Jochen Reiser (born June 23, 1971, in Pforzheim, Germany) is a physician-scientist and a healthcare leader. He is the President of the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) and CEO of the UTMB Health System,[1] which includes the oldest medical school and nursing school in Texas. As chief executive officer, he oversees the enterprise which includes multiple campuses, five health science colleges, the Galveston National Laboratory(BSL-4) and the Correctional Health Care Services for most of Texas.
Prior to joining the University of Texas Medical Branch, he served as the Ralph C Brown Professor and the Chairman of Medicine at Rush University Medical Center.[2] Reiser's research has provided important mechanistic insights into the molecular pathogenesis of kidney diseases.
suPAR is investigated as potential causative agent contributing to many kidney diseases including focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). These studies have broad clinical significance and lay the foundation for creation of novel diagnostics and pharmaco-therapeutics with potential benefit for a large patient population. His studies on suPAR molecule were featured in Science in 2018.[5] Reiser has been an advocate of science and innovation for two decades and was named as an inventor on multiple patents. He is co-founder of Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Walden Biosciences,[6] an ARCH Venture Partners joint-venture biopharmaceutical portfolio company dedicated to develop first-in-class therapeutics for kidney diseases.
Education
Reiser received his medical and Ph.D. degrees from Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg in Heidelberg, Germany]], in 1998 and 1999, respectively. His dissertation, summa cum laude, was entitled Pathobiologie der Podozyten: Molekulare Analyse der glomerulären Schlitzmembran und Fortsatzdynamik von Podozyten at the Institute for Anatomy and Cell Biology,[7]
Reiser’s independent academic career started as an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School in 2005. In 2007, he founded and directed the MGH Program in Glomerular Disease, which runs the first of its kind at a Harvard University-affiliated hospital.
In 2010, he was elected as the Vice Chair for Research by the Department of Medicine.[12] In 2011, he took up the role of Endowed (Peggy and Harold Katz) Chair in Vascular Biology and Kidney Disease. In 2012, he was promoted to interim chairman of Medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
After having served in various capacities at the University of Miami, Reiser was appointed as The Ralph C Brown MD Professor and Chairman of Medicine by Rush University Medical Center in September 2012. Reiser’s academic career has centered on his role as Chairman of Medicine at Rush University and he has been a member of Medical Executive Committee (MEC) (2014–2016), Committee on Senior Faculty Appointments and Promotions (COSFAP) (2014, Chair 2015–2016), Committee on Student Evaluation and Promotion (COSEP) (2014–2016), and Conflict of Interest and Commitment Committee (COIIR) (since 2013). He currently serves on the Faculty Council for Rush University.
Reiser's research focuses on podocyte biology and glomerular diseases. His laboratory[14] has been developing therapies and assays to combat renal diseases and its many complications since 2004.
His contributions range from identification of a common circulating blood protein —soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (suPAR)— in the pathogenesis of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS)[15] to suPAR's emerging role as earliest known biomarker for incident and progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD)[3] as well as for acute kidney injury (AKI).[4]suPAR may link the innate immune system functionally to the kidney – a novel, potentially fundamental concept. "suPAR is a global risk factor for kidney diseases and lower levels of it are better for any of them. He also compares the characteristics of suPAR to that of cholesterol. suPAR targeting may do for kidney disease what statins has done for cardiovascular disease", he says.[16] His work has been responsible for new research fields and is significantly sparking new therapeutic approaches for renal diseases.
As a healthcare leader, Reiser engages others to work in a team-focused approach, which drives success and motivation. Forward thinking and disruptive in the idea, he leads with transparency and accountability, applying a data-driven approach to ensure successful navigation through the complex financial and academic world of healthcare today.
Awards and honors
Reiser has been an active member of the following prestigious physician societies: