Committees

The Lupus Voices Council (LVC) is made up of people living with lupus, caregivers and family members, and other members of the lupus community. The LVC is responsible for providing the Lupus ABC Research Committee with the perspectives and needs of individuals with lupus, including the symptoms and experiences that matter most.

Lupus Voices Council Members:

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Veronica Vargas Lupo (Co-Chair) – Advocate, Person Living with Lupus, and Daughter of Person Living with Lupus

Veronica Vargas Lupo is a Strategy & Transformation Retail Associate Partner at IBM with 10+ years of client-facing experience. She is an expert in partnering with company leaders to develop and digitally transform their business capabilities and operational processes based on smarter, data-driven decision-making. Prior to IBM, Veronica worked as a buyer and planner for Dillard’s department stores for three years. Veronica has lived with lupus for 17 years. She has been an active member of the Lupus Research Alliance Young Leadership Board since its inception in 2010 and was honored in 2018 at our annual Handbag Luncheon as our “Woman of Achievement’. Veronica is originally from Venezuela, where she grew up until moving to the U.S. as a teenager. Lupus is dear to her not only because she has lived with it but also because her mother has lupus. 

Why Veronica says she is serving on the Lupus Voices Council: “Lupus ABC will, for the first time, truly give people who live with lupus and their caregivers a platform where they can be heard and involved in the treatment development process directly with all stakeholders. As someone who has lived with the disease for many years and knowing the wide range of symptoms that those of us with lupus experience, having a voice in this process is immensely important. It is so critical for our perspectives to be considered when designing clinical trials and measuring outcomes to develop tailored therapies in lupus.”

Nandan (Dan) Baruah – Advocate and Person Living with Lupus

Dan is a patient advocate and an “E-Patient” (empowered, engaged, equipped, and enabled) who resides in New York City. He has more than seven years of experience in active patient engagement, efficacy, and self-management projects. His primary advocacy focus is on the male lupus patient empowerment programs in disease management, QOL (quality-of-life) paradigms and providing unique patient perspectives, as a full partner, in the novel clinical trial drug development ecosystem. Since 2016, Dan has been volunteering as a member of several patient advisory boards and as a Healthcare Consumer Reviewer, assisting various medical research centers, lupus organizations, and pharmaceutical companies. Dan is also involved with several organizations aiming to raise awareness of clinical trial opportunities including the Lupus Research Alliance, Lupus Foundation of America, Hospital for Special Surgery, Center for Information and Study on Clinical Research Participation, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Global Healthy Living Foundation, and National Minority Quality Health Forum. He served as a Consumer Reviewer for the Lupus Research Program in the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs at the Department of Defense. Dan has a Master of Science degree in Information Systems from Pace University.

Dan is serving on the Lupus Voices Council because “this lupus whisperer hopes to see a cure for lupus in my lifetime.”

Jeanine Cox – Nurse, Advocate, and Person Living with Lupus

Jeanine Cox was diagnosed with lupus at 24 with symptoms of extreme debilitating fatigue, severe joint pain, systemic swelling, mild fevers, and flu-like symptoms. The flare ups became more frequent, and started to last much longer. She currently has stage IV lupus nephritis and was recently added to the kidney transplant list. Jeanine earned her Bachelor’s Degree in Nursing from Adelphia University and became a Registered Nurse in 1987. However, due to her lupus complications Jeanine had to make the difficult decision to leave her nursing career. Still, Jeanine used her nursing background to help generate public awareness for lupus by narrating Lupus Research Alliance’s Community Education Toolkit. And despite her serious medical issues, she participates in LRA’s yearly Take it to the Hill initiative, sharing her experiences with members of Congress to illustrate why lupus research funding is so critical.

Jeanine’s hope for the Lupus ABC is “to help expedite the production of more effective lupus treatments with minimal serious side effects to the patient.”

