Dr. Broderick completed his premedical studies at Harvard University. He earned his medical degree from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). He completed surgical internship at Yale New Haven Hospital. He returned to UCSF for Urologic residency (1985-1989); following residency he completed a fellowship at UC Davis in Neuro-Urology, Incontinence and Impotence.
In 1990 he joined the University of Pennsylvania, as an Assistant Professor. He established Penn’s research program in male sexual dysfunction, with funding from Public Health System, National Institutes of Health and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Minority Medical Faculty Development Program.
In 1998 he joined Mayo Clinic Florida, as Professor in Urology. His practice is focused on Men’s Health: Erectile Dysfunction, Peyronie’s disease, Urethral Stricture Disease, Male Stress Incontinence, and BPH. Throughout his career he has championed medical education. He serves as Program Director of the Urology Residency MCF, member of the Personnel Committee, member of the Academic Appointments and Promotions Committee and Vice-Chair Graduate Medical Education Committee, Florida.
In 1992 he addressed the first Consensus Conference on Impotence sponsored by the NIH. In 1999 and 2004, and 2009 he served as committee member to the International Consultation on Sexual Medicine. In June of 2015 he co-Chaired the Guidelines Committee on Priapism, Peyronie’s, and Penile Reconstruction for the ICSM, Madrid. He previously served as Chairperson of the International Society for Sexual Medicine’s Online University.
He is a founding member of the Sexual Medicine Society of North America, and has served on the Board of Directors for Sexual Medicine Society of North America. He was elected President of SMSNA (2005-2006). He has chaired the Website, Publications, Education and Industry Relations Committees. His projects for SMSNA include a website for patient education, and a public education campaign, A National Conversation on Men’s Health, A Town Hall Meeting on Men’s Health and A Consumer’s Virtual Guide to Men’s Sexual Health.
Christian Nelson is the Chief of the Psychiatry Service and an Attending Psychologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center with expertise in treating men with prostate cancer and other genitourinary malignancies. As the psychological liaison to Memorial Sloan Kettering’s Genitourinary and Sexual Medicine services, he provides short- and long-term counseling services to patients struggling with cancer-related issues. Dr. Nelson also works with the Center’s 65+ Program, providing psychological support for patients who are 65 and older, and co-facilitates a support group for patients dealing with the combined issues of cancer and aging.
Working with members of the symptom management, neurocognitive, and psychotherapy laboratories, Dr. Nelson has focused his research on cancer’s impact on quality of life in prostate and geriatric cancer patients, and on developing new psychotherapy approaches for these groups. Some specific studies he has conducted include the impact of sexual dysfunction following cancer treatment; the cognitive effects of hormonal therapy on prostate cancer patients; distress in African-American men with prostate cancer; and developing assessment measures and psychotherapy specific to geriatric patients.
Dr. Run Wang is the Professor of Surgery (Urology) and Cecil M. Crigler, MD Chair in Urology at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston, Texas, USA. He is also the Professor of Urology and Director of Sexual Medicine and Sexual Medicine Fellowship Program in the Department of Urology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. He previously served as the Chief of Urology at the Lyndon B. Johnson General Hospital in Houston, Texas, USA. Dr. Wang holds honorary/concurrent/visiting professorships in numerous national and international universities. He is the Past President for the Sexual Medicine Society of North America, and currently serves as chair of the SMSNA International Liaison Committee and President of the SMSNA Foundation.
Dr. Nelson Bennett is an Associate Professor of Urology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine with a clinical and research focus on Male Sexual Medicine and Surgery. He graduated from Mercer University with a degree Biomedical Engineering. He completed his medical degree from University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and then went on to complete a residency in Urologic Surgery at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. After finishing a 2-year fellowship at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in Sexual Medicine and Surgery, he joined the faculty at the Lahey Clinic in Massachusetts before joining the faculty at Northwestern in 2016. In addition to serving as an Associate Professor at the Feinberg School of Medicine, he is the Co-Director of the Andrology Fellowship.
Dr. Bennett has been actively involved as a leader in numerous national and international organizations. He is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Sexual Medicine, as well as a reviewer for numerous peer-reviewed journals. He is a former Treasurer of the Sexual Medicine Society of North America (SMSNA) and an active committee member of the International Society for Sexual Medicine (ISSM). He serves as a section leader on the Core Curriculum Committee of the American Urologic Association (AUA), and is a member of the National Medical Association (NMA).
John P. Mulhall, MD, is the Director of the Male Sexual & Reproductive Medicine Program, and Director of the Sexual Medicine Research Laboratory at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. He holds an adjunct position as professor of urology in the Department of Urology at Weill Cornell Medical College. He completed his urology residency training at University of Connecticut Health Center, and his Sexual/Reproductive Medicine & Surgery Fellowship training at Boston University Medical Center.Dr. Mulhall is involved in clinical and laboratory research activities. He has spent more than a decade studying prostatectomy associated ED and Peyronie’s disease in the laboratory and in clinical studies. Dr Mulhall’s basic research interests include defining the pathobiology of Peyronie’s disease fibroblasts and erectile function preservation in cavernous nerve injury models. His clinical research is currently focused on predictors of post-prostatectomy erectile function recovery, pelvic radiation associated ED, penile structure imaging, as well as the design and conduct of drug trials in sexual medicine.
Dr. Mulhall has more than 170 papers published in peer-reviewed journals, and has published the books, Contemporary Management of Urologic Emergencies (1999), Sexual Function In The Prostate Cancer Patient (2009) and recently published a book for men with prostate cancer titled Saving Your Sex Life: A Guide For Men With Prostate Cancer (2008) He has contributed numerous book chapters. He was editor-in-chief of the review journal Current Sexual Health Reports until the end of 2007. He is also an Associate Editor for The Journal of Sexual Medicine and Reviews in Urology, and has served on the editorial board of The Journal of Urology.
Alexander W. Pastuszak, MD, PhD, is Chief Clinical Officer of Vault Medical Services and Assistant Professor of Urology at the University of Utah, with over 15 years experience in healthcare delivery and clinical and basic sciences research. Dr. Pastuszak earned his undergraduate degree at Yale University and completed his MD and PhD at the University of California, San Francisco. He completed his urology residency at Baylor College of Medicine and a fellowship in male reproductive medicine and surgery with Drs. Larry I. Lipshultz and Dolores J. Lamb, also at Baylor College of Medicine.
Dr. Pastuszak specializes in the treatment of male infertility, as well as male and female sexual dysfunction. As Chief Medical and Scientific Officer of Vault Health, Dr. Pastuszak oversaw a national clinical practice and clinical as well as research and development and special projects at the company. His clinical and basic science research focuses on men's health, with his laboratory investigating the genetic factors that cause male infertility, erectile dysfunction, and Peyronie's disease. He has received numerous awards for his work, most recently including continuing NIH funding as well as the Urology Care Foundation Rising Stars in Urology award. Dr. Pastuszak has authored over 140 peer-reviewed articles and numerous book chapters on men's reproductive and sexual health, and is editor of two textbooks on male and female sexual health.
Dr. Pastuszak is an internationally regarded speaker and key opinion leader in the healthcare space, and regularly shares his time and knowledge with the general public through regular media interviews and blog posts. He is also an entrepreneur, having founded companies in the digital health and personal protection spaces, and advises a number of companies in the healthcare and medical device spaces.
Dr. Wittmann is an Associate Professor of Urology and Adjunct Associate Professor of Social Work. She is a lead faculty in the Brandon Prostate Cancer Survivorship Program with clinical and research interest is sexual health and quality of life in cancer survivorship. She uses mixed methods to understand issues in cancer survivorship care and to evaluate interventions designed to improve patients' and partners' outcomes. She is faculty in the Mixed Methods Research Program at the University of Michigan.