Adjunct faculty typically have an academic or research appointment at another institution and contribute or collaborate with one or more School of Medicine faculty members or programs.
Adjunct rank detailsChirag Parikh, MD, PhD, FACP
Professor AdjunctAbout
Copy Link
Titles
Professor Adjunct
Biography
Dr. Parikh is an Adjunct Professor of Medicine, section of Nephrology. Currently at Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Parikh continues his research projects and collaborations with F. Perry Wilson, MD, MSCE, the Interim Director of the Program of Applied Translational Research (PATR) and with other faculty and collaborators within PATR.
Dr. Parikh received his MD from Mumbai, India in 1996. His post-graduate training involves Residency in Internal Medicine at Nassau University and SUNY in Stony Brook, NY, and Fellowship in Nephrology and Hypertension at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver, CO. He also completed a PhD in Clinical Investigation and Translational Research at University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO in 2003. He is board certified in both Internal Medicine and Nephrology. He has received several awards, including the National Junior Physician Investigator Award from the American Federation of Medical Research and the Outstanding Investigator Award from the Society of Clinical Investigation.
Dr. Parikh conducts an active patient-oriented research program investigating the translational and epidemiological aspects of acute kidney injury (AKI) and other kidney related disorders. His major research interest is developing novel biomarkers of AKI. He is the Principal Investigator of the NIH sponsored TRIBE-AKI consortium that is conducting large studies for validating novel kidney injury biomarkers in setting of cardiac surgery, kidney transplantation, diabetic kidney disease and hepatorenal syndrome. He has authored more than 250 peer-reviewed papers, 50 book chapters and reviews, and he has given more than 50 invited lectures at scientific meetings and academic institutions around the world.
Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- PhD
- University of Colorado at Denver (2003)
- MD
- Seth G.S. Medical College (1996)
Research
Copy Link
Overview
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
ORCID
0000-0001-9051-7385
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Publications Timeline
Research Interests
Jason Greenberg, MD, MHS
Dennis G Moledina, MD, PhD, FASN
F. Perry Wilson, MD, MSCE
Sherry Mansour, MD, MS
Lloyd G. Cantley, MD
Mark Perazella, MD
Acute Kidney Injury
Renal Insufficiency
Kidney Diseases
Publications
2025
Urinary Biomarkers and Warm Ischemia in Circulatory Death Donors
Dsouza S, Hu D, Obeid W, Philbrook H, Sharma R, Doshi M, Marklin G, Olden N, Woodard W, Herczyk W, Mohan S, Mansour S, Reese P, Parikh C. Urinary Biomarkers and Warm Ischemia in Circulatory Death Donors. American Journal Of Transplantation 2025, 25: s353. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajt.2025.07.803.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchImproving the Prediction of Deceased Donor Allograft Function with Donor Urinary Biomarkers
Parikh C, Dsouza S, Reese P, Obeid W, Mohan S, Mansour S, Hall I, Doshi M, Philbrook H. Improving the Prediction of Deceased Donor Allograft Function with Donor Urinary Biomarkers. American Journal Of Transplantation 2025, 25: s152. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajt.2025.07.329.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchOperational Checks for Real-Time Urinary Biomarker Measurements for Deceased Donor Kidney Quality Assessment
Barik M, Dsouza S, Obeid W, Hu D, Doshi M, Mohan S, Reese P, Gibbons M, Gansner E, Marklin G, Olden N, Woodard W, Herczyk W, Philbrook H, Parikh C. Operational Checks for Real-Time Urinary Biomarker Measurements for Deceased Donor Kidney Quality Assessment. American Journal Of Transplantation 2025, 25: s444-s445. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajt.2025.07.1020.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCirculating Proteins for Prediction of Kidney Disease Progression and Cardiovascular Outcomes: Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis of Four Cohorts
