In stalking the ‘silent killer,’ he transforms health in the liver and beyond
Arun Sanyal, M.D., would like nothing better than to put himself out of a job. That’s because he has dedicated his career to wiping out liver disease, known as the “silent killer” because the liver won’t tell you when things start to go wrong. It is among the world’s top 10 causes of death.
Sanyal’s passion for hepatology developed early in his career when he was training at Virginia Commonwealth University and saw how few treatment options there were – and how little hope – for patients with liver disease. He wanted to change that, to develop treatments as well as to find ways to prevent liver disease from developing in the first place.
Sanyal, a transplant hepatologist, views the liver as more than just an organ – it’s the unsung hero to unlocking better health outcomes for millions.
“The liver is the driver of human health and well-being,” he says. “When the liver shuts down, every other organ in the body is affected. By focusing on the liver, we can transform human health.”
In 2022, the VCU Stravitz-Sanyal Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health was founded through the largest publicly shared gift for liver research in U.S. history, with Sanyal as the institute’s director. Since then, he and his team of researchers and clinicians have developed breakthrough drug therapies and created global partnerships that bring cutting-edge research to the world.
The video below shares the story of an uncommon hero who is revolutionizing how liver disease is treated, prevented and understood in terms of its importance to other major health conditions like diabetes and heart disease.
“There’s no point in solving a problem only to put the solution on a shelf,” Sanyal says. “We have to get it into the hands of people treating patients all over the world.”
Subscribe to VCU News
Subscribe to VCU News at newsletter.vcu.edu and receive a selection of stories, videos, photos, news clips and event listings in your inbox.
Latest Health & medicine
- Patient practice: Simulation training prepares medical students for real patientsThe School of Medicine’s Center for Human Simulation and Patient Safety teaches students to navigate uncomfortable, intimidating and impactful patient interactions that come with being a physician.
- VCU innovators look to streamline pacemaker procedures and safetyUniversity grants fuel two clinical tools created to improve implantation accuracy and device management.
- VCU summer program puts two heads together for migraine researchUndergraduate Sunwoo Kim and School of Pharmacy professor Joseph McClay explore genetic angle to debilitating headaches.
- Faith Parker relished her brain-tester of a summerIn Boston, the VCU senior delved into neuroscience, surgery and research, with support from the Internship Funding Program.
- A portable water tank from a VCU public-private partnership is designed to transform cancer radiation therapyWilliam Song, a professor in the School of Medicine, and his partners hope to take a complex, costly process in cancer care and make it faster, more affordable and more accessible.
- VCU study identifies potential therapeutic strategy for treating cocaine use disorderBy uncovering molecular clues about the brain’s reward system, researchers see a path to keep two key proteins functioning properly.