By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Durham, N.C. -- Judd W. Moul, M.D., professor of surgery at
the Uniformed
Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) in
Bethesda, Md., and an attending urologic oncologist at the
Walter Reed Army Medical
Center in Washington, D.C., has been named the new chief of
the division of urology at Duke University Medical Center.
Moul, 47, who is retiring as a colonel in the United States
Army Medical Corps, is also director of the Center for Prostate Disease
Research, a Congressionally mandated, Department of Defense
research program based at USUHS and Walter Reed. Moul's
clinical practice focuses on broad aspects of prostate cancer
and prostate disease. He is a noted authority on prostate
cancer in African-American men, biochemical recurrence of
prostate cancer, prostate biopsy technique and nerve-sparing
radical prostatectomy.
Moul begins his duties Aug. 15. His appointment, after a
national search that began in mid-2003, was announced by Danny
O. Jacobs, M.D., chair of the department of surgery at Duke
University Medical Center.
"Judd is an enthusiastic and dynamic leader who will build
upon the strengths of the division of urology while cultivating
new research and recruiting new faculty," said Jacobs. "In
addition to his outstanding clinical research involving
prostate cancer, Judd has an established track record of
bringing together multi-disciplinary programs that unify
efforts and benefit patients."
While at Walter Reed, Judd developed a prostate clinical
trials and care unit. He hopes to bring a similar program to
Duke.
"We're working on a Prostate Cancer Center that would be a
'home' for urologists, oncologists, radiation oncologists --
anyone working with men and their families affected by prostate
cancer," said Moul. "It would also be 'one-stop shopping' for
patients."
Moul said the plan is to utilize space adjacent to the
current urology clinic in the Duke Clinics.
He also believes that by creating a unified clinic, access
to clinical trials will improve for patients and will benefit
Duke.
Moul is nationally recognized for his creation of a U.S.
military-based prostate disease research database that houses
information on more than 20,000 prostate cancer patients
treated at nine collaborating institutions. After beginning his
duties at Duke, Moul will continue his work with the database
as a consult to the Department of Defense (DoD).
Moul graduated summa cum laude from Pennsylvania State
University. He earned his degree from Jefferson Medical
College, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and Alpha Omega
Alpha. He completed his Urologic-Oncology Fellowship at
Duke.
He has received grants from the National Institutes of
Health, DoD, Veterans Affairs and CaPCURE Foundation, and has
managed the cumulative $50 million in grants from the
U.S. Army Medical Research
and Materiel Command since the inception of Center for
Prostate Disease Research in 1992. Moul has authored and
co-authored more than 275 scientific manuscripts and book
chapters, including articles in the New England Journal of
Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
Honors received include the 1995 American Medical
Association Young Physicians Section Community Service Award
for his national involvement in prostate cancer patient support
groups, the 1996 Sir Henry Welcome Research Medal and Prize
from the Association of Military Surgeons of the United States,
and selection as a 1994 Fellow for the American Urological
Association/European Association of Urology International
Academic Exchange Program. In 1997, Moul was the recipient of
the Gold Cystoscope Award from the American Urological
Association. He received the Baron Dominique Jean Larrey
Military Surgeon Award for Excellence in 1998 and the
Presidential Award from the Uniformed Services Urology Research
Group in 2000.
Moul is on the editorial board of several medical journals,
including Oncology, Journal of Urology, Urology, and the
periodical Oncology News International. He is also co-editor of
the journal, Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases, and is
medical editor for Family Urology, a patient education magazine
published by the American Foundation for Urologic Disease.