UCI Health Physician Huddle

UCI Health

At UCI Health, advancing medicine means never standing still. Physician Huddle brings specialists, healthcare leaders, and clinical partners into the center of the latest breakthroughs, research discoveries, and innovations in patient care. Hosted by Sunil Verma, MD, and Lindsay Carrillo, MBA, each episode features candid conversations with UCI Health experts — from pioneering brain cancer therapies and AI-driven cancer diagnostics to surgical innovations, aging care strategies, and advances in specialty fields like urology and neuro-oncology. Whether you’re seeking clinical insights to inform your practice or looking for new ideas to improve patient outcomes, Physician Huddle offers trusted expertise, forward-thinking discussions, and real-world applications you can use today. Subscribe and stay connected to clinical innovation at UCI Health. Learn more or refer a patient at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org.

  1. How pain medicine is evolving for physicians and patients

    19H AGO

    How pain medicine is evolving for physicians and patients

    Shalini Shah, MD, professor and vice chair of the Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Care and director of pain services at UCI Health, joins Physician Huddle to discuss the growth and evolution of pain medicine. Shah reflects on her path from anesthesiology training at Cornell to adult and pediatric pain fellowships at Harvard-affiliated hospitals, and how she was recruited to UCI Health to help establish a pediatric pain program. She describes how UCI Health developed one of the country’s largest pediatric pain programs by volume, with care designed to improve access for children and adolescents who should not have to wait for care. The conversation explores how UCI Health has expanded pain services across Orange County, including the growth of multiple pain clinics and a multidisciplinary model that brings together physicians from anesthesiology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, neurology, psychiatry, and other specialties under a coordinated structure. Shah discusses the state of opioid prescribing, including how the pendulum has shifted from overprescribing to fear of prescribing. She emphasizes that opioids are neither “the hero” nor “the villain,” but one component of a personalized treatment plan when used appropriately. The episode also covers interventional pain therapies, longevity and function, lifestyle approaches to pain management, advocacy through organized medicine, and Shah’s reflections on physician leadership, work-life integration, and building teams that support people through different seasons of life. Topics discussed:  UCI Health has developed a high-volume pediatric pain program focused on timely access, multidisciplinary care and community relationships.Shah emphasizes that pain care should not be siloed; the UCI Health model brings multiple pain-trained specialties under one coordinated structure.Shah’s leadership philosophy centers on building strong teams, understanding what people need to succeed and recognizing that team members operate at different capacities during different life stages.Medical education around pain and opioid prescribing has historically been limited, contributing to broader challenges in clinical practice.Shah helped advance a University of California-wide curriculum to improve medical student education in pain care and opioid prescribing.Opioids should be viewed as part of a personalized treatment plan — not as either the central solution or something to categorically avoid. Interventional pain medicine is evolving rapidly, with new therapies, modalities and devices expanding treatment options.Pain management increasingly intersects with longevity, mobility, function and quality of life.Physician advocacy matters because healthcare policy is often shaped by people who have not directly cared for patients.Connect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    29 min
  2. Rethinking menopause care for midlife women

    6D AGO

    Rethinking menopause care for midlife women

    Rebecca Sauer, MD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UCI Health, joins Physician Huddle to discuss the evolving field of menopause and midlife care. Sauer reflects on her path from medical school at UC Irvine to her current focus on perimenopause, menopause, and women’s health. She explains that menopause care historically has received limited attention in medical training, despite the wide range of symptoms and health concerns that can arise during this stage of life. The conversation covers common symptoms of perimenopause and menopause, including hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disturbances, mood changes, urogenital symptoms, and cognitive concerns. Sauer also discusses emerging associations with joint issues, tinnitus, cardiovascular changes, and broader health implications. She outlines how clinicians can approach evaluation, including when to consider thyroid, rheumatologic, autoimmune, nutritional or mood-related conditions before attributing symptoms to perimenopause. The discussion also explores hormone therapy, nonhormonal options, osteoporosis prevention, resistance training, and the importance of setting realistic expectations for treatment. Sauer also illustrates UCI Health leadership in developing a comprehensive menopause program, built around certified menopause providers, multidisciplinary collaboration and evidence-based guidance for women navigating midlife health. Topics discussed:  Sauer emphasizes that listening, validation, and individualized care can significantly improve quality of life.Nonhormonal therapies may be appropriate for patients who are not candidates for hormone therapy or have targeted symptoms. Menopause and perimenopause have historically been underrepresented in medical education, even within OB-GYN training. Common symptoms include hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disturbances, mood changes, urinary symptoms and vaginal dryness. Midlife care may also involve cognitive symptoms, joint concerns, cardiovascular risk, bone health, mood disorders and metabolic changes. Perimenopausal symptoms are often a diagnosis of exclusion; clinicians should evaluate for thyroid disease, autoimmune conditions, nutritional deficiencies and other possible causes when indicated. Hormone therapy remains a standard-of-care option for vasomotor symptoms and may help prevent osteoporosis in appropriate patients. UCI Health progress toward a comprehensive, evidence-based menopause care model across OB-GYN, primary care, and other key subspecialties. Connect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    28 min
  3. How biportal endoscopic spine surgery is changing the present and future of outpatient spine care

