identify immune features linked to treatment response and resistance. Insights from this work may reveal why EMD is harder to treat and help guide future therapeutic strategies. Recent publications Dr. Bryan Kestenbaum, professor (Nephrology) is co-author of "Association of Clonal Hematopoiesis of Indeterminate Potential with Cardiovascular Events in Patients with CKD" and "Clonal Hematopoiesis of Indeterminate Potential and Progression of CKD" in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. Dr. Sylvia LaCourse, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "Rapid tuberculosis diagnosis from respiratory or blood samples by a low cost, portable lab-in-tube assay" in Science Translational Medicine. Dr. Megan Mayer, fellow (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of "Should Medicaid Pay for Housing? Considering the Debate" in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Dr. Andrew Portuguese, assistant professor (Hematology and Oncology) is co-lead author of "A phase 1 trial of fully human BCMA CAR-T therapy for relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma with 5-year follow-up" in Blood. DOM co-authors are Andrew Cowan, Mazyar Shadman, Emily Liang, Brian Till, David Maloney, and Stanley Riddell. Dr. Laura Pyle, research professor, Dr. Phoom Narongkiatikhun, postdoctoral scholar, Ye Ji Choi, research scientist, and Dr. Petter Bjornstad, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) are co-authors of "Unveiling mechanisms underlying kidney function changes during sex hormone therapy" in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. Dr. Ganesh Raghu, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of "Genomic classifier for usual interstitial pneumonia combined with bronchoalveolar lavage cellular profile: potential use in the clinical management of new onset ILD?" in the European Respiratory Journal. Dr. Mazyar Shadman, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) is lead author of "Comparative efficacy of Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitors in high-risk relapsed/refractory CLL: a network meta-analysis" in Blood Advances. Dr. Lauge Sokol-Hessner, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "Making Healthcare Safer IV: Programs for Responding to Harms Experienced by Patients During Clinical Care" in Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. DOM co-author is Thomas Gallagher. In the news Dr. Larry Corey, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) wrote "We Need an mRNA Champion in a Red Cape" for the Timmerman Report. Dr. Julie Dombrowski, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "CDC's top laboratory on sexually transmitted diseases is shut by Trump administration" in STAT. An obituary for Dr. King Holmes has been published in the New York Times. Dr. Holmes was a long-standing leader in the Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Dr. Reena Mehra, professor and head (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) joined the ATS Breathe Easy Podcast to discuss "Rethinking Obstructive Sleep Apnea & Cardiovascular Risk." Dr. Anna Wald, professor and head (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "Does a Measles Infection Protect Against Cancer and Heart Disease? - HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has claimed it does, but science says otherwise" in MedPage Today. Events of interest Medicine Grand Rounds Dr. Ken Steinberg, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) and vice chair for education, will present "Elevating and Sustaining Excellence in Education: The Role of a Vice Chair of Education" at Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, April 18, 12-1pm, via zoom. ________________________________ Online AI training Microsoft is providing an on-line training session for DOM employees to learn to create useful AI prompts on April 14, 12-1:30. If you are interested, please register for the session. Weekly Calendar, April 14-18, 2025 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Resilience in Community The UW Professional Staff Organization (PSO) Annual Forum will be held virtually on April 22- 23. This year's theme, "Resilience in Community," acknowledges the uncertainty of our times and emphasizes the importance of cultivating a supportive, connected environment where we can learn from one another and grow together. Women Faculty Day The theme for Women Faculty Day this year is "Advocacy, Allyship, & Action: Building a Future for Women in Medicine & Science" and will feature UW Provost Dr. Tricia Serio as the Keynote Speaker. May 13, 9am-3:30pm, UW Center for Urban Horticulture Center. Please register for this event. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image022.png@01DBAAF7.B80B6480][cid:image023.jpg@01DBAAF7.B80B6480][cid:image024.jpg@01DBAAF7.B80B6480][cid:image025.png@01DBAAF7.B80B6480][cid:image026.png@01DBAAF7.B80B6480] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. 