Anna Fisch – Advocate and Person Living with Lupus

Anna Fisch has lived with lupus since she was 28, dealing with lupus nephritis and a major flare occurring many years ago during pregnancy. She has been a loyal supporter of the Lupus Research Alliance for over 20 years. She started with the Young Leaders Board, co-chairing special events. Anna is particularly involved with making the annual Lupus Gala and Luminary Luncheon fundraising successes. She is also active in LRA’s advocacy initiatives for lupus research and served as a consumer reviewer for the Lupus Research Program at the U.S. Department of Defense. Having received her bachelor’s degree in psychology and art history from Barnard College, Anna earned a Master of Science degree in Nonprofit Management from the Milano School of Management and Urban Policy at The New School.

Anna has joined the Lupus Voices Council because she has “high hopes that the LupusABC, an innovative public private partnership, informed by patient consumer input, will improve the quality of life for people with Lupus by making new therapies available and moving us closer to a cure.”

Shane Lerner – Advocate and Person Living with Lupus

Shane was diagnosed with lupus at age 37 after six months of doctors’ visits. First he was told he might have rheumatoid arthritis, followed by testing for leukemia. He was finally diagnosed when a bullous lupus rash started bubbling on his back. He has suffered from arthritis pain, brain fog, major fatigue, vision problems, digestive issues, and memory loss. To pay his way through college, Shane worked as a personal trainer. He graduated from University of California, Los Angeles with his Bachelor’s Degree in Economics and has been working in real estate investment, property management, and construction entrepreneurially for over 20 years. Shane has served on a lupus patient advisory board to bring the patient perspective into clinical trial design.

Shane’s greatest hope for Lupus ABC “is to help others achieve freedom from the burden of Lupus. To help research progress to help others with lifestyle changes that allow for healthy living with the diagnosis of Lupus. I truly believe with the right choices, habits, and medical help everyone can be free from regular suffering that occurs with Lupus. I am excited for the possibilities in research and technology as well as the natural methods that have been discovered to help with auto-immune diseases.”

Malinda Logan – Advocate and Person Living with Lupus

Malinda Logan is a multi-hyphenate – a professional actor, and Founder and CEO of Coached by MLo which provides service and consultation in fundraising to organizations and filmmakers. Initially misdiagnosed, Malinda learned she had lupus while an undergraduate in college. Over the years, lupus manifested with her kidneys, lungs/oxygen intake, skin, typical inflammatory flares, brain fog and other complications. Due to long-term drug usage to control lupus, additional issues manifested with blood stagnation ultimately affecting her joints. When she was active on Lupus Research Alliance’s Young Leaders Board, Malinda also participated in several patient advisory boards to provide the patient perspective to clinical trial recruitment materials. She received her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Acting from Ithaca College and earned a Master of Science degree in Fundraising Management from Columbia University.

On a personal mission to reverse her autoimmunity, it is her hope “that with Lupus ABC, therapies will be expedited to treat lupus and patients’ needs and experiences will be heard, protected and at the forefront of medical practices.”

Elizabeth Santa Cruz – Advocate and Mother of Child Living with Lupus

Elizabeth SantaCruz is a passionate contributor to the lupus community as mom for her daughter Miah who was first diagnosed with the disease at age eight after 24 months of incorrect diagnosis and treatment. She serves as Director of Outreach and Communication for LupusChat, a healthcare community of patients and caregivers affected in some way by lupus. In her role as lupus advocate, Elizabeth participated in the Patient-Focused Drug Development meeting held by the LRA along with the Lupus and Allied Diseases Association and the Lupus Foundation of America to provide the U.S. Food and Drug Administration with the community’s perspectives on drug development. Every year, Elizabeth meets with members of the U.S. Congress to discuss the importance of funding lupus research and patient support services. She also works yearly to have May be proclaimed Lupus Awareness Month in the State of New Jersey as well as her own town of Kearny. Elizabeth earned her Bachelor’s degree in Accounting from Berkely College.

As a member of the Lupus Voices Council, she hopes for better treatments and ultimately a cure for lupus. “I truly believe that we can make a difference as a community and we can impact future generations.”

Narae Yun – Advocate and Person Living with Lupus

Narae Yun balances lupus with a successful career as a director in global diversity, equity and inclusion at an international financial institute. She was diagnosed at 26 after five years of symptoms ranging from joint pain and butterfly rash to dysautonomia, fatigue and fluctuating mobility challenges. Narae has been actively involved with the Lupus Research Alliance for three years, serving on the LRA’s Young Leaders Board and effectively fundraising for lupus research as a team captain for the national Walk with Us to Cure Lupus grassroots initiative. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from Binghamton University.

Narae is now serving on the Lupus Voices Council in hopes “that combined efforts and collaboration across key organizations will accelerate progress for lupus patients to enable better outcomes and lead fulfilling lives. As someone who fights lupus every day, I’m looking forward to co-creating solutions that work for lupus patients alongside experts in various fields.”

Lupus ABC will, for the first time, truly give people who live with lupus a platform where they can be heard and involved in the treatment development process directly with all stakeholders. As someone who has lived with the disease for many years, to say it’s immensely meaningful having a voice in this process is an understatement. It is so critical for our voice to be taken into account when designing clinical trials and measuring outcomes to develop tailored therapies in lupus.

Veronica Vargas Lupo

Research Committee

The Lupus ABC Research Committee (RC) comprises medical, academic, and industry experts, as well as patient communities and governmental agencies including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The RC is responsible for setting the strategic priorities of Lupus ABC, defining specific research projects, and overseeing projects to ensure successful outcomes.

Research Committee Members:

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Nikolay Delev, M.D. (Co-Chair) – Executive Medical Director, Clinical Development Team Lead, Immunology and Fibrosis, Bristol Myers Squibb


Nikolay Delev, M.D. has served as Executive Medical Director, Clinical Development Team Lead, Immunology and Fibrosis, at Bristol Myers Squibb since 2019. Dr. Delev received his M.D. from Sofia Medical School in Bulgaria and completed Internal Medicine training at Advocate Illinois Medical Center in Chicago. He completed Rheumatology Fellowship training at Johns Hopkins University with a special interest in inflammatory arthritides and clinical research. He oversees the clinical development strategy, design, and execution of programs across the BMS mid to late-stage portfolio. He is leading a clinical team targeting a broad spectrum of immunologic conditions such as lupus, psoriatic arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and Sjogren’s. Prior to joining BMS, he held several roles of increasing responsibility at Parexel, Novartis, and Celgene, where he served as a Medical and Scientific Expert and Senior Director for a variety of early and late-stage programs. He was loosely involved in the development and approval of Otezla and Cosentyx. He continues to see patients as a volunteer clinician-rheumatologist in an outpatient setting.

Gary A. Koretzky, M.D., Ph.D. (Co-Chair) – Vice Provost for Academic Integration Cornell University; Professor, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine

Gary Koretzky, M.D., Ph.D. obtained his M.D. and Ph.D. (Immunology) degrees at the University of Pennsylvania (‘ 84). He then pursued clinical training in Internal Medicine and Rheumatology at the University of California at San Francisco. He went on to re-enter the laboratory at UCSF as a post-doctoral fellow, examining the molecular events associated with immune cell activation. Dr. Koretzky later moved to the University of Iowa in 1991, continuing his research examining the biochemistry and molecular biology of signal transduction in hematopoietic cells. In 1999, Koretzky joined the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and as Director of the Signal Transduction Program of the Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute. At Penn, he was an Associate Director of the M.D./Ph.D. program, served as Chief of the Division of Rheumatology from 2006-2008, and as the Francis C. Wood Professor of Medicine and Vice Chair for Research and Chief Scientific Officer in the Penn Department 2008-2013. In 2013, Dr. Koretzky moved to Weill Cornell Medical College as the Vice Dean for Research and the Dean of Weill Cornell Graduate School. In 2017, Dr. Koretzky moved to Ithaca as Vice Provost for Academic Integration to build research programs between the Ithaca and New York City campuses and as the inaugural Director of the Cornell Center for Immunology.

Catherine Barbey, Ph.D. – Senior Medical Director, Clinical Development Lead, Immunology, Biogen

Catherine Barbey, Ph.D. is a Senior Medical in the MS-Immunology Development Unit at Biogen. She has been in the pharmaceutical industry for almost 20 years, with a successful track record in Global Medical Information, Global Medical Affairs and Global Clinical Development in the areas of dermatology and rheumatology, particularly in lupus. Prior to joining the pharmaceutical industry, she spent 15 years as an immunologist researcher, conducting research at the University of Lausanne, the University of British Columbia-Canada, and various clinical departments at the University Hospital of Geneva and Lausanne and the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

Beatrix Bartok, M.D. – Executive Director, Clinical Development, Inflammation & Respiratory Therapeutics, Gilead Sciences

Beatrix Bartok, M.D. is the Medical Director at Gilead Sciences. Dr. Bartok received her M.D. from the University of Pécs medical school before completing a residency in internal medicine at the University of Utah and a rheumatology fellowship at the University of California San Diego.

Denesh Chitkara, M.D. – Vice President, Head of Global Clinical Development Immunology, EMD Serono

Denesh Chitkara, M.D. is the Vice President, Head of Global Clinical Development Immunology at EMD Serono. Denesh completed his medical training at The Ohio State University College of Medicine, a fellowship in pediatric gastroenterology at the combined program of Harvard Medical School Children’s Hospital Boston/Massachusetts General Hospital, and a fellowship in clinical research at Mayo Clinic Rochester. Denesh has been involved in immunology clinical development for the last 14 years with leadership roles within Merck/MSD, Celgene, and Bristol Myers Squibb. Denesh has been leading teams involved in the clinical development of treatments for a broad range of immunologic diseases, such as cutaneous and systemic lupus erythematosus, axial spondyloarthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and hepatic fibrosis.

Jennifer Cooper, M.D. – Representative of Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance (CARRA); Assistant Professor, Pediatric-Rheumatology, University of Colorado

Jennifer Cooper, M.D. is a pediatric rheumatologist, clinical pharmacologist, and clinical/translational researcher at the University of Colorado. She completed dual fellowship training in pediatric rheumatology and clinical pharmacology at UCSF in 2017. Dr. Cooper has been an active member of the Childhood Arthritis & Rheumatology Research Alliance (CARRA) SLE committee and Lupus Nephritis Workgroup since 2015. She published a key paper evaluating the use of standardized treatment protocols for pediatric lupus nephritis at 10 CARRA sites and is actively working to plan a larger comparative effectiveness trial. She is also co-PI on a project to develop a standardized core dataset to harmonize data collection for pediatric SLE research internationally. Her individual research efforts are focused on pairing translational immunology and pharmacokinetics to develop precision treatment strategies for children with SLE. She also serves as co-director of the Children’s Hospital Colorado Pediatric Lupus Program, which provides pediatric rheumatology care for a five-state region.

Maria Dall’Era, M.D. – Professor and Chief, UCSF Division of Rheumatology; Director of the UCSF Lupus Clinic and Rheumatology Clinical Research Center

Maria Dall’Era, M.D. is the Jean S. Engleman Distinguished Professor and Chief of the Division of Rheumatology at UCSF. She is the Director of the UCSF Lupus Program and the Rheumatology Clinical Research Center. She serves as the Chair of the Lupus Clinical Investigators Network (LuCIN) and is a Steering Committee member of the annual 21st Century Lupus Conference, Lupus Academy, and the Lupus Forum. Dr. Dall’Era is a practicing rheumatologist and clinical researcher who leads an integrated research program focused on three closely related goals: (i) improving our understanding of the molecular and epidemiologic basis for SLE, (ii) developing novel approaches to the treatment of SLE and lupus nephritis, and (iii) finding biomarkers that predict treatment response and long-term outcome in patients with lupus nephritis. She is currently the protocol chair of an NIH-funded clinical trial in lupus nephritis, the P.I. of a CDC-funded longitudinal lupus cohort of patients throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, and a co-PI on various translational studies focused on lupus nephritis and cutaneous lupus. As Director of the UCSF Lupus Center, she cares for > 200 lupus patients and oversees the training of rheumatology fellows, medical residents, and students.