    MAY 4

    How biportal endoscopic spine surgery is changing the present and future of outpatient spine care

    Don Park, MD, professor of orthopedic surgery and director of minimally invasive spine surgery at UCI Health, joins Physician Huddle to discuss the evolution of endoscopic spine surgery and the development of the UCI Health outpatient spine surgery program at the UCI Health — Irvine medical campus. Park explains how endoscopic techniques allow surgeons to treat common spine conditions through millimeter-sized incisions, using high-resolution cameras and specialized instruments. He describes how these approaches may support faster recovery, reduced pain, and a transition of appropriate spine procedures from the inpatient setting to an ambulatory surgery center. The conversation also explores why the adoption of minimally invasive and endoscopic spine surgery has been gradual in the United States, the importance of hands-on training and mentorship, and how the UCI Health multidisciplinary spine program brings together orthopedic surgery and neurosurgery in a collaborative environment. Park also discusses his use of an augmented reality headset during endoscopic lumbar fusion, the role of emerging technologies in the operating room, and the future potential of AI as an adjunct to surgical decision-making, visualization, and safety. Topics discussed: Endoscopic spine surgery uses small incisions and high-resolution visualization to treat selected spine conditions, including lumbar disc herniations and lumbar stenosis.UCI Health is developing an endoscopic and outpatient spine surgery program that aligns with the Irvine medical campus and its ambulatory surgery capabilities. Not every patient is a candidate for endoscopic surgery; Park emphasizes matching the right patient, pathology, and surgical approach. Training is central to broader adoption because many surgeons did not learn endoscopic spine techniques during residency or fellowship. Park views new technology through a patient-safety lens: It must make surgery better, more efficient or safer. Augmented reality technologies may offer enhanced visualization and improved ergonomics during selected endoscopic spine procedures.AI’s future role in spine surgery may be as an adjunct that supports surgeons, rather than a replacement for clinical judgment.Connect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    29 min
  4. Lung cancer in never-smokers: What physicians should know

    APR 14

    Lung cancer in never-smokers: What physicians should know

    In this episode of Physician Huddle by UCI Health, thoracic surgeon Hari B. Keshava, MD, joins the show to discuss the rising incidence of lung cancer in never-smokers, persistent gaps in lung cancer screening, and the growing importance of coordinated follow-up for incidental lung nodules. Keshava also explains how advances in minimally invasive and robotic thoracic surgery, along with targeted therapies and immunotherapy, are reshaping treatment pathways for patients with lung cancer. He also shares his unusual path to medicine, from electrical engineering to thoracic surgery, and reflects on how a personal, family experience with serious lung disease continues to shape the way he cares for patients and their loved ones. Topics discussed:  Why lung cancer screening rates have improved, but remain far below where they should beCommon physician and patient barriers to low-dose CT screeningHow to talk with patients about smoking history without judgmentWhat to do when a lung nodule is found incidentallyHow the UCI Health lung nodule clinic helps streamline follow-up and next stepsThe rising incidence of lung cancer in never-smokers, particularly in certain patient populationsQuestions surrounding genetics, driver mutations, and environmental exposureHow robotic and minimally invasive thoracic surgery is improving recoveryWhy targeted therapies and immunotherapy are changing surgical decision-makingKeshava’s path from electrical engineering to thoracic surgeryHow personal experience shapes empathy, expectation-setting, and patient communicationWhat makes thoracic surgery and multidisciplinary cancer care at UCI Health distinctiveConnect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    31 min
  5. How integrative health approaches such as acupuncture and nutrition support quality of life and improve cancer outcomes

