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Michael Goldstein, MD

Positions and Appointments

2008-present  Assistant Professor of Surgery
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY
2008-present  Attending Surgeon
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
2008-present  Surgical Director, Pediatric Abdominal Transplantation
New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
2008-present  Associate Program Director, General Surgery Residency Program
New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
2008-present  Associate Program Director, Medical Education
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY

Clinical Specialties

Abdominal organ transplantation
Pediatric abdominal transplantation
Incompatible transplantation
Hepatobiliary surgery
Dialysis access surgery

Research Interests

Clinical outcomes research
Expanded criteria deceased donation utilization
Ischemia/reperfusion injury and regeneration
Organ preservation
Surgical education


Education and Training

2003-2005  Fellowship, Center for Liver Disease and Transplantation
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center , New York, NY
2002-2003  Administrative Chief Resident
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
1997-2003  Residency
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
2000-2001  Research Fellow
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY
1993-1997  MD
Temple University, Philadelphia, PA
1989-1993  BA
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

Board Certifications

American Board of Surgery, General Surgery, 2004
New York State License, 1999

Professional Experience

2005-present  Assistant Attending Surgeon
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY
2005-present  Assistant Professor
Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY
2004-2005  Instructor of Clinical Surgery
Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
2004-2005  Assistant Attending Surgeon
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
2000-2001  Research Fellow
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Dept. of Surgery, New York, NY
1997-2004  Resident Surgeon
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
1997-2004  Post-doctoral Residency Fellow
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY
1993-1995  Research Assistant
Albert Einstein Medical Center, Medical Informatics, Philadelphia, PA
1991-1997  Research Assistant
University of Pennsylvania, Biology Dept., Philadelphia, PA

Professional Honors

Nassau Research Fund, Outstanding undergraduate research, University of Pennsylvania, 1992

N & T Johnson Memorial Scholarship, Temple University School of Medicine, Sept., 1994

“A Stitch in Time” Teaching Award, CPMC Residency, June 2001

Young Investigator Award, American Society for Transplant Surgery, May 2001

Resident Teacher Award, Honorable Mention; Columbia P&S, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003

Professional Societies and Committees

Fellow, American College of Surgeons, 2007
American Society of Transplant Surgeons, 2006
Trainee, American College of Surgeons, 2000
American Medical Association, 1997

Selected Publications


Gao J, Ng A, Shih G, Goldstein MJ, Kapur S, Wang J, Min RJ. Intrarenal Color Duplex Ultrasonography: A Window to Vascular Complications of Renal Transplants. J Ultrasound Med, 2007; 26:1403-1418.

Wan DW, Serur D, Bodenheimer HC Jr, Goldstein MJ, Sigal SH. Remission of aseptic inflammatory ascites after nephrectomy of a failed allograft. Am J Kidney Dis, 2007 Oct; 50(4):645-8.

Renz JF, Kin C, Kinkhabwala M, Jan D, Varadarajan R, Goldstein MJ, Brown R Jr, Emond JC. Utilization of extended donor criteria liver allografts maximizes donor use and patient access to liver transplantation. Ann Surg, 2005 Oct; 242(4):556-63; discussion 563-5.

Goldstein MJ, Samstein B, Ude A, Widmann WD, Hardy MA. Work Hours Assessment and Monitoring Initiative (WHAMI) Under Resident Direction: A Strategy for Working Within Limitations. Current Surgery, 2005; Jan-Feb; 62(1):132-7.

Crew RJ, Radhakrishnan J, Cohen DJ, Stern L, Goldstein MJ, Hardy M, D'Agati VD, Markowitz GS. De novo thrombotic microangiopathy following treatment with sirolimus: report of two cases. Nephrol Dial Transplant, 2005 Jan; 20(1):13-5.

Goldstein MJ, Kim E, Widmann WD, Hardy MA. A 360-degree evaluation of the night-float system for general surgery: A work in progress in response to the mandated work-hours reduction. Current Surgery, 2004 Sep-Oct; 61(5):445-51.

Goldstein MJ, Toman J, Chabot JA. Pancreaticogastrostomy: A novel application after central pancreatectomy. J Am Coll Surg, 2004 Jun; 198(6):871-6.

Goldstein MJ. Resident Work-Hours Limitations: Shifting the Focus of Graduate Medical Education. John Jones Surgical Society Newsletter, 2004 May.

Zeng S, Feirt N, Goldstein MJ, Guarrera J, Ippagunta N, Ekong U, Dun H, Lu Y, Qu W, Schmidt AM, Emond JC. Blockade of receptor for AGE (RAGE) attenuates ischemia and reperfusion injury to the liver in mice. Hepatology, 2004 Feb; 39(2):422-432.

Goldstein MJ. Surgical training, the revolution: Work hours limitations. Current Surgery, 2003 May; 60(3):321-323.

Goldstein MJ, Salame E, Kapur S, Kinkhabwala M, LaPointe-Rudow D, Harren P, Lobritto SJ, Russo M, Brown RS Jr., Cataldegirmen G, Weinberg A, Renz JF, Emond JC. Analysis of Failure in Living Donor Liver Transplantation (LRT): Differential Outcomes in Children and Adults. World J Surg, 2003 Mar; 27(3):356-364.

Salamé E, Goldstein MJ, Kinkhabwala M, Kapur S, Finn R, Lobritto S, Brown, RS Jr., and Emond JC. Analysis of donor risk in living-donor hepatectomy: the impact of resection type on clinical outcome. Am J Transplant, 2002 Sep; 2(8):780-788.

Grand Rounds, Invited Lectures


“Transplantation of kidneys with undesirable risk factors” NATCO Annual Meeting. New York, NY. 2007 August.

