The Electrophysiology Research Foundation is a charitable organization incorporated on August 2, 1982. The Foundation is a non-profit corporation, organized and operated exclusively for charitable purposes.
DR. SANJEEV SAKSENA MD
FHRS, FACC, FESC, FAHA, FRSM Professor of Medicine, UMDNJ- RWJ Medical School Editor in Chief, Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology Medical Director, Electrophysiology Research Foundation Past President, Heart Rhythm Society.
Dr. Sanjeev Saksena MD
Dr. Saksena is Clinical Professor of Medicine at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson School of Medicine, and Medical Director of the Electrophysiology Research Foundation. He has been the Director of the Cardiovascular Institute at Atlantic Health Systems (East) from 1999-2004, and Director of the Arrhythmia& Pacemaker Service from 1989. He has also been President of the North American Society of Pacing and Electrophysiology (NASPE) and Chair of its Government Relations Committee, and member for governmental affairs committees for the Heart Rhythm Society and the American College of Cardiology. He has extensive administrative experience with growing and restructuring organizations, and was pivotal in the growth of cardiology and cardiac surgery departments in his institutions as well as restructuring of national organizations such as NASPE to the Heart Rhythm Society. He has extensive experience in developing collaborative initiatives between major organizations such as the professional medical societies and the FDA (1994), NHLBI (1999), international organizations ( ESC 1998, IHRS 2005-6) and educational organizations (ECAS and Springer 2006).
He is the original author of current CPT coding in Cardiac Pacing and Electrophysiology and has been actively involved in economic policy issues in cardiovascular medicine. He has extensive experience in clinical service and program development and its economic impact on hospitals, medical practices and medical education. He has been Director of Cardiology and Electrophysiology fellowship programs, and supervised medical residents in clinical and research rotations in cardiology. His trainees now supervise electrophysiology programs or are cardiology faculty members in three continents. His educational activities in the Electrophysiology Research Foundation sponsor educational activities and programs for trainees and practicing physicians in the USA, Europe and Asia.He is co-Founder of the Indian Heart Rhythm Society and works closely with medical institutions in Asia and Europe and been on the faculty or working groups of joint international programs in Asia, South America, Europe and with World Societies in Cardiology and Cardiac Arrhythmias. As medical director of the EP Research Foundation, he has developed cardiac technology transfer to and cardiovascular program development in India.
He is the Founding editor and current Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology and has been the Editor of the Government Relations column for PACE and remains an active consultant to governmental and private health care organizations. He has been an active clinical and applied basic science investigator since 1980, and has held grants from NHLBI, industry and the American Heart Association. In this period, he has authored/co-authored over 350 abstracts, 330 articles, and 60 book chapters. He is editor/co-editor of 6 journal supplements and co-editor of 5 books and has most recently co-edited new textbooksentitled Electrophysiological Disorders of the Heart and Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology – A multidisciplinary approach. His current interests include clinical and basic research in cardiac electrophysiology and cardiac pacing, international and government relations and development and economics of cardiovascular services. He has been on the Planning and Steering Committees of several NIH trials such as AVID, AFFIRM and TOPCAT and was the Study Chair in multicenter clinical trials such as the Intracardiac Echocardiography Helps Interventional Procedures ( ICE-CHIP), Intracardiac Echocardiography Guided Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (ICE-CRT HF) trials and the T-Flex AF trial.
Reanalysis of the AFFIRM trial:
