Biography
Dr. Roll completed both general surgery training and the abdominal organ transplant fellowship at the University of California San Francisco. During his training, Dr. Roll spent 2 years in Dr. Holger Willenbring's laboratory investigating liver cell therapy, as well as normal and pathologic liver regeneration. After fellowship Dr. Roll moved to England to become a Senior International Fellow in Liver Transplant and Multi Organ Procurement at Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, one of the busiest liver transplant departments in the United Kingdom. There he gained valuable experience in the blossoming field of DCD liver transplant and normothermic machine liver perfusion prior to returning to UCSF.
Since returning to UCSF in 2015, Dr. Roll has specialized in abdominal organ transplantation for both adults and children, including liver and kidney transplant surgery from living donors, complex hepatobiliary surgery, and kidney autotransplants for intractable ureteral problems. He also performs general surgery in patients with end-stage organ disease and patients taking immunosuppression. His expertise includes using minimally invasive surgical techniques.
Within UCSF, Dr. Roll is an investigator on several clinical trials looking at outcomes for organ transplant recipients and advance organ preservation. He has leadership roles in patient safety and quality improvement at UCSF, in addition to teaching medical students and residents in multiple forums. Outside of UCSF, he serves on the editorial board of multiple peer reviewed journals.
Education
Boston College, BS, Finance, 1995-1999
Brandeis University, Post Baccalaureate, Premedical, 1999-2001
Temple University School of Medicine, MD, 2001-2005
University of California, San Francisco, General Surgery, 2005-2012
Board Certifications
American Board of Surgery, General Surgery
Clinical Expertise
Ascites
Bile Duct Cancer (Cholangiocarcinoma)
Bile Duct Injuries
Bile Duct Strictures
Bridging Therapies to Downstage HCC in Liver Transplant Setting
Choledochal Cysts
Deceased Donor Organ Utilization
Gallbladder Cancer
Kidney Transplantation
Laparoscopic Donor Nephrectomy
Liver Biopsy
Hepatocellular Carcinoma (Primary Liver Cancer)
Liver Cysts
Liver Metastases (Secondary Liver Cancer)
Liver Resection
Liver Transplantation
Living Donor Kidney Transplantation
Living Donor Liver Transplantation
Normothetic Machine Liver Perfusion
Organ Donation of Cardiovascular Death
Pancreas Transplantation
Pediatric Kidney Transplantation
Pediatric Liver Transplantation
Portal Hypertension
Clinical Interests
Transplantation
HBP surgery
Clinical Trials
- US National OCS Liver Perfusion (OLP) Registry (NCT05940857)Related Conditions: Liver Transplant| Start Date: | End Date:
- Kidney Transplantation From Donors With HIV: Impact on Rejection and Long-Term Outcomes (Expanding HOPE Kidney) (NCT06263426)Related Conditions: HIV/AIDS, Kidney Transplant| Start Date: | End Date:
In the News
Research Interests
Cell therapy with hepatocytes and hepatocyte-like cells derived from stem cells.
Role of miRNA in liver regeneration
Normothetic machine liver perfusion
Publications
- Safety and Feasibility of Early Extubation in Liver Transplantation: Experience in 1555 Patients.| | PubMed
- AAV capsid prioritization in normal and steatotic human livers maintained by machine perfusion.| | PubMed
- Association between bariatric surgery after kidney transplantation and graft and survival outcomes.| | PubMed
- Living Donor Candidates' Self-reported Health and Health Perceptions and Completion of Donor Evaluation: A Cohort Study.| | PubMed
- Renal Autotransplantation: Association Between Preoperative Disease Duration and Surgical Outcomes.| | PubMed
- Dawn has arrived, illuminating thrilling opportunities and fresh challenges in a new era of United States transplantation.| | PubMed
- The type, duration, and severity of pretransplant kidney injury predict prolonged kidney dysfunction after liver transplantation.| | PubMed
- The future of liver transplantation.| | PubMed
- Chapter 44 Use of living donors for HIV-positive transplant candidates.| | UCSF Research Profile
- Contributors to Volume 2.| | UCSF Research Profile