Biography
Dr. John Roberts is a surgeon with expertise that includes kidney, liver and pancreas transplants. He is also an expert in surgically managing liver diseases, such as portal hypertension (high blood pressure in the vein going from the digestive organs to the liver), as well as in liver surgery for cancer.
Roberts is one of the few surgeons in the U.S. who has extensive experience in performing the Rex shunt – a procedure that restores normal blood flow to the liver – in children and adults. He also has spearheaded an effort to expand the use of living donors for liver transplantation, one of his many projects to make more organs available.
Roberts earned his medical degree at the University of California, San Diego and completed a surgical residency at the University of Washington. He also served as a postdoctoral fellow in transplantation in the Department of Surgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School.
Roberts joined UCSF Medical Center in 1988. In addition to his leadership of the transplant service, he teaches medical students and supervises the training of surgical residents.
Roberts has won numerous awards and has received grants from the National Institutes of Health for his research. He has produced nearly 170 papers on topics that include organ transplant rejection, immunogenicity (ability of a substance to provoke an immune response) and immunosuppression (intentionally subduing immune response to lower the chance of organ rejection).
Roberts speaks nationally on transplant issues. He is a fellow of the American Surgical Association and a member of many professional organizations.
Roberts is one of the few surgeons in the U.S. who has extensive experience in performing the Rex shunt – a procedure that restores normal blood flow to the liver – in children and adults. He also has spearheaded an effort to expand the use of living donors for liver transplantation, one of his many projects to make more organs available.
Roberts earned his medical degree at the University of California, San Diego and completed a surgical residency at the University of Washington. He also served as a postdoctoral fellow in transplantation in the Department of Surgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School.
Roberts joined UCSF Medical Center in 1988. In addition to his leadership of the transplant service, he teaches medical students and supervises the training of surgical residents.
Roberts has won numerous awards and has received grants from the National Institutes of Health for his research. He has produced nearly 170 papers on topics that include organ transplant rejection, immunogenicity (ability of a substance to provoke an immune response) and immunosuppression (intentionally subduing immune response to lower the chance of organ rejection).
Roberts speaks nationally on transplant issues. He is a fellow of the American Surgical Association and a member of many professional organizations.
Videos
Education
| Institution | Degree | Dept or School | End Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of California, San Francisco | Residency |
Board Certifications
- American Board of Surgery, 1988, renewed 2006
Clinical Expertise
Acute Liver Failure
Bile Duct Injuries
Bile Duct Strictures
Bile Duct Cancer (Cholangiocarcinoma)
Liver Cancer (Hepatocellular Carcinoma)
Choledochal Cyst Disease
Complex Cancer Resections
Expanded Criteria Donor Kidney Transplant
Fulminant Hepatic Failure
Infections Post-Transplant
Kidney Transplant
Liver Resection
Liver Transplant
Living Donor Liver Transplant
Living Donor Kidney Transplant
Pediatric Liver Transplant
Pediatric Kidney Transplant
Portal Hypertension
Rex Shunt or Meso-portal Shunt
Surgical Shunts
In the News
July, 30, 2015 | UCSF Transplant Surgery
July, 29, 2014 | UCSF Transplant Surgery
April, 19, 2014 | UCSF Transplant Surgery
June, 05, 2013 | UCSF Transplant Surgery
May, 09, 2012 | UCSF Transplant Surgery
October, 20, 2011 | UCSF Transplant Surgery
May, 28, 2011 | UCSF Transplant Surgery
Grants and Funding
- TRANSPLANTATION AND HEPATOTOXINS FOR LIVER CANCER | NIH | 1993-01-01 - 1997-12-31 | Role: Principal Investigator
Research Interests
- Ethical Issues in Transplantation
- Organ Allocation
- Cost of Transplantation
- Immunosuppression
Publications
MOST RECENT PUBLICATIONS FROM A TOTAL OF 10
- National access to renal transplantation and post-transplant survival among patients with diabetes: deceased and living donor outcomes.| |
PubMed
- The effect of labeling on kidney offer acceptance.| |
PubMed
- Optimizing liver transplant outcomes for colorectal liver metastases in the United States.| |
PubMed
- Back Table Arterial Reconstructions Using the Recipient Hepatic Arterial Tree in Living Donor Liver Transplantation.| |
PubMed
- Perioperative and postoperative analgesic strategies in live donor hepatectomy: A national survey.| |
PubMed
- Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder in Pediatric Liver Transplant Patients.| |
PubMed
- Intraoperative Hemodynamic Monitoring and Prediction of Early Allograft Dysfunction Following Living Donor Liver Transplantation: A Systematic Review.| |
PubMed
- The Cost of Procuring Deceased Donor Livers: Evidence From US Organ Procurement Organization Cost Reports, 2013-2018.| |
PubMed
- The Medical Costs of Determining Eligibility and Waiting for a Kidney Transplantation.| |
PubMed
- Successful living donor liver transplant from donor with false-positive human immunodeficiency virus test in recipient without human immunodeficiency virus.| |
PubMed