Personal profile
Headline
PROFESSOR | Medicine, Nephrology
Biography
Steven G. Coca, DO, MS, is a Professor of Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, the Associate Chair for Clinical and Translational Research for the Department of Internal Medicine, and the Director of Clinical Research for the Division of Nephrology.
Dr. Coca’s research accomplishments are diverse and far-reaching: he has focused research efforts on short- and long-term outcomes of acute kidney injury, and assessing performance of biomarkers for rapid diagnosis and risk stratification in AKI. His research has advanced understanding of the clinical utility of prognostic, predictive, and efficacy