(Press-News.org) Christopher Kane, MD, CEO of the UC San Diego Health Physician Group and senior assistant vice chancellor of clinical affairs for UC San Diego Health Sciences, was recently appointed to the position of president of the American Board of Urology (ABU), the organization that sets and maintains the standards for the specialty certification of more than 11,000 urologists in the United States.
Kane is the first physician from UC San Diego Health to serve in this leadership role with the ABU. He has served as a trustee for the organization for five years and became eligible for the presidency in the final year of his six-year tenure. The organization’s mission is to improve urologic care, promote lifelong learning, and ensure ethical and high-quality care.
"Dr. Kane is a nationally renowned leader whose clinical acumen, academic rigor, and deep commitment to mentorship have shaped the future of urology,” said Patty Maysent, CEO of UC San Diego Health. “From bench to beside and classroom to supervised training, his ability to inspire excellence has earned him widespread respect and recognition. His appointment as ABU president is a testament to his rare combination of compassion, curiosity, and strategic insight. These qualities continue to influence the field of urology and inspire and elevate the next generation of urologists.”
Kane specializes in diagnosing and treating patients with prostate, kidney, bladder and testicular cancer. He has extensive expertise in robotic prostatectomy, open and laparoscopic kidney cancer surgery, and bladder and testes cancer surgery.
“While on an early rotation in urology, I fell in love with the challenge of the complex surgeries and the camaraderie and dedication of the team,” said Kane. “Being a trustee for the ABU has provided a similar opportunity for collaboration and empowerment working alongside the best urologists in the field. Those years of experience are now culminating in my presidency, where I have the privilege of advocating for my fellow physicians and sharing the professional and public health benefits of board certification.”
The ABU plays a crucial role in ensuring the competency and proficiency of urologists across the country. As a trustee, Kane’s responsibilities focused on examination development and certification processes. He contributed to the creation of both the qualifying exam, which follows residency, and the certifying exam, which assesses practicing urologists. As president, he now turns his attention to refining certification protocols and enhancing the overall experience for urologists undergoing initial qualification and recertification.
“Dr. Kane has served selflessly in numerous leadership roles for the American Urological Association (Western section) and the Society for Urologic Oncology, as well as the American Association of Genitourinary Surgeons,” said Manoj Monga, MD, chair of the Department of Urology at University of California San Diego School of Medicine. “His ability to be a catalyst for constructive dialogue and consensus building will serve the American Board of Urology and the public well.”
As CEO of the UC San Diego Health Physician Group, Kane collaborates with leadership to ensure access, quality, safety and patient satisfaction and is integrated to support the unique and growing needs of an expanding academic health system and its growing regional network of providers.
Kane is also the senior assistant vice chancellor of clinical affairs for UC San Diego Health Sciences and has authored more than 390 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters with a focus on prostate cancer risk factors and outcomes, prostate cancer surgery, and minimally invasive surgery for prostate and kidney cancer.
He serves on the editorial boards of several major urology journals, as well as the American Urologic Association Prostate Cancer Management Guidelines Committee. He was the founding chair of the Department of Urology at UC San Diego School of Medicine and served in that role for approximately thirteen years.
“Today, lifelong learning is more important than ever but keeping up with the pace at which information is evolving can be overwhelming,” said Kane. “It will be an honor to work with the ABU as president to partner with leaders in the field to continue adjusting and streamlining the ongoing learning and examination processes while maintaining the same high bar for patient outcomes and experiences.”
As part of his role with the ABU, Kane recently authored a study proving that its certification process is effective in ensuring the highest quality of specialty services and providing helpful guidance for patients looking for care. The data shows that doctors who pass the multi-step certification process on their first attempt have a very low chance of facing adverse patient or professional outcomes at any point in their careers.
“My goal is to ensure we continue to invest in research that makes the case for board certification as key to not only building a successful practice but also protecting public health and continuing to move patient care forward,” said Kane.
UC San Diego Health is ranked No. 1 locally and nationally in 10 specialties, including 43rd in the nation for urological care by U.S. News & World Report. It also ranks among the top ten academic medical centers in the U.S., according to Vizient, Inc.
# # #
END
Christopher Kane appointed President of American Board of Urology
Prestigious position reflects Kane’s commitment to excellence in patient care, groundbreaking research and physician mentorship
2025-05-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
SwRI breaks pressure and temperature record for sCO2 materials testing
2025-05-20
SAN ANTONIO — May 20, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has achieved a significant milestone, reaching new temperature records for testing materials in high-pressure environments. While conducting material testing for a high-pressure, high-temperature supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) turbine, SwRI achieved unprecedented conditions of 1,150 degrees Celsius (2,100 degrees Fahrenheit) at 300 bar (4,350 psi). These are the highest published temperature and pressure conditions ever reached in sCO2 materials testing.
In 2020, SwRI received a $6.4 million contract ...
Native turtles return to Yosemite after removal of invasive bullfrogs
2025-05-20
The call of American bullfrogs was deafening when scientists from the University of California, Davis, first began researching the impact of invasive bullfrogs on native northwestern pond turtles at Yosemite National Park.
“At night, you could look out over the pond and see a constellation of eyes blinking back at you,” said UC Davis Ph.D. candidate Sidney Woodruff, lead author of a study chronicling the effects of removal. “Their honking noise is iconic, and it drowns out native species’ calls.”
But the ponds of Yosemite sound different today, with a chorus of native species making themselves heard. The researchers’ study, published ...
Maternal air pollution exposure worsens asthma severity for offspring
2025-05-20
EMBARGOED UNTIL: 9:15 a.m., Tuesday, May 20, 2025
MATERNAL AIR POLLUTION EXPOSURE WORSENS ASTHMA SEVERITY FOR OFFSPRING
Study also finds exposure leads to epigenetic changes that can persist for generations.
Session: C19—Spatial and Single-Cell Analysis of Lung Disease: Bridging Early Mechanisms to Therapeutic Gaps
An Epigenetic Association Between Heightened Airway Hyperreactivity and Maternal Exposure to Particulate Air Pollution
Date and Time: Tuesday, May 20, 2025, 9:15 a.m.
Location: Room 3006/3008 (West Building, Level 3), Moscone Center
ATS 2025, San Francisco – A mother’s exposure to air pollution during pregnancy ...
Post-intensive care syndrome linked to long-term deficits
2025-05-20
EMBARGOED UNTIL: 9:15 a.m., Tuesday, May 20, 2025
POST-INTENSIVE CARE SYNDROME LINKED TO LONG-TERM DEFICITS
Older age, frailty increase risk more than clinical factors, study finds
Session: C17—Delirium, Disparities, and Disability: Advancing Equity in Critical Illness Outcomes
Characterizing Critical Illness Recovery Trajectories: Exploring Risk Factors for Post Intensive Care Syndrome
Date and Time: Tuesday, May 20, 2025, 9:15 a.m.
Location: Room 2009/2011 (West Building, Level 2), Moscone Center
ATS 2025, ...
ICU delirium tests misclassify Spanish-speakers
2025-05-20
EMBARGOED UNTIL: 9:15 a.m., Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Session: C17 - Delirium, Disparities, and Disability: Advancing Equity in Critical Illness Outcomes
Achieving Health Equity in Delirium Detection in Spanish-speaking Latinx ICU Patients
Date and Time: Tuesday, May 20, 2025, 9:15 a.m. PT
Location: Room 2009/2011 (West Building, Level 2), Moscone Center
ATS 2025, San Francisco – Delirium is common in the ICU, and guidelines call for daily screening. Now a new study published at the ATS 2025 International Conference suggests that standard screening tests may result in the ...
Terrence Sejnowski elected to the Royal Society and the American Philosophical Society
2025-05-20
LA JOLLA (May 20, 2025)—Salk Professor Terrence Sejnowski, head of the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory and holder of the Francis Crick Chair, has been elected to the Royal Society and the American Philosophical Society. These prestigious elections recognize his outstanding leadership and extraordinary achievement in computational neuroscience.
Sejnowski is one of the newest Foreign Members of the Royal Society, an independent scientific academy in the United Kingdom dedicated to promoting excellence in science for the benefit of humanity. Founded in 1660, the Royal Society is the world’s oldest scientific academy ...
Commercially available peroxide binds incompatible polymers for recycling
2025-05-20
ITHACA, N.Y. -Cornell University researchers have developed an inexpensive and potentially scalable approach that uses a commercially available peroxide to bind polyethylene and polypropylene together, thereby creating a more useful, high-quality plastic recycling additive.
The findings were published May 19 in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. The co-lead authors were postdoctoral researcher Moritz Kränzlein and doctoral student Shilin Cui. The project was led by Geoffrey Coates, professor of chemistry and chemical biology.
The ...
Depression linked to physical pain years later
2025-05-20
Middle-aged and older adults who experience pain are more likely to have had worsening symptoms of depression up to eight years before the pain began, according to a new study by UCL (University College London) researchers.
The study, published in the journal eClinicalMedicine, suggests that among this age group, treatment for depression might help to prevent or reduce later aches and pains.
The researchers compared survey data from 3,668 adults aged over 50 who often experienced moderate to severe pain with a matched group of the same number who did not.
In the pain group, they found that depressive symptoms got rapidly worse in the eight years prior ...
Beyond ‘one size fits all’: Study reveals ethnic differences in breast cancer development and outcomes, demanding tailored care approaches
2025-05-20
Women of African or South Asian genetic ancestry tend to develop breast cancer and die at a younger age than women of European ancestry, according to new research by Queen Mary University of London. The study, which looked at clinical and genetic data from over 7,000 women with breast cancer, also found important genetic differences in these women’s cancers that could impact their diagnosis and treatment.
The findings, published today (20 May) in Nature Communications, highlight the underrepresentation of people of non-European genetic ancestry as participants in cancer ...
New flammable gas research facility under construction at Southwest Research Institute
2025-05-20
SAN ANTONIO — May 20, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) will significantly expand its testing and research capabilities with a new hydrocarbon research facility. It will offer megawatt-scale testing of machinery and energy systems powered by hydrocarbons and other flammable gases. SwRI’s new 90,000-square-foot facility will evaluate a range of hydrocarbon machinery for efficiency, safety and durability.
The facility is designed for the safe use of flammable gases including hydrogen, hydrocarbons, organic fluids and refrigerants. Hydrocarbons like natural ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Simple process extends lifetime of perovskite solar cells
Candidate drug that boosts protective brain protein in mice has potential to treat Alzheimer’s Disease
Scientists discover one of the world’s thinnest semiconductor junctions forming inside a quantum material
Illinois researchers explore COVID-19 vaccine attitudes and motivations, finding common values
Study identifies new mechanism for reducing female post-operative pain
Changes in BMI during adolescence may explain link between air pollution exposure and insulin resistance, study shows
Marshall University researchers identify promising treatment for fentanyl-xylazine overdoses
Research team homes in on genetics behind blackberry thorns
UF water researchers develop prediction system for harmful algae
Remotely moving objects underwater using sound #ASA188
From tiny worms to giant squid: new global database reveals the hidden power of body size in the ocean
Cell Painting identifies flavonoids that are toxic to bladder cancer cells
American College of Cardiology issues guidance on using Apple Watch for heart health monitoring
2025 Andreas Grüntzig Ethica Award presented to Lars Wallentin and Stefan James on behalf of Swedish cardiovascular registry experts
Research reveals unexpected roles of TEAD proteins in neurodevelopment
UTA ATLAS team shares Breakthrough Prize in physics
New research on ALS opens up for early treatment
Molecules in blood and urine could reveal how much ultra-processed food you eat
Language isn’t just for communication — it also shapes how sensory experiences are stored in the brain
Reducing underwater noise when installing subsea structures #ASA188
How membranes may have brought about the chemistry of life on earth
NIH researchers develop biomarker score for predicting diets high in ultra-processed foods
AI and partnerships are vital to tackling food contamination - study
Fluridone widens Palmer pigweed control options for rice growers, but stick to the label
Christopher Kane appointed President of American Board of Urology
SwRI breaks pressure and temperature record for sCO2 materials testing
Native turtles return to Yosemite after removal of invasive bullfrogs
Maternal air pollution exposure worsens asthma severity for offspring
Post-intensive care syndrome linked to long-term deficits
ICU delirium tests misclassify Spanish-speakers
[Press-News.org] Christopher Kane appointed President of American Board of UrologyPrestigious position reflects Kane’s commitment to excellence in patient care, groundbreaking research and physician mentorship