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Name: image036.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1399 bytes Desc: image036.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 18 16:10:00 2025 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Apr 18 16:10:06 2025 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 21-25, 2025 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01DBB07B.255A1C10] DOM Week April 18, 2025 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (if you have items for DOM Week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Awards Scholar Awards Congratulations to the 2025 recipients of our Chair of Medicine and Equity Academic Scholarship Awards: Chair of Medicine Scholar Award recipients [A person wearing a tie AI-generated content may be incorrect.] John Bui, MD Acting Assistant Professor Allergy and Infectious Diseases [A person with long hair wearing a teal sweater AI-generated content may be incorrect.] Linzee Mabrey, MD, MSc Acting Instructor Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine [A person wearing a red shirt and blue tie AI-generated content may be incorrect.] Albert Yeh, MD Acting Assistant Professor Hematology and Oncology Equity Academic Scholarship Award recipients [A person smiling at the camera AI-generated content may be incorrect.] Justin Bullock, MD, MPH Clinician Researcher Nephrology [A person with long brown hair wearing a black jacket AI-generated content may be incorrect.] Tijana Milinic, MD Acting Instructor Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine [A person wearing glasses and a tie AI-generated content may be incorrect.] Khai Tram, MD Clinician Researcher Allergy and Infectious Diseases Education news New Chief Residents Congratulations to the new chief residents for the 2026-2027 academic year: Boise * Meagan Boll * Mariah Lapinski * Vanessa Lin Harborview * Shailly Pandey, quality & safety * Sarina Sandhu, inpatient * Xiaochang (Chris) Song, outpatient UWMC * Alyssa Botelho, outpatient (Roosevelt) * Nicole Boyd, inpatient * Marin Cabrera, inpatient UW Medicine Primary Care - Belltown * Divya Takkellapati, outpatient Global Health- Naivasha * TBA VA * Rachel Abramson, outpatient clinician-teacher * Pranusha Atuluru, quality & safety * Kaela Cohan, inpatient * Kayla Hogan, outpatient clinician-teacher * Swetha Reddi, inpatient ________________________________ Save the date: Research Fellows Orientation Course The annual Department of Medicine Workshop: "Surviving and Thriving During the Research Years" will be held this year on Aug. 6 at South Lake Union. This course covers the skills necessary for academic success, such as grant & manuscript writing, mentorship, appointments & promotions, and breakout sessions on opportunities in industry or the public health & policy sector. More information and registration information will be provided closer to the date. Research news Community factors linked to cardiac-arrest outcomes [Graham Nichol]A study of people who had suffered out-of-hospital cardiac arrests showed that their locations affected their outcomes. People in rural areas were less likely to have been resuscitated by the time they reached the emergency department than were those in poorer urban areas and people in economically deprived urban areas who made it to the hospital were less likely to survive, or had worse neurological outcomes, than those in urban areas that are more well-off. The findings were published this week in JAMA Network Open. "People have assumed that if we just improve EMS, we will eliminate the differences in outcomes we see between one community and another," said senior author Dr. Graham Nichol, professor (General Internal Medicine). Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ Over 250 million people worldwide unaware they have diabetes [Edward Boyko]Globally, nearly one in nine adults (589 million) are now living with diabetes. Of these, an estimated 252 million are not yet aware they have the condition, placing them at higher risk of serious complications and early death. Dr. Edward Boyko, professor (General Internal Medicine) is co-chair of the new edition of the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) Diabetes Atlas. As the number of people living with diabetes continues to rise, the latest IDF Diabetes Atlas emphasizes the urgent need for improved prevention, early detection and intervention to tackle the burden diabetes places on individuals, communities, health systems and economies. Learn more on our news site. ________________________________ Research improves lives UW Medicine has launched the Research Improves Lives campaign. This initiative highlights the vital contributions of the UW Medicine research community to discovery, patient care, job creation and economic growth, while illustrating