About
Titles
Director, Yale Lupus Clinical Research Program, Internal Medicine; Co-Director, Yale Lupus Program, Internal Medicine; Associate Professor, Internal Medicine
Biography
Dr. Shivani Garg is an Associate Professor in the Section of Rheumatology at the Yale School of Medicine, where she serves as Director of the Yale Lupus Clinical Research Program and co‑Director of the Yale Lupus Program. Her research aims to transform lupus care through precise and personalized approaches that address gaps in cardiovascular risk management, optimize therapeutic drug monitoring, and support shared decision‑making for patients with lupus and lupus nephritis.
As a physician‑scientist, Dr. Garg has led foundational work identifying lack of optimal use of life‑saving lupus therapies, particularly hydroxychloroquine, mycophenolate, as a key driver of poor outcomes. She founded the nationally recognized interdisciplinary Lupus and Lupus Nephritis Clinics at the University of Wisconsin‑Madison, and created a longitudinal biorepository of 400 patients and a multidisciplinary advisory panel to guide patient‑centered interventions.
Her research includes a widely cited global meta‑analysis establishing hydroxychloroquine levels as an objective adherence metric and landmark studies that defined therapeutic reference ranges for hydroxychloroquine blood levels. Dr. Garg also developed HCQ‑SAFE(C), the first interactive, pictogram‑based electronic shared decision‑making tool for lupus medications, now incorporated into national American College of Rheumatology implementation guides, Epic EHR, and used across multiple clinics. She continues to pioneer work linking target‑site pharmacokinetics with molecular features of cutaneous and renal lupus to advance precision dosing and drug development. She has published more than 60 peer‑reviewed manuscripts with over 1,500 citations, including multiple Plenary presentations at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Meetings. Dr. Garg’s contributions have been recognized through numerous awards and honors. Collectively, her work is reshaping lupus care by integrating personalized medicine, therapeutic monitoring, and patient‑centered decision support to improve health and survival for individuals living with lupus.
Departments & Organizations
- All Institutions
- Internal Medicine
- Yale Medicine
- Yale New Haven Health System
Education & Training
- PhD
- University of Wisconsin, Madison, School of Medicine and Public Health (2025)
- MS
- University of Wisconsin, Madison, School of Medicine and Public Health (2018)
- MD
- Emory University, Medicine, Section of Rheumatology (2017)
- Fellow Physician
- Emory University (2017)
- MD
- Jefferson Einstein Medical Center, Internal Medicine (2015)
- Resident Physician
- Jefferson Einstein Medical Center (2015)
- MD
- Government Medical College and Hospital, Chandigarh, Medicine (2011)
Advanced Training & Certifications
- Cosmos Super User
- Epic Systems (2028)
- Cosmos Data Scientist and Data Architect
- Epic Systems (2028)
Research
In its most aspirational form, precision medicine/dosing should maximize the benefit/harm balance at the level of the individual patient.
Maxfield et al. NEJM 2021
Overview
I am a physician‑scientist in Rheumatology, Director of the Lupus Clinical Research Program and co‑Director of the Lupus Program at Yale School of Medicine, and founding Director of one of the nation’s earliest interdisciplinary Lupus and Lupus Nephritis (LN) clinics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. My work advances personalized care and precision medicine by integrating target‑site pharmacokinetics (TPK), interferon‑driven immune signatures, and patient‑centered qualitative methods to improve outcomes in lupus. My Plenary‑highlighted work at the 2019, 2020, and 2025 American College of Rheumatology (ACR) Annual Meetings has demonstrated that nonadherence, risk aversion, and fear of toxicity related to fixed dosing, even with life‑saving therapies such as hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), are major drivers of poor outcomes. These concerns remain largely unaddressed in routine care. Therefore, my long‑term goal is to leverage immunopharmacology and patient‑centric approaches to ensure safe and effective use of key therapies (e.g., HCQ) and improve health outcomes in lupus.
My research has delivered several field‑shaping contributions: (1) a global meta‑analysis, one of the top 20 most discussed ACR journal articles in 2021, establishing HCQ levels as an objective measure of adherence; and (2) a landmark study, invited as a 2025 ACR Plenary presentation, defining a therapeutic reference range for HCQ blood levels (750-1150 ng/mL) in lupus, advancing personalized dosing of high-risk medicines such as HCQ. Equally central to my program is the use of qualitative and implementation science to make precision actionable at the bedside. Towards this, I developed the first interactive, pictogram‑based, end‑user-informed shared decision‑making tools (HCQ‑SAFE and Pred‑SAFE) that clearly communicate benefits and harms of HCQ and chronic prednisone use. HCQ‑SAFE has >1,500 views in 18 months, improved adherence by 47% across eight clinics, and is incorporated in the ACR Lupus Implementation Guide, demonstrating real‑world scalability. These tools operationalize personalized care by reducing decisional conflict, aligning therapy with patient values, and embedding adherence support into clinical workflows.
I serve on national ACR Clinical Practice Guideline and Collaborative Care Committees. My record includes a PhD in Clinical Investigation, 60 publications, three Plenary presentations, >8 competitive grants including an NIH K23, the Rheumatology Research Foundation Innovation Award, and multiple institutional and national honors. Collectively, my work has helped shift treatment paradigms in lupus by coupling pharmacologic precision with patient‑centered implementation.
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
Teaching & Mentoring
Mentoring
Jay J. Patel
Medical student2024 - 2027Caroline Packee
Associate Research Scientist2024 - 2026Callie Saric
Medical student2022 - 2024
Clinical Care
Overview
Clinical Specialties
Board Certifications
Rheumatology
- Certification Organization
- AB of Internal Medicine
- Original Certification Date
- 2017
Internal Medicine
- Certification Organization
- AB of Internal Medicine
- Original Certification Date
- 2015
Links
Media
Get In Touch
Contacts
Yale School of Medicine
300 Cedar Street, 4th Floor
New Haven, CT 06510
United States
Locations
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