Daniela Dastros-Pitei, M.F.P.M., M.D., Ph.D. – Vice President Clinical Sciences Immunology, GSK

Daniela Dastros-Pitei, M.D., Ph.D. has more than 25 years expertise in clinical, academic and industry research and development, with the last 15 years in senior roles, focused on innovation and pursuing advances in the totality of evidence required to address patients remaining unmet needs. Dr. Dastros-Pitei obtained her Ph.D. at King’s College London. Her interest in clinical research led her to move into the pharmaceutical industry, starting at Pfizer with the successful filing of eletriptan and continuing through the years with multiple successful NDAs and BLAs in medium-sized companies (Takeda, Eisai, UCB, etc.). There, she developed and led global teams and departments operating in the US, EU and Japan. She developed her expertise from Phase 1 to launch in the development of both small and large (mAbs) molecules in multiple therapeutic areas ranging from neurodegeneration and pain to cardio-vascular and sepsis. Dr. Dastros-Pitei has always had a major interest in immunology, including lupus and rheumatology, dermatology, and gastro-enterology, which is the driving force in her current role as VP of Immunology Disease Area in Clinical Sciences at GSK.

Richard A. Furie, M.D. – Chief of the Division of Rheumatology, Northwell Health; Marilyn and Barry Rubenstein Chair in Rheumatology Professor of Medicine, Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell  

Richard Furie, M.D. is the Chief of the Division of Rheumatology at Northwell Health. He is a rheumatologist whose activities for the last several decades have focused on patient care, physician education, and clinical research in the area of anti-rheumatic drug development. He directs The Program in Novel Therapeutics, the Health System’s clinical research program in musculoskeletal disease. He also directs the Hospital’s SLE and Autoimmune Disease Treatment Center, which has become internationally recognized for its role in the development of new therapies for SLE. Regarded as one of the senior rheumatologists in the New York metropolitan area, he has served as a volunteer for the Arthritis Foundation, the Lupus Foundation of America, the Lupus Research Alliance, and Lupus Therapeutics. For over twenty years, he served on many committees of the American College of Rheumatology and was named a Master of the College in 2018.

Rachel Glaser, M.D. (ex-officio member) – Associate Director for Therapeutic Review and Acting Deputy Director for Safety in the Division of Rheumatology and Transplant Medicine, U.S. Food and Drug Administration  

Rachel Glaser, M.D. is the Associate Director for Therapeutic Review and the Acting Deputy Director for Safety, in the Division of Rheumatology and Transplant Medicine at the FDA. She is also a practicing rheumatologist in Rockville, MD. She received her medical degree from The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Dr. Glaser subsequently completed her training in internal medicine at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell, and a fellowship in rheumatology at the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), NIH. She was previously an Instructor in Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College and worked in private practice prior to joining the FDA. At the FDA, Dr. Glaser is responsible for the regulatory review of small molecules, biologics, and biosimilars developed for the treatment of adult and pediatric rheumatologic diseases. She serves on multiple internal and external committees and working groups in these areas.

Amit Golding, M.D., Ph.D. (ex-officio member) – Medical Officer in the Division of Rheumatology and Transplant Medicine, U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Amit Golding, M.D. is a Senior Physician in the Division of Rheumatology and Transplant Medicine (DRTM) in FDA/CDER/OND/Office of Immunology and Inflammation. After completing clinical training in Internal Medicine (Johns Hopkins Bayview), Rheumatology Fellowship (Johns Hopkins University SOM), and post-doctoral research in the laboratory of Dr. Ethan Shevach (NID/NIAID/LI/Cellular Immunology), Dr. Golding joined the University of Maryland School of Medicine Division of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology as a tenure-track Assistant Professor. He received a 5-year Career Development Award grant from the V.A. to conduct research on the regulatory T cells in Veterans with autoimmune disorders, including systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (R.A.). He has published numerous first and last-authored manuscripts on the cellular biology of human regulatory T cells in the context of autoimmune disease as well as a new method for identifying hyperactivated B cells in SLE. Dr. Golding has been a full-time FDA employee since September 2019 and has presented on behalf of the FDA at the annual ACR Convergence meetings.