the consequences if research declines or ceases. If you would like to help show how research improves lives, please share your own story of how research has impacted your life or the life of someone you know. Recent publications Dr. Helen Chu, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of "Maternal Immunization" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. Dr. Helen Jack, assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "Priorities for addressing mental health conditions and substance use disorders in prisons in sub-Saharan Africa: expert consensus from a Delphi panel" in The Lancet Psychiatry. DOM co-author is Zo? Senter. Dr. George Ioannou, professor (Gastroenterology) is lead author of "Target Trial Emulation of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Infection Versus No Infection and Risk of Post-Coronavirus Disease 2019 Conditions in the Omicron Variant Versus Prior Eras" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Viswam Nair, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is co-author of "An ultrasensitive method for detection of cell-free RNA" in Nature. Drs. Joshua Schiffer, professor, and Grace John-Stewart, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of "Intact HIV DNA decays in children with and without complete viral load suppression" in PLoS Pathogens. Dr. Judith Tsui, professor (General Internal Medicine) is co-author of "Retreatment of Hepatitis C Virus Among People Who Inject Drugs" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. In the news Dr. Rachel Bender Ignacio, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "One of the country's leading Alzheimer's projects is in jeopardy" from NBC News. Dr. Tomas Mustelin, professor and head (Rheumatology) is quoted in "Risky moves: Can blocking "jumping genes" treat diseases and aging?" in Science. Dr. Anna Wald, professor and head (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "Is coloring Easter eggs safe amid bird flu outbreaks?" from FOX News. Events of interest Resilience in Community The UW Professional Staff Organization (PSO) Annual Forum will be held virtually on April 22- 23. This year's theme, "Resilience in Community," acknowledges the uncertainty of our times and emphasizes the importance of cultivating a supportive, connected environment where we can learn from one another and grow together. Weekly Calendar, April 21-25, 2025 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Women Faculty Day The theme for Women Faculty Day this year is "Advocacy, Allyship, & Action: Building a Future for Women in Medicine & Science" and will feature UW Provost Dr. Tricia Serio as the Keynote Speaker. May 13, 9am-3:30pm, UW Center for Urban Horticulture Center. Please register for this event. Commemorating Dr. King Holmes A celebration of the life of King Holmes will be held on the UW campus in Kane Hall (Roethke Auditorium, Room 130), on June 16, from 4:00 pm to 5:30 pm (reception to follow). For those who cannot attend in person, a virtual option will be available (more to come). If attending in person, please RSVP (if you would like to record a video message, please use this zoom link). ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image018.png@01DBB07B.255A1C10][cid:image019.jpg@01DBB07B.255A1C10][cid:image020.jpg@01DBB07B.255A1C10][cid:image021.png@01DBB07B.255A1C10][cid:image022.png@01DBB07B.255A1C10] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. If you are not the intended recipient, or if the message has been addressed to you in error, do not read, disclose, reproduce, distribute, disseminate or otherwise use this transmission. 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Name: image017.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1661 bytes Desc: image017.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 25 16:10:26 2025 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Apr 25 16:10:35 2025 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 28-May 2, 2025 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01DBB5FC.89C44910] DOM Week April 25, 2025 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (if you have items for DOM Week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Faculty news AAP elections [Kristina Crothers and Gail Jarvik]Congratulations to the following DOM members who have been elected as a new member or to the council of the American Association of Physicians (AAP): Dr. Kristina Crothers, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is a newly elected AAP member, and Dr. Gail Jarvik, professor and head (Medical Genetics) has been elected to the AAP Council. Her five-year term will begin on May 1. Election to the AAP is in recognition of attaining excellence in the pursuit of medical knowledge, and the advancement through experimentation and discovery of basic and clinical science and their application to clinical