David Felson, MD, MPH
Professor Adjunct, Internal Medicine (Rheumatology)Cards
Appointments
Contact Info
Rheumatology
300 cedar Street
New Haven , CT 06520
United States
About
Titles
Professor Adjunct, Internal Medicine (Rheumatology)
Biography
My research is focused on understanding how to prevent and treat osteoarthritis. Specifically, I seek to determine whether rheumatic disease treatments are effective in preventing progression and/or treating patients with osteoarthritis. Additionally, my research focuses on identifying biomechanical risk factors and testing biomechanical treatments for osteoarthritis and characterizing MRI features of normal knees and knees with pain. I also study outcome measurement in rheumatic disease and with a particular focus on rheumatoid arthritis trials. I have received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Osteoarthritis Research Society and was the inaugural recipient of the Clinical Research Award from the American College of Rheumatology. In 2022, I accepted a secondary academic appointment at the Yale School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Rheumatology, Allery & Immunology Section as an Assistant Professor Adjunct of Medicine where I will help to train residents, fellows and junior faculty members in the sound design of patient-focused studies, collection of patient-level data and analysis of study results.
Appointments
Rheumatology
Professor AdjunctPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Clinical Fellowship
- Boston University School of Medicine (1984)
- Research Fellowship
- Boston University (1984)
- MPH
- Boston University School of Public Health (1984)
- Internship and Residency
- Case Western University Hospitals (1981)
- MD
- John Hopkins University (1978)
- AB
- Harvard College (1974)
Board Certifications
Rheumatology
- Certification Organization
- American Board of Internal Medicine
- Original Certification Date
- 1984
Internal Medicine
- Certification Organization
- American Board of Internal Medicine
- Original Certification Date
- 1981
Research
Overview
My main contributions to science are in the areas of osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis outcomes. Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common form of arthritis and a highly prevalent disabling disease for which there is no known structure modifying treatment and science has focused on articular cartilage biology. I started the Framingham Osteoarthritis Study which was the first modern day study to characterize the prevalence of disease and was the first to obtain MRI’s on a community sample. These have shown that structural changes of OA including meniscal tears were common even in those without joint pain. Using longitudinal data from Framingham, we were the first to show that obesity preceded knee OA and probably caused it and the first to show that weight loss could prevent disease. I also started the MOST cohort study to examine risk factors that could be modified in osteoarthritis and the Beijing Osteoarthritis Study which confirmed the extremely low rate of hip osteoarthritis in China and showed that the remarkably spherical hips of Chinese provided an explanation.
My work has been to document that articular structures outside of cartilage generate pain in those with disease, especially bone marrow lesions and synovitis and that these structures may be good therapeutic targets. We have demonstrated the association of bone marrow lesions with pain, that their fluctuation relates directly to pain fluctuation, and that treatment of these lesions in the knee can both shrink the lesions on MRI and reduce knee pain. For synovitis, we have demonstrated an association with pain and that pain fluctuation and synovitis fluctuation are directly related. In recent work of ours, we have shown that preventing cartilage loss, a focus on treatmen development, is unlikely to have a major effect on pain reduction. For both bone marrow lesions and synovitis, my group has documented that their presence increases the risk of disease progression and cartilage loss. In recent work, we have documented that visceral adiposity products enhance musculo-skeletal pain.
For rheumatoid arthritis, my group created the idea of a core set of outcomes, a concept that has now been adopted in multiple diseases. We then led international efforts to standardize outcome measurement in rheumatoid arthritis, efforts that helped catalyze the dramatic improvements in treatment for this disease.
I have also dedicated myself to training and mentoring clinical scientists and many of the clinical researchers in musculoskeletal diseases in the US have trained in my group.
Google scholar H Index April 2022: 163; work cited 149,575 times.
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Yuan Lu, ScD
Publications
2013
The State of US Health, 1990-2010: Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors
Murray CJ, Atkinson C, Bhalla K, Birbeck G, Burstein R, Chou D, Dellavalle R, Danaei G, Ezzati M, Fahimi A, Flaxman D, Foreman, Gabriel S, Gakidou E, Kassebaum N, Khatibzadeh S, Lim S, Lipshultz SE, London S, Lopez, MacIntyre MF, Mokdad AH, Moran A, Moran AE, Mozaffarian D, Murphy T, Naghavi M, Pope C, Roberts T, Salomon J, Schwebel DC, Shahraz S, Sleet DA, Murray, Abraham J, Ali MK, Atkinson C, Bartels DH, Bhalla K, Birbeck G, Burstein R, Chen H, Criqui MH, Dahodwala, Jarlais, Ding EL, Dorsey ER, Ebel BE, Ezzati M, Fahami, Flaxman S, Flaxman AD, Gonzalez-Medina D, Grant B, Hagan H, Hoffman H, Kassebaum N, Khatibzadeh S, Leasher JL, Lin J, Lipshultz SE, Lozano R, Lu Y, Mallinger L, McDermott MM, Micha R, Miller TR, Mokdad AA, Mokdad AH, Mozaffarian D, Naghavi M, Narayan KM, Omer SB, Pelizzari PM, Phillips D, Ranganathan D, Rivara FP, Roberts T, Sampson U, Sanman E, Sapkota A, Schwebel DC, Sharaz S, Shivakoti R, Singh GM, Singh D, Tavakkoli M, Towbin JA, Wilkinson JD, Zabetian A, Murray, Abraham J, Ali MK, Alvardo M, Atkinson C, Baddour LM, Benjamin EJ, Bhalla K, Birbeck G, Bolliger I, Burstein R, Carnahan E, Chou D, Chugh SS, Cohen A, Colson KE, Cooper LT, Couser W, Criqui MH, Dabhadkar KC, Dellavalle RP, Jarlais, Dicker D, Dorsey ER, Duber H, Ebel BE, Engell RE, Ezzati M, Felson DT, Finucane MM, Flaxman S, Flaxman AD, Fleming T, Foreman, Forouzanfar MH, Freedman G, Freeman MK, Gakidou E, Gillum RF, Gonzalez-Medina D, Gosselin R, Gutierrez HR, Hagan H, Havmoeller R, Hoffman H, Jacobsen KH, James SL, Jasrasaria R, Jayarman S, Johns N, Kassebaum N, Khatibzadeh S, Lan Q, Leasher JL, Lim S, Lipshultz SE, London S, Lopez, Lozano R, Lu Y, Mallinger L, Meltzer M, Mensah GA, Michaud C, Miller TR, Mock C, Moffitt TE, Mokdad AA, Mokdad AH, Moran A, Naghavi M, Narayan KM, Nelson RG, Olives C, Omer SB, Ortblad K, Ostro B, Pelizzari PM, Phillips D, Raju M, Razavi H, Ritz B, Roberts T, Sacco RL, Salomon J, Sampson U, Schwebel DC, Shahraz S, Shibuya K, Silberberg D, Singh JA, Steenland K, Taylor JA, Thurston GD, Vavilala MS, Vos T, Wagner GR, Weinstock MA, Weisskopf MG, Wulf S, Murray. The State of US Health, 1990-2010: Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors. JAMA 2013, 310: 591-606. PMID: 23842577, PMCID: PMC5436627, DOI: 10.1001/jama.2013.13805.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsAge-standardized YLL rateHealthy life expectancyBurden of diseaseRisk factorsLife expectancyPopulation healthYLL ratesAge-standardized YLD rateChronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseHigher body mass indexAge-standardized death ratesDeath rateReference life expectancyRisk-outcome pairsSum of YLDsChronic kidney diseaseObstructive pulmonary diseaseHigh blood pressureIschemic heart diseaseBody mass indexLow back painDrug use disordersDisease 2010 studyMajor depressive disorderMajor health problem
News
News
- January 23, 2024
Investigating Maternal Inflammatory Arthritis and Pregnancy Outcomes
- September 14, 2023
New Professors in the Department of Internal Medicine
- April 28, 2022
Renowned Osteoarthritis Expert David Felson Joins Yale Rheumatology
- April 14, 2022
Welcome New Members of the Department of Internal Medicine (April 2022)
Get In Touch
Contacts
Rheumatology
300 cedar Street
New Haven , CT 06520
United States