Ellen GoldmuntzM.D., Ph.D. – Acting Chief of the Autoimmunity and Mucosal Immunology Branch in the Division of Allergy, Immunology and Transplantation, NIAID

Ellen Goldmuntz, M.D., Ph.D. is the Acting Chief of the Autoimmunity and Mucosal Immunology Branch in the Division of Allergy, Immunology and Transplantation, NIAID. She completed her residency at Children’s National Medical Center, followed by a pediatric rheumatology fellowship in a combined program with the Children’s National Medical Center and NIH. Dr. Goldmuntz attended Albert Einstein College of Medicine, where she received an M.D. and a Ph.D. through the Medical Scientist Training Program. She joined the Division of Allergy, Immunology and Transplantation in 2003 to work on clinical trials in autoimmunity. Prior to joining NIAID, Dr. Goldmuntz was an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Rheumatology at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, DC.

Elena Hsieh, M.D. – Associate Professor of Immunology & Microbiology and Pediatrics, University of Colorado

Elena Hsieh, M.D. earned her M.D. degree from the University of California San Francisco in 2008. She completed a residency in pediatrics at the University of California Los Angeles in 2011 and a fellowship in Allergy and Immunology at Stanford University in 2014. After one year stay at Stanford University as an Instructor, in 2015 Dr. Hsieh joined the faculty at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, jointly affiliated with the Children’s Hospital of Colorado. Dr. Hsieh’s lab addresses mechanistic and translational questions in human immunology, focusing on classical pediatric autoimmune disorders such as lupus and type 1 diabetes, and genetic immune dysregulation disorders. She is currently leading consortium studies that aim to identify novel inborn errors of immunity (IEI) that present with autoimmunity/inflammation, atopy, and/or malignancy (Sanford Children’s Genomic Medicine Consortium). She is the Director of the Jeffrey Modell Center for Primary Immunodeficiency and co-directs the Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Newborn Screen Program. Dr. Hsieh also directs the high-dimensional single-cell tissue interrogation section of the Human Immune Shared Resource under the Human Immunology and Immunotherapy Initiative, which seeks to promote basic science and translational immunology research.

J. Michelle Kahlenberg, M.D., Ph.D. – Giles G. Boles M.D. and Dorothy Mulkey M.D. Research Professor of Rheumatology and Associate Professor of Internal Medicine and Dermatology, University of Michigan

J. Michelle Kahlenberg, M.D., Ph.D. is the Giles G. Boles MD and Dorothy Mulkey MD Research Professor of Rheumatology and Associate Professor of Internal Medicine and Dermatology at the University of Michigan. She completed her undergraduate degree at Denison University, her M.D., Ph.D., and Internal Medicine training at Case Western Reserve University, and her fellowship in Rheumatology at the University of Michigan. She has been running her own laboratory at UM since 2013. Her clinical work is centered on the care of complicated lupus patients, including those with refractory skin disease. Her research laboratory combines translational approaches using patient samples and murine models to uncover the mechanisms that drive lupus and other autoimmune diseases. In particular, she is focused on unraveling the pathogenic mechanisms in cutaneous lupus, the factors that drive photosensitivity, and how skin inflammation can influence systemic lupus activity. Recently, she and her collaborator, Johann Gudjonsson, were the first Taubman Institute Innovate Program recipients through which they started the PerMIPA cohort to deeply and longitudinally phenotype lupus and psoriasis patients.

Mariana Kaplan, M.D. – (ex-officio member) – Chief of the Systemic Autoimmunity Branch, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS)  

Mariana Kaplan, M.D. is Senior Investigator, Chief of the Systemic Autoimmunity and Deputy Scientific Director at NIAMS/NIH. Before her appointment, she was a Professor of Medicine in the Division of Rheumatology at the University of Michigan. Dr. Kaplan did her Rheumatology Fellowship and post-doctoral training at the University of Michigan, where she was a member of the faculty for 15 years and an active member of their Multidisciplinary Lupus Clinic. In addition to her research activities, Dr. Kaplan is an active clinician and teacher. She sees lupus patients in the NIH Clinical Research Center and is involved in the development of various clinical trials for patients with autoimmune diseases at NIH. She has served in numerous roles at the ACR/REF, the American Association of Immunologists, the Lupus Foundation of America, and the Lupus Research Alliance. Dr. Kaplan received the 2015 Evelyn V. Hess Award from the Lupus Foundation of America in recognition of her significant contributions to lupus research, diagnosis, and treatment.