    MAR 18

    How integrative health approaches such as acupuncture and nutrition support quality of life and improve cancer outcomes

    Gary Deng, MD, program director of integrative oncology at UCI Health and Samueli Endowed Chair in Integrative Oncology and the director of clinical affairs at the Susan Samueli Integrative Health Institute, discusses his vision for building a whole-person model of cancer care at UCI Health. Drawing on more than two decades of experience at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and earlier work at MD Anderson Cancer Center, Deng explains how integrative oncology has evolved from a niche, often misunderstood field into an increasingly evidence-based component of modern cancer care. He describes how approaches such as acupuncture, nutrition, exercise, stress management, and lifestyle change can help address symptoms, support quality of life and give patients a greater sense of agency during treatment. The conversation also explores the science behind integrative oncology, including randomized controlled trials, neuroimaging, National Cancer Institute-funded research, and emerging data suggesting that interventions once viewed as supportive may also affect treatment response and clinical outcomes. Deng outlines his long-term goal of establishing a model at UCI Health that integrates mind, body, and lifestyle into standard oncology care and generating the evidence to help disseminate that model more broadly. Topics discussed:  Building the UCI Health integrative oncology programWhy whole-person care matters in cancer treatmentTreating symptoms, quality of life, and patient experience alongside the diseaseThe evolution of acupuncture from skepticism to guideline-supported careNational Cancer Institute-funded research in acupuncture and sepsisFunctional MRI and neurobiological mechanisms behind acupunctureLifestyle medicine in oncology, including diet, exercise, stress and sleepEmerging research on lifestyle change and treatment responseCircadian rhythm, social environment, and cancer outcomesThe opportunity to build a new integrative oncology care model at UCI HealthConnect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    32 min
  6. What happens when GI doctors shape the future of endoscopic therapy and technology?

    FEB 20

    What happens when GI doctors shape the future of endoscopic therapy and technology?

    Jason Samarasena, MD, professor of medicine and Chief of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at UCI Health, reflects on more than two decades of service at UCI Health and the rapid transformation of modern GI practice. Now leading a division spanning advanced endoscopy, inflammatory bowel disease, hepatology and motility, Samarasena discusses recruiting world-class faculty, expanding clinical trials and building a culture that empowers physicians to pursue their strengths, whether in program development, research, or innovation. The conversation highlights breakthrough technologies including the first drug-coated balloon for complex esophageal strictures, next-generation robotic colonoscopy platforms and artificial intelligence systems designed to detect and characterize polyps, identify dysplasia in Barrett’s esophagus and automate endoscopy reporting. Samarasena also shares insights from co-founding an AI company focused on computer vision in GI and discusses how digital health agents may transform patient preparation, multilingual communication, and workflow efficiency. The episode concludes with a preview of the upcoming UCI Health Digestive Health Summit, a two-day educational and hands-on training event showcasing multidisciplinary collaboration across surgery and gastroenterology, along with a leadership and empowerment track addressing physician wellness, innovation, and the evolving business of healthcare. Topics Discussed: •Balancing clinical care, research and training •Clinical trials in IBS and advanced GI therapeutics •Robotic colonoscope platform development •Ergonomics and physician longevity in endoscopy •Drug-coated balloon for esophageal strictures (Paclitaxel) •AI computer vision in colonoscopy •Dysplasia detection in Barrett’s esophagus •Automating endoscopy reports with AI •AI health agents for bowel prep and multilingual patient communication •Chao Digestive Health Institute (CDHI) collaborative model •Digestive Health Summit and hands-on endoscopy labs Connect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    29 min
  7. Neurosurgical innovation and incremental wins in an unforgiving field