medicine. ________________________________ [Michael Linenberger]Dr. Michael Linenberger, professor emeritus (Hematology and Oncology) was selected to present the Francis S. Morrison, MD Memorial Lecture at the 2025 American Society for Apheresis (ASFA) annual meeting in Montreal earlier this month. This memorial lectureship award recognizes individuals whose contributions to the field of apheresis medicine have made, or are expected to make, a significant and lasting impact. ________________________________ [Jeanne Marrazzo]Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, affiliate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) has been named the 2025 Alumni of Impact Awardee by the UW School of Public Health (SPH). This prestigious award recognizes an SPH alum who has demonstrated outstanding achievements in the field of public health and has made significant contributions to their communities. Dr. Marrazzo was a faculty member in the Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for over two decades. She has most recently served as the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), overseeing research to advance the understanding, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of infectious, immunologic, and allergic diseases. Staff news [Ignacio Sunkel]Staff spotlight: Ignacio Sunkel Our latest staff spotlight is on Ignacio Sunkel, program operations analyst in the Division of Gastroenterology. Learn more about him on our news site. Clinical news CARES Awards [A person and person smiling AI-generated content may be incorrect.]Congratulations to the following DOM members who received Spring 2025 Cares Awards: Allison Fairbanks, teaching associate (Gastroenterology) and Dr. Serkan Sahin, clinical instructor (Cardiology). The UW Medicine Cares Award, established in 2013, recognizes and celebrates the accomplishments of individuals and teams who consistently exemplify UW Medicine?Service Culture Guidelines. Research news A greener approach to patient care [William Weppner]Many healthcare systems are increasingly aware not only of the growing health concerns of climate change but also recognize the need to reduce the environmental impacts generated by the healthcare system itself. Telemedicine programs- like the VA Health Care System?s Advanced Comprehensive Diabetes Care (ACDC)- hold the potential to both enhance patient care and reduce the carbon footprint of providing care. In a recent article published in NEJM Catalyst researchers demonstrated that ACDC improved care for diabetes patients while also reduced patient travel time, out-of-pocket costs, and greenhouse gas emissions. ?Climate change is one of the greatest threats to the health of our patients and communities that we may see in our lifetimes,? said Dr. William Weppner, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) and section head at the Boise VA Medical Center who is first author on the NEJM Catalyst paper. Read the full story on our news site. ________________________________ Caution advised toward ?cuffless devices? BP readings [Eugene Yang]Watches, rings and other devices claim to monitor blood pressure, but lack the validation of an inflatable-cuff measurement in clinic, a recent study published in JAMA Cardiology warns. Lead author is Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology). ?The consumer market for these devices is well established. Companies have already received FDA clearance as well as European CE marks for these devices. The problem is that they have not been appropriately validated. We all need to take a step back and understand that these devices cannot accurately measure blood pressure or diagnose hypertension or determine when to prescribe a medication,? Yang said. Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ UW Medical Student Addiction Research Program grant renewal [Judith Tsui]Dr. Judith Tsui, professor (General Internal Medicine) is PI on a R25, 5-year grant renewal for ?The UW Medical Student Addiction Research (MedStAR) Program to Address Substance Use and Disorders in Urban and Rural Communities in Five Western States.? The UW Medical Student Addiction Research (MedStAR) program has been successful in creating opportunities for mentored research and education for medical students in 5 western rural-serving states (WA, WY, AK, MT, and ID) with a goal of generating a ?pipeline? for medical students who are interested in pursuing Addiction Medicine fellowships to become the next generation of physician-scientists. DOM co-I?s include Elly Bhatraju, Geetanjali Chander, Sarah Leyde, and Joe Merrill (General Internal Medicine) and Julie Dombrowski, Sara Glick, and Susan Graham, (Allergy and Infectious Diseases). Recent publications Dr. Andrew Cowan, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) is senior author of ?Summarizing Clinical Evidence Utilizing Large Language Models for Cancer Treatments: A Blinded Comparative Analysis? in Frontiers in Digital Health. DOM co-authors are Rahul Banerjee and Mary Kwok. Dr. Nicole Ehrhardt, assistant professor, is lead author and Dr. Lorena Alarcon-Casas Wright, professor of clinical practice (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is senior author of ?A Randomized Clinical Trial of a Culturally Tailored Diabetes Education Curriculum With and Without Real-Time Continuous Glucose Monitoring in a Latino Population With Type 2 Diabetes: The CUT-DM With Continuous Glucose Monitoring Study? in the Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology. Dr. Lauren Jatt, fellow (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is lead author of ?An HIV Vaccine in the Era of Twice-Yearly Lenacapavir for PrEP - Essential or Irrelevant?? in the New England Journal of Medicine. Dr. Steven Kahn, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is lead author of ?NIDDK at 75 Years of Age: Great Triumphs but Concerns for Its Longevity? in Diabetes Care. Dr. Reena Mehra, professor and head (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is co-author of ?Lorundrostat Efficacy and Safety in Patients with Uncontrolled Hypertension? in the New England Journal of Medicine. Dr. Rajnish Mehrotra, professor and head (Nephrology) is co-author of ?Performance of Dialysis Facilities after Health-Equity Scoring Incentive? in the New England Journal of Medicine. Drs. Thomas Rea, professor (General Internal Medicine) and Peter Kudenchuk, professor (Cardiology) are co-authors of ?A Comparison of Ketamine to Midazolam for the Management of Acute Behavioral Disturbance in the Out-of-Hospital Setting? in the Annals of Emergency Medicine. Dr. Ruben Raychaudhuri, assistant professor, is lead author and Dr. R. Bruce Montgomery, professor (Hematology and Oncology) is senior author of ?Prostate Cancer: A Review? in JAMA. Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology) is senior author of ?Peripartum Unmasking of Acute Lupus Myopericarditis? in JACC: Cardiology. Lead author is UW medical student Annie Richardson and DOM co-authors are Cooper Kersey and Brianna Balansay. Events of interest Clinical Cardiology Pearls for Primary Care This course is tailored for a primary care audience and is intended to provide practical, up-to-date information on commonly encountered cardiovascular diseases. May 2, via zoom. More information and registration link available on the CME website. DOM Reconnection, with Birds! [A bird perched on a branch]The DOM birding group has been meeting monthly now for over a year, spotting over 75 species in the Union Bay Natural Area! The group is informal and open to all, from the bird-curious to seasoned life-listers. A great way to enjoy the outdoors, catch up with colleagues and meet new members of the department. No registration necessary; we meet in the east parking lot of UW?s Center for Urban Horticulture at 9AM on the second Saturday of every month. Binoculars are available for those who do not have their own. Contact Mark Tonelli with any questions. Weekly Calendar, April 28 ? May 2, 2025 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Women Faculty Day The theme for Women Faculty Day this year is ?Advocacy, Allyship, & Action: Building a Future for Women in Medicine & Science? and will feature UW Provost Dr. Tricia Serio as the Keynote Speaker. May 13, 9am-3:30pm, UW Center for Urban Horticulture Center. Please register for this event. Small Projects, Big Impact: Enhancing Health Sciences Education through Research and Scholarship The CLIME Together Symposium is an annual event bringing together members of the UW School of Medicine to build community, gain skills as educators, and enhance health sciences education. This year?s theme is ?Small Projects, Big Impact: Enhancing Health Sciences Education through Research and Scholarship.? The plenary speaker is Dr. Grace Huang, renowned educator and professor at Harvard Medical School. June 6, 9am-1pm, UW Waterfront Activities Center. Please register for this symposium. Commemorating Dr. King Holmes A celebration of the life of King Holmes will be held on the UW campus in Kane Hall (Roethke Auditorium, Room 130), on June 16, from 4:00 pm to 5:30 pm (reception to follow). For those who cannot attend in person, a virtual option will be available (more to come). If attending in person, please RSVP (if you would like to record a video message, please use this zoom link). ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image020.png@01DBB5FC.89C44910][cid:image021.jpg@01DBB5FC.89C44910][cid:image022.jpg@01DBB5FC.89C44910][cid:image023.png@01DBB5FC.89C44910][cid:image024.png@01DBB5FC.89C44910] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 22120 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 16478 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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