Matthew D. Linnik, Ph.D. – Vice President, Immunology, Eli Lilly and Company

Matt Linnik, Ph.D. is Vice President, Immunology at the Lilly Biotechnology Center in San Diego, where his responsibilities span discovery and clinical research. Matt received his Ph.D. in Pharmacology at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine. Current responsibilities include a biologic immune checkpoint agonist in phase 2, a small molecule enzyme inhibitor entering phase 2, and a large academic collaboration with a major EU University. His research lab focuses on multifunctional molecules, including antibody-drug conjugates for autoimmune diseases and oncology. Matt started his Lilly career in the late phase, contributing to multiple autoimmune compounds, including baricitinib, ixekizumab, and tabalumab. Matt joined Lilly in 2011 from Biogen Idec where he was Distinguished Medical Research Scientist and Head of Translational Medicine for Immunology. At Biogen, Matt was responsible for rituximab and ocrelizumab in autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, SLE and lupus nephritis. Before Biogen Idec, he was Chief Scientific Officer and Executive Vice President at La Jolla Pharmaceutical Co (NASDAQ: LJPC). His responsibilities included leading registration trials for a phase 3 asset in lupus nephritis (abetimus sodium) and driving a discovery research platform for B cell toleragens. Matt is an internationally recognized expert in Lupus and Co-Chair of Lupus Industry Council for Lupus Research Alliance.

Eric Morand, M.D., Ph.D. – Professor and Head of Rheumatology at Monash University; Head of the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health

Eric Morand, M.D. graduated from Monash University and trained in rheumatology in Australia and the Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases, U.K. His laboratory research focuses on glucocorticoid-induced proteins in the immune system and his clinical research is on systemic lupus erythematosus. He founded the Asia Pacific Lupus Collaboration, which developed and validated the Lupus Low Disease Activity State (LLDAS) endpoint and lead the TULIP2 trial of anifrolumab, resulting in regulatory approval of anifrolumab in the U.S., Japan, Australia, and E.U. Dr. Morand is also a founding member of the Australian Lupus Registry & Biobank and a founder of the Monash Lupus Clinic, Australia’s largest research-grounded clinic for patients with SLE.

Raj Nair, M.D. (ex-officio member) – Deputy Director (Acting) of the Division of Rheumatology and Transplant Medicine (DRTM), Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), FDA

Raj Nair, M.D. is a Clinical Team Leader within the Division of Rheumatology and Transplant Medicine (DRTM) at the FDA. He trained at the University of Alabama-Birmingham as a research fellow under the direction of Dr. Kenneth Saag and subsequently completed a clinical fellowship in Rheumatology at the Thurston Arthritis Center, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. He joined Washington Hospital Center, where he served as an attending physician. During this time, he obtained certification in musculoskeletal ultrasound through the American College of Rheumatology (RhMSUS). He started as a full-time FDA employee in 2013 and was promoted to clinical team leader within the Division of Rheumatology and Transplant Medicine in 2021. He has been a speaker at the national American College of Rheumatology annual meetings and additional meetings specific to regulatory policy, patient perspective, and specific diseases.

Brad Rovin, M.D., FACP, FASN – Lee A. Herbert Professor of Nephrology and Head of Nephrology at The Ohio State University

Brad H. Rovin, M.D. is the Lee A. Hebert Professor of Nephrology. Dr. Rovin received his Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois and his Doctor of Medicine from the University of Illinois Medical School in Chicago, Illinois. He completed a residency in Internal Medicine at Barnes Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri, and a Fellowship in Nephrology at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis. Dr. Rovin joined the College of Medicine Faculty in 1990, became Director of the Division of Nephrology in 2004, and served as Vice Chairman of Medicine for Research from 2009-2019. In 2019 he became the Medical Director of the Ohio State University Clinical Research Management Institute. Dr. Rovin studies the immunopathogenesis of glomerular and autoimmune diseases. He is heavily involved in clinical trial development and design for investigator-initiated and industry-sponsored trials. Dr. Rovin has had several leadership roles in the American Society of Nephrology, including running the Glomerular Diseases Pre-Course and Co-Editing NephSAP-Glomerular Diseases. He also is Co-Chair for glomerular disease guideline development for the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes effort. He is a founding member of NephroNet, a grass-roots nephrology community clinical trial organization, and the Lupus Nephritis Clinical Trials Network.

