Dr. Feng is a Professor of Surgery at the University of California, San Francisco, where she performs liver, kidney, and pancreas transplants. Dr. Feng is also the Vice Chair of Research for the Department of Surgery and the Director of the Abdominal Transplant Surgery fellowship program. She has mentored many medical students, residents, fellows, and junior attendings in clinical and translational research. Dr. Feng will assume this title in August 2020. To successfully transition the journal, she will work through the end of the year with current Editor-in-Chief, Dr. Allan Kirk.
Dr. Feng’s research interests center on exploring mechanisms of spontaneous tolerance, and approaches to induce tolerance in adult and pediatric liver transplant recipients. She is the overall principal investigator for multiple NIH-funded, multi-center tolerance trials, and has also served as a site principal investigator for a diverse portfolio of trials testing novel immunosuppression regimens in both kidney and liver transplantation.
Dr. Feng has held numerous leadership roles, including:
Finally, to address the primary challenge that faces transplantation today, organ scarcity, Dr. Feng spearheaded a decade-long effort to establish an algorithm for the conduct of innovative research in deceased donors. These efforts have resulted in a study conducted by the National Academy of Medicine that provides critical guidance to overcome the ethical, regulatory, and logistical issues that currently obstruct this research that has tremendous potential to enhance the quality and increase the number of organs available for transplantation.
In addition to reviewing manuscripts for many high impact journals, Dr. Feng has served as Associate, Deputy, and Consulting Editor for AJT. She is also a member of the editorial board of the New England Journal of Medicine.
Dr. Feng welcomes this opportunity and shares, “AJT has succeeded as a vehicle to showcase high quality and impactful research, thereby shaping the global practice of transplantation. However, the explosion of knowledge coupled with the implosion of time embodies the primary challenge faced by AJT: the need to deliver more information more accurately and more effectively. My top priorities will be to:
We are excited to see the continued growth and evolution of AJT with this change in editorial leadership, while it continues to maintain the quality that our members and other readers have come to expect. We thank Dr. Allan Kirk for his exceptional leadership during his tenure as Editor-in-Chief, and his commitment to ensuring a smooth transition of leadership for the AJT. Also, we wish to thank the members of the AJT Editor-in-Chief Search Committee for a job well done. Please join us in wishing Dr. Feng great success in this new role.
Lloyd Ratner, MD, MPH
ASTS President
Emily Blumberg, MD
AST President