    FEB 18

    Neurosurgical innovation and incremental wins in an unforgiving field

    Frank Hsu, MD, PhD, the Denny and Betty Tsai Endowed Chair in Neurological Surgery at UCI Health, reflects on shaping a comprehensive, subspecialty-driven neurosurgery program grounded in collaboration, academic rigor, and steady innovation. Since joining UCI Health in 2012 and assuming departmental leadership shortly thereafter, Hsu has helped guide the program through a period of significant growth, expanding faculty depth across trauma, spine, vascular, functional and skull base neurosurgery while strengthening residency and fellowship training. In this conversation, he discusses building a culture that prioritizes teamwork over ego, developing multidisciplinary programs in partnership with neurology, orthopedics and otolaryngology, and advancing minimally invasive approaches such as focused ultrasound for essential tremor and Parkinson’s disease. He also outlines how the UCI Health expansion into Irvine and affiliated community hospitals is enhancing access to complex stroke, trauma, and tertiary neurosurgical care across the region. This episode offers an inside look at how advanced neurosurgery evolves, through deliberate recruitment, evidence-based innovation and incremental progress in some of medicine’s most challenging diseases. Topics Discussed Multimodality monitoring in traumatic brain injuryExpanding subspecialty expertise across trauma, spine, vascular and functional neurosurgeryComprehensive spine collaboration with orthopedics, neurology, pain and rehabGrowth of residency and fellowship programsFocused ultrasound for essential tremor and Parkinson’s diseaseExpansion across Irvine and community hospitalsBuilding a collaborative neurosurgery cultureManaging stroke volume in a growing regionEvidence-based adoption of robotics and minimally invasive techniquesIncremental advances in glioblastoma survivalAcademic leadership in Orange County’s only academic medical centerConnect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    29 min
  8. From gene therapy to focused ultrasound: Advancing the future of neurological care

    FEB 18

    From gene therapy to focused ultrasound: Advancing the future of neurological care

    In this episode of Physician Huddle by UCI Health, Claire Henchcliffe, MD, DPhil, Stanley van den Noort Endowed Chair in Neurology at the UC Irvine School of Medicine, discusses scaling a 60+ faculty department, expanding clinical trials access and advancing precision neurology through stem cell therapy, artificial intelligence, and multidisciplinary collaboration. Henchcliffe reflects on her path from Oxford to Weill Cornell Medicine and ultimately to UC Irvine, where she has grown the Department of Neurology from fewer than 40 faculty to more than 60, with ongoing expansion underway. She discusses the strategic importance of integrating academic neuroscience with enterprise growth, leveraging campus research strength, community partnerships, and clinical scale to meet a nationwide shortage of neurologists. The conversation highlights the UCI Health depth in neurodegenerative disease, including Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, ALS, and emerging dementia subtypes, as well as its more than 100 open clinical trials across gene therapy, stem cell transplantation, antibody infusions, and small molecule therapeutics. Henchcliffe describes pioneering work in first-in-human stem cell transplantation for Parkinson’s disease and the launch of magnetic resonance–guided focused ultrasound for non-incisional neurological interventions. Looking ahead, she outlines a vision for precision neurology powered by neurogenetics, AI-driven predictive analytics and neuroinformatics, bringing biomarkers, environment, social determinants and big data together to personalize neurological care. Topics Discussed: Addressing the national neurologist workforce shortageIntegrating campus research with clinical neurologyFirst-in-human stem cell transplantation for Parkinson’s diseaseGene therapy in neuromuscular disordersMagnetic resonance–guided focused ultrasound for non-incisional neurosurgeryExpansion of stroke care and comprehensive stroke center collaborationUndiagnosed Disease Network participationDevelopment of a new headache fellowshipNeuroinformatics, AI and predictive analytics in clinical decision-makingPrecision neurology incorporating genetics, biomarkers and social determinantsMore than 100 open clinical trials across subspecialtiesConnect with UCI Health physicians online at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org, on LinkedIn @UCI Health Physicians, on Instagram @ucihealthphysicians, or at @uciphysicians on X. Refer a patient at referralportal.ucihealth.org and learn more about ongoing clinical trials at ucihealth.org/clinical-trials.

    32 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

At UCI Health, advancing medicine means never standing still. Physician Huddle brings specialists, healthcare leaders, and clinical partners into the center of the latest breakthroughs, research discoveries, and innovations in patient care. Hosted by Sunil Verma, MD, and Lindsay Carrillo, MBA, each episode features candid conversations with UCI Health experts — from pioneering brain cancer therapies and AI-driven cancer diagnostics to surgical innovations, aging care strategies, and advances in specialty fields like urology and neuro-oncology. Whether you’re seeking clinical insights to inform your practice or looking for new ideas to improve patient outcomes, Physician Huddle offers trusted expertise, forward-thinking discussions, and real-world applications you can use today. Subscribe and stay connected to clinical innovation at UCI Health. Learn more or refer a patient at clinicalconnection.ucihealth.org.

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