Research at Mayo Clinic drives innovation in patient care, advances medical knowledge and develops new treatments to improve health outcomes globally. In 2024, Mayo Clinic appointed Vijay Shah, M.D., as the new Kinney Executive Dean of Research.
Dr. Shah has a distinguished 25-year career in National Institutes of Health-funded research on advanced liver disease. He brings expertise in basic science, artificial intelligence and clinical trials to this pivotal role. Mayo Clinic Magazine had the opportunity to discuss what led Dr. Shah to this position and his vision for the future of research at Mayo Clinic.
How do you balance and integrate your research responsibilities with clinical and leadership duties in your current role?
I focus a lot on creating a vision to work toward with my team and then supporting them so that our team members can all work together and support one another. I also want them to feel safe coming to me for help when they need it. I have so much gratitude for all the people who have helped me in my career, and I’m thankful to be able to support so many others through my leadership duties.
I’m thrilled to now be in the position of leading the Research shield at Mayo Clinic. At Mayo, our research and practice are intertwined. My medical practice helping patients each and every day connects directly to our expansive research program aimed at finding solutions that don’t exist today. Ultimately, building trust and creating supportive teams means that we can all work together to focus on our primary value: putting the needs of our patients first.
What brought you to Mayo Clinic?
It was serendipity. While I was doing my fellowship at Yale, my wife took a position in the Twin Cities. During that time, I came to Mayo for a month to do a transplant rotation, and that made all the difference for me. I met a lot of role models here at Mayo — Drs. Nick LaRusso, Greg Gores, Russ Wiesner. They introduced me to Mayo Clinic and demystified it for me.
When I had this chance to visit and to meet the people here, I saw that it was somewhere that would be a great fit for me and my work. Rochester has a wonderful mix of small-town charm and all the cosmopolitan aspects of a large intellectual city. It’s been a great place to raise kids, and Mayo Clinic has been an amazing place to work. It’s a testament to why I’ve been here for 25 years.
Our digital transformation is allowing us to better organize our data and apply algorithms to gain new insights into disease.
What excites you the most about the future of research at Mayo?
At Mayo Clinic, our research is about finding new cures for patients, especially for serious or complex diseases. That’s the principle that drives everything we’re doing. And from that, there are so many ways now that we can find new cures. We have our traditional pathways, led by our immensely talented research investigators — work in the lab discovering new insights into the biology of disease, designing and testing new therapies for treating those diseases, and bringing those new treatments into the clinic for patients.
Now we have many other ways, like Mayo Clinic Platform, where we can start to utilize patient data from around the world to reimagine how we do clinical trials. Artificial intelligence can speed up the pathway to drug discovery. Our digital transformation is allowing us to better organize our data and apply algorithms to gain new insights into disease. These are just some of the pathways that will help us get to more cures. All of these tools are accelerating the pace of research, and in turn the pace of treatments, and all of that will mean our patients get better therapies faster than ever before.
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