“Electrolyte abnormalities in transplantation” NATCO Annual Meeting. New York, NY. 2007 August.

Transplant Ground Rounds. Jewish Hospital, Louisville, KY. 2007 July.

“Pull: Optimizing Organ Acceptance” Learning Session 2, Organ Donation and Transplantation Breakthrough Collaborative, HRSA-DOT. Atlanta, GA. 2007 April.

“Transplanting Kidneys with Glomerulosclerosis” Learning Session 2, Organ Donation and Transplantation Breakthrough Collaborative, HRSA-DOT. Atlanta, GA. 2007 April.

Transplant Grand Rounds. Washington Hospital Center, Washington DC. 2007 January.

Transplant Grand Rounds. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston MA. 2007 January.

Surgery Grand Rounds. Weill-Cornell Medical College, New York , NY. 2007 January.

“DSA Transformation and Successes” Organ Transplantation Breakthrough Collaborative LS3, National Learning Congress, HRSA-DOT. New Orleans, LO. 2006 October.

“Pulsatile-Machine Preservation Versus Cold Storage.” NATCO, Preservation Seminar. Chicago, IL. 2006 August.

Pediatric Grand Rounds. Weill-Cornell Medical College, New York, NY. 2005 December.

Scientific Exhibits


Goldstein MJ, Abrams TW. “A simulation approach to evaluating relative contributions of multiple 5 HT-modulated K+ currents to spike broadening in Aplysia sensory neurons.” Neuroscience Annual Meeting, 1992.

Goldstein MJ, Abrams TW. “Computer simulation studies of functional consequences of modulation of multiple 5-HT-sensitive K+ currents in Aplysia sensory neurons.”Neuroscience Annual Meeting, 1993.

Goldstein MJ, Abrams TW. “Serotonin modulation of K+ currents enhances central propagation of peripherally initiated action potentials in Aplysia sensory neurons.” Neuroscience Annual Meeting, 1994.

Goldstein MJ, Nevo I, Salah M, Dagalur S. “VIGIATRIX (VX) – A clinical workstation that increases physician vigilance.” Refereed scientific exhibit. American Society of Anesthesiology Annual Meeting, Atlanta GA, October 1995.

Lapointe-Rudow D, Shane E, Goldstein MJ, Addesso V, Russo MW, Emond JC, Brown RS Jr. “Prevalence of bone disease in patients with cirrhosis.” 51st Annual AASLD. Dallas, TX, October 2000.

Goldstein MJ, El-Tamer M, Thaker HM, O’Toole KM. “Fibrosarcoma protuberans of the breast: A case report and review of the literature.” ACS. Chicago, IL, October 2000.

Cataldegirmen G, Hofmann M, Kislinger T, Goldstein MJ, Stern D, Schmidt AM, and Emond J. “Blockade of receptor for AGE (RAGE): A novel strategy results in enhanced regeneration and marked survival benefit after massive hepatectomy in mice. 51st Annual AASLD. Dallas, TX, October 2000.

Goldstein MJ, Widmann WD, Hardy MA. “Work Hours Assessment and Monitoring Initiative (WHAMI) Under Resident Direction: A Strategy for Working Within Limitations.” ASE. Houston, TX, Mar 2004.

Goldstein MJ, Balina M, Goris M, Aull M, Dadhania D, Serur D, Hartono C, Kapur S. “Steroid avoidance in recipients of expanded-criteria donor (ECD) renal allografts: Effects on early graft function.” WTC. Boston, MA, July 2006.

Goldstein MJ, Sorenson E, Abreu-Goris M, Dadhania D, Kapur S. Mitigating Risk Of Deceased Donor Renal Transplantation After Positive Crossmatch. ATC. San Francisco, CA, May 2007.

Oral Presentations


“Successful Transplantation of Undesirable Kidneys” Department of Surgery, Weill-Cornell Medical College. ASTS State of the Art Winter Symposium. Marco Island, FL. January 2007.

“Pulsatile-Machine Preservation Versus Cold Storage In Mate Renal Allografts.” Department of Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical College. World Transplant Congress. Boston MA. July 2005.

“Rituximab Rescue For Refractory Antibody Mediated Rejection After Kidney Transplantation.” Department of Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia Campus. ATC. Seattle, WA. May 2005.

“Comparative Analysis Of Biliary Complications In Adults And Children After 130 Living Donor Liver Transplants.” Department of Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia Campus. ATC. Seattle, WA. May 2005.

“Work Hours Assessment and Monitoring Initiative (WHAMI) Under Resident Direction: A Strategy for Working Within Limitations.” Department of Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia Campus. APDS. Houston, TX; Mar 2004.

“A 360-degree evaluation of the night-float system for general surgery: A work in progress in response to the mandated work-hours reduction.” Department of Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia Campus. APDS. Vancouver, BC; May 2003.

“The 80 Hour Work Week? Too Much Work in Too Little Time.” Department of Surgery, New-York Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia Campus. Society of Clinical Surgery, New York, NY; Sept 2002.

“Analysis of Failure in Living Donor Liver Transplantation (LRT): Differential Outcomes in Children and Adults.” Center for Liver Disease & Transplantation, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia Campus: Transplantation 2001, Chicago, IL; May 2001.

“Clinical Validation of an Algorithm that Assesses Vital Sign Changes in Real Time.” Medical Informatics, Dept. of Anesthesiology, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA. Presented at the 15th International Symposium on Computing in Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Phila., PA.; April 1995.

“Computer Simulation of Multiple 5-HT-Modulated K+ Currents in Aplysia Sensory Neurons.” Honors Thesis, Biological Basis of Behavior Department, University of Pennsylvania, Phila., PA; May 1993.

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