Julie Swain, MD
Vice Chair, Clinical Performance
Department of Cardiovascular Surgery
Mount Sinai Health System
Director, Center for Medical Devices, Mount Sinai Heart
Professor
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Julie Swain, MD, serves as Professor of Cardiovascular Surgery, Vice Chair of Clinical Performance, CV Surgery for the Mount Sinai Health System and Director of the Center for Medical Devices (CMeD) at Mount Sinai Heart. Her extensive experience in cardiac, vascular, and thoracic surgery are invaluable to the missions of the center as well as the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Throughout her career, Dr. Swain has performed cardiovascular and vascular surgery, managing a university-based surgical practice in adult cardiac, thoracic, and vascular surgery, and intensive care unit medicine. She has designed and conducted clinical research trials, led cardiovascular physiology basic science laboratories, and conducted collaborative research with US, European, Russian, Japanese, and Chinese scientists. Her published work includes studies in cardiovascular and pulmonary basic science and translational clinical research. In addition, she has consulted with industry and membership on scientific advisory boards.
Dr. Swain has had many roles relating to cardiovascular devices, including those of Advisor to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for more than 20 years; Member and Chair of the FDA Cardiovascular Advisory Panel; Member of the FDA Urological and GI Devices Advisory Panel; Special Assistant to the Director, Division of Cardiovascular Devices, working with all of the Divisions in the FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health/Office of Device Evaluation, as well as the Center for Biologics and the Center for Drugs; Collaborator with industry (U.S. and international), academics, and other government agencies in developing policy and in designing clinical study protocols, analyzing and interpreting data, and preparing advisory panel presentation. She also served as co-author of FDA Guidance on Clinical Trial Design.
Dr. Swain's research field is the cerebral consequences of cardiac surgery. Her research is internationally recognized for pioneering discoveries in the physiology and biochemistry of hypothermia, the use of magnetic resonance spectroscopy in the study of cardiopulmonary bypass and the brain, and in basic studies of myocardial metabolism. She has over 70 publications and 100 national science presentations. She established cardiovascular surgical brain protection laboratories at the National Institutes of Health and at the University of Kentucky and headed a multidisciplinary team of molecular biologists, neurologists, and magnetic resonance experts studying molecular mechanisms of brain and spinal cord injury. She has collaborated with scientists in Novosibirsk, Russia on clinical studies of neuroprotection strategies. She has conducted numerous human research investigations and has consulted with industry on research trials and federal regulatory issues for cardiovascular devices.
She was the Lead Clinical Reviewer for transcatheter heart valve repair and replacement studies from the inception of the field and worked with companies to design studies, analyze data and make regulatory recommendations. She held that same role for Mechanical Circulatory Assist devices from 2002-2009, developing performance goals for bridge-to-transplant, working with companies to design studies, analyzing the data, and making FDA regulatory recommendations. Dr. Swain also served as Lead Clinical Reviewer for medical devices for the fields of heart failure, myocardial ischemia treatment, left atrial appendage closure, atrial septal defects, embolic protection, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, therapeutic hypothermia, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. She designed clinical trials for vascular grafts, neurological devices, stroke studies, atrial fibrillation, vascular stents, pressure monitors, organ preservation, and pulmonary devices for treating emphysema.
Of particular interest to Dr. Swain are the neurological effects of cardiovascular devices, along with studies for stroke, TIA, and migraine. She advised FDA management on new trends in medical device development and use, worked closely with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on reimbursement issues for medical devices. Developing trial design, endpoint, and adverse event definitions for transcatheter valves, Dr. Swain served as an FDA representative on the Valve Academic Research Consortium and the Mitral Valve Academic Research Consortium. She has also served as a member of Scientific Advisory and Data Safety Monitoring Boards.
Dr. Swain has worked closely with engineers and veterinarians, collaborating on preclinical study issues. She has also joined forces with statisticians to design and interpret clinical trials, and with FDA epidemiologists to develop and conduct post-market studies.
Dr. Swain's Bachelor's degree is in Physical Chemistry from the University of California at Los Angeles, and her M.D. is from Baylor College of Medicine. She has held postdoctoral research fellowships in Cardiovascular Medicine at Harvard and Cell Biophysics at Baylor. Her postgraduate clinical training was at Baylor and the University of California at San Diego.