Jorge A Ross Terres, M.D. – Senior Global Medical Director Nephrology and Rheumatology, Genentech

Jorge Terres, M.D. is the Senior Global Medical Director, Nephrology and Rheumatology at Genentech. He received his medical degree from Universidad Anáhuac Mexico Norte.

Veronica Vargas Lupo, M.B.A. – Lupus Voices Council Co-Chair; Person with Lupus

Veronica Vargas Lupo is a Strategy & Transformation Retail Associate Partner at IBM with 10+ years of client-facing experience. She is an expert in partnering with company leaders to develop and digitally transform their business capabilities and operational processes based on smarter, data-driven decision-making. Prior to IBM, Veronica worked as a buyer and planner for Dillard’s department stores for three years. Veronica has lived with lupus for 17 years. She has been an active member of the Lupus Research Alliance Young Leadership Board since its inception in 2010 and was honored in 2018 at our annual Handbag Luncheon as our “Woman of Achievement’. Veronica is originally from Venezuela, where she grew up until moving to the U.S. as a teenager. Lupus is dear to her not only because she has lived with it but also because her mother has lupus.

Victoria P. Werth, M.D. – Professor of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania; Chief of Dermatology at the Philadelphia Veterans Administration Hospital

Victoria Werth, M.D. is a Professor of Dermatology and Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Chief of the Division of Dermatology at the Philadelphia VAMC. Dr. Werth earned her medical degree from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She completed a residency in internal medicine at Northwestern Memorial Hospital and a dermatology residency and immunodermatology fellowship at NYU, funded by the NIH and Dermatology Foundation. Dr. Werth joined the faculty at Penn in 1989 and has developed an internationally recognized program in autoimmune skin diseases. She is a co-founder of the Rheumatologic Dermatology Society and the previous president of the group. She has a longstanding interest in clinical and translational research pertaining to autoimmune skin diseases, including cutaneous lupus erythematosus, dermatomyositis, and autoimmune blistering diseases, with a focus on improving the outcomes of autoimmune dermatologic diseases. Her laboratory studies include cutaneous lupus and dermatomyositis that relate to pathogenesis and heterogeneity of response to treatment and ultraviolet light effects on skin. Her work has been funded by the Dermatology Foundation, NIH, DOD, the Veterans Administration, the Lupus Research Alliance, the Lupus Foundation of America, the Myositis Association, the International Pemphigus and Pemphigoid Foundation, CARRA, and industry.

“United we will succeed in the fight and cure of serious diseases such as lupus.”

Nikolay Delev, M.D.

Member Groups

  • AbbVie**
  • Alumis, Inc.**
  • American College of Rheumatology (ACR)
  • Amgen**
  • AstraZeneca*
  • Biogen*
  • Bristol Myers Squibb*
  • Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA)
  • Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance (CARRA)
  • Eli Lilly and Company*
  • EMD Serono*
  • Genentech*
  • Gilead Sciences, Inc.*
  • GSK*
  • Janssen**
  • Kaleidoscope Fighting Lupus
  • Kyverna Therapeutics**
  • Louisiana Lupus Foundation, Inc.
  • Lupus Foundation of America
  • Lupus Foundation of Colorado
  • Lupus Foundation of New England
  • Lupus Foundation of Southern California
  • Lupus Research Alliance
  • Lupus Society of Illinois
  • Lupus Therapeutics / Lupus Clinical Investigators Network
  • Merck**
  • Michigan Lupus Foundation
  • National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  • National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  • Novartis***
  • Rome Therapeutics**
  • Sanofi**
  • Takeda**

As of November 29, 2023