Lopez-Silva C, Surapaneni A, Coresh J, Chen T, Schlosser P, Rhee E, Waikar S, Schmidt I, Deo R, Ganz P, Dubin R, Ramachandran V, Kimmel P, Schrauben S, Parikh C, Bonventre J, Dobre M, Rao P, Ricardo A, Weir M, Grams M. Circulating Proteins for Prediction of Kidney Disease Progression and Cardiovascular Outcomes: Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis of Four Cohorts. American Journal Of Nephrology 2025, 1-12. PMID: 40587944, PMCID: PMC12329602, DOI: 10.1159/000547138.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsGlomerular filtration rateGlomerular filtration rate declineChronic Renal Insufficiency CohortC-statistic rangeKIM-1Cardiovascular diseaseKidney failureClinical trialsKidney diseasePredictive of kidney disease progressionC-statisticUS Food and Drug AdministrationHigh-risk patientsKidney disease progressionClinical risk estimationDiabetic kidney diseaseClinical trial enrollmentStudy of Kidney DiseaseFood and Drug AdministrationAfrican American Study of Kidney DiseaseData Meta-AnalysisEarly risk markerIncident cardiovascular diseaseIndividual Participant Data Meta-AnalysisParticipant data meta-analysisThe distal nephron biomarkers associate with diabetic kidney disease progression
Tamargo C, Coca S, Philbrook H, Hu D, Ix J, Shlipak M, Fried L, Gutierrez O, Waikar S, Schrauben S, Schelling J, Ganz P, Kimmel P, Greenberg J, Deo R, Takakura A, Vasan R, Bonventre J, Parikh C. The distal nephron biomarkers associate with diabetic kidney disease progression. JCI Insight 2025, 10: e186836. PMID: 40548378, PMCID: PMC12220953, DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.186836.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsDiabetic kidney disease progressionUrine albumin-to-creatinine ratioDiabetic kidney diseaseRisk of DKD progressionEpidermal growth factorDKD progressionMedian urine albumin-to-creatinine ratioUrinary epidermal growth factorBiomarker levelsAlbumin-to-creatinine ratioDistal tubule markerPredicting diabetic kidney diseaseMedian Follow-UpDistal tubular markersKidney disease progressionCox regression modelsBaseline biomarker levelsNational Institute of DiabetesType 2 diabetesEGFR changeTubular markersUrinary biomarkersFollow-upClinical trialsDisease progressionUrine Biomarkers for Diabetic Kidney Disease Progression in Participants of the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort Study
Schrauben S, Zhang X, Xie D, Coca S, Greenberg J, Ix J, Shlipak M, Hsu C, Taliercio J, Parikh C, Gutierrez O, Sarnak M, Dobre M, Cohen D, Schelling J, Rao P, Unruh M, Ricardo A, Waikar S, Kimmel P, Bonventre J. Urine Biomarkers for Diabetic Kidney Disease Progression in Participants of the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort Study. Clinical Journal Of The American Society Of Nephrology 2025, 20: 958-967. PMID: 40493410, PMCID: PMC12262923, DOI: 10.2215/cjn.0000000711.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricConceptsAssociated with higher risk of CKD progressionHigher risk of CKD progressionRisk of CKD progressionAssociated with higher riskHigh urine levelsKidney injury molecule-1Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1Associated with lower riskCKD progressionChemoattractant protein-1Urine biomarkersUrine levelsKIM-1/CrMolecule-1Urine kidney injury molecule-1Urine albumin-to-creatinine ratioLow riskHigh riskAlbumin-to-creatinine ratioUrine MCP-1Progression of diabetic kidney diseaseDiabetic kidney disease progressionMedian Follow-UpChronic Renal Insufficiency CohortChronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort StudyThe Discrepancy Between Estimated GFR Cystatin C and Estimated GFR Creatinine at 3 Months After Hospitalization and Long-Term Adverse Outcomes
Wen Y, Srialluri N, Farrington D, Thiessen-Philbrook H, Menez S, Moledina D, Coca S, Ikizler T, Siew E, Go A, Hsu C, Himmelfarb J, Chinchilli V, Kaufman J, Kimmel P, Garg A, Grams M, Parikh C. The Discrepancy Between Estimated GFR Cystatin C and Estimated GFR Creatinine at 3 Months After Hospitalization and Long-Term Adverse Outcomes. Kidney International Reports 2025, 10: 1896-1906. PMID: 40630320, PMCID: PMC12230997, DOI: 10.1016/j.ekir.2025.04.003.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricConceptsAcute kidney injuryEnd-stage kidney diseaseHeart failure hospitalizationFailure hospitalizationCystatin CHospitalized adultsRisk of heart failure hospitalizationHigher risk of heart failure hospitalizationLong-term adverse outcomesMedian Follow-UpRisk of end-stage kidney diseaseAge of study participantsPrognostic valuePrognostic markerCardiac eventsKidney injuryRisk stratificationFollow-upAdverse outcomesKidney diseaseEGFRcrHospitalized patientsHigh riskSurvival analysisEGFRcysBiomarker Panels for Discriminating Risk of CKD Progression in Children
Greenberg J, Abraham A, Xu Y, Schelling J, Coca S, Schrauben S, Wilson F, Waikar S, Vasan R, Gutiérrez O, Shlipak M, Ix J, Warady B, Kimmel P, Bonventre J, Parikh C, Denburg M, Furth S. Biomarker Panels for Discriminating Risk of CKD Progression in Children. Journal Of The American Society Of Nephrology 2025, 36: 1105-1115. PMID: 39820177, PMCID: PMC12147970, DOI: 10.1681/asn.0000000602.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricConceptsPlasma KIM-1CKD progressionKIM-1Alpha 1-microglobulinUrine albumin/creatinineBaseline urine protein-to-creatinine ratiosBiomarker panelRisk factorsRisk of CKD progressionAssociated with CKD progressionUrine alpha-1-microglobulinRisk group classificationProtein-to-creatinine ratioUrine protein-to-creatinine ratioClinical risk factorsChildren 6 monthsHigh-risk groupUrine KIM-1Clinically relevant biomarkersConventional risk factorsCombination of biomarkersTubular healthBaseline eGFRMedian ageEGFR decline
2024
Assessment of Renal Vein Stasis Index by Transesophageal Echocardiography During Cardiac Surgery: A Feasibility Study
Goeddel L, Hernandez M, Koffman L, Slowey C, Muschelli J, Zhou X, Parikh C, Lima J, Bandeen-Roche K, Faraday N, Crainiceanu C, Brown C. Assessment of Renal Vein Stasis Index by Transesophageal Echocardiography During Cardiac Surgery: A Feasibility Study. Anesthesia & Analgesia 2024, 140: 224-227. PMID: 39312481, PMCID: PMC11649470, DOI: 10.1213/ane.0000000000007161.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricOccurrence of Low Cardiac Index During Normotensive Periods in Cardiac Surgery: A Prospective Cohort Study Using Continuous Noninvasive Cardiac Output Monitoring
Goeddel L, Koffman L, Hernandez M, Whitman G, Parikh C, Lima J, Bandeen-Roche K, Zhou X, Muschelli J, Crainiceanu C, Faraday N, Brown C. Occurrence of Low Cardiac Index During Normotensive Periods in Cardiac Surgery: A Prospective Cohort Study Using Continuous Noninvasive Cardiac Output Monitoring. Anesthesia & Analgesia 2024, 140: 77-86. PMID: 39207928, PMCID: PMC11649474, DOI: 10.1213/ane.0000000000007206.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsConceptsCentral venous pressurePre-CPBCardiac output monitoringCardiopulmonary bypassProspective cohort studyCardiac surgeryPost-CPBKidney injuryCoronary bypassRisk of postoperative acute kidney injuryCohort studyCardiac outputNoninvasive cardiac output monitoringOutput monitoringBlood pressurePostoperative acute kidney injuryProspective cohort of patientsPaired Wilcoxon rank sum testContinuous cardiac output monitoringPostoperative kidney injuryIsolated coronary bypassLow cardiac indexLow cardiac outputUS Food and Drug AdministrationAssociated with increased risk
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
Copy Link
Honors
honor Jeff Gray Memorial "Translating to Management in AKI"
03/09/2017National AwardAKI and CRRT 2017 22nd International ConferenceDetailsUnited Stateshonor Dr. MD Motashaw Oration and Award for Research Accomplishment
04/24/2013International AwardSeth G.S. Medical College and KEM HospitalDetailsIndia
News
Copy Link
Get In Touch
Copy Link