Jeremy Gordon, PhD

People

Jeremy Gordon
Assistant Professor at UCSF

Dr. Jeremy Gordon, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Department of Radiology & Biomedical Imaging. He received his BS in Physics & Astronomy from the University of Georgia in 2008 and his PhD in Medical Physics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2013. He has been
at UCSF since 2013, first as a postdoctoral scholar working with Dr. Peder Larson (2013 - 2016) and then as a Senior Bioengineer (2016 - 2020) before joining the faculty in 2020.

His research is focused on developing novel techniques to acquire and analyze metabolic information, leveraging a team science approach to advance the research and clinical care of patients utilizing hyperpolarized 13C and other x-nuclei such as 2H for a wide range of diseases. These methods are currently being applied in patients with pancreatic cancer as a novel tool to predict treatment response using hyperpolarized metabolic imaging, to characterize metabolic changes associated with multiple sclerosis using hyperpolarized metabolic imaging, and to develop new methods of measuring glucose metabolism in vivo and its impairment in Alzheimer’s Disease using deuterium metabolic imaging.

Honors and Awards
Distinguished Reviewer, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2018
Accepted to the RSNA ITARSc Program, 2017
2nd Place Presentation, Hyperpolarized Media Study Group, International Society for Magnetic Resonan, 2016
Outstanding Poster Presentation Award, UCSF Imaging Research Symposium, 2016
Magna Cum Laude merit award, International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2013
Summa Cum Laude merit award, International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2013
Young Investigator I.I. Rabi Award Finalist, International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicin, 2013

Publications

Consensus recommendations for hyperpolarized [1- 13 C ]pyruvate MRI multi-center human studies.

Magnetic resonance in medicine

Shonit Punwani, Peder E. Z. Larson, Christoffer Laustsen, Jan VanderMeulen, Jan Henrik Ardenkjær-Larsen, Adam W. Autry, James A. Bankson, Jenna Bernard, Robert Bok, Lotte Bonde Bertelsen, Jenny Che, Albert P. Chen, Rafat Chowdhury, Arnaud Comment, Charles H. Cunningham, Duy Dang, Ferdia A. Gallagher, Adam Gaunt, Yangcan Gong, Jeremy W. Gordon, Ashley Grimmer, James Grist, Esben Søvsø Szocska Hansen, Mathilde Hauge Lerche, Richard L. Hesketh, Jan-Bernd Hoevener, Ching-Yi Hsieh, Kayvan R. Keshari, Sebastian Kozerke, Titus Lanz, Dirk Mayer, Mary McLean, Jae Mo Park, Jim Slater, Damian Tyler, Jean-Luc Vanderheyden, Cornelius von Morze, Fulvio Zaccagna, Vlad Zaha, Duan Xu, Daniel Vigneron

Consensus Recommendations for Hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate MRI Multi-center Human Studies.

ArXiv

Punwani S, Larson PE, Laustsen C, VanderMeulen J, Ardenkjær-Larsen JH, Autry AW, Bankson JA, Bernard J, Bok R, Bertelsen LB, Che J, Chen AP, Chowdhury R, Comment A, Cunningham CH, Dang D, Gallagher FA, Gaunt A, Gong Y, Gordon JW, Grimmer A, Grist J, Hansen ESS, Lerche MH, Hesketh RL, Hoevener JB, Hsieh CY, Keshari KR, Kozerke S, Lanz T, Mayer D, McLean M, Park JM, Slater J, Tyler D, Vanderheyden JL, von Morze C, Zaccagna F, Zaha V, Xu D, Vigneron D, HP 13C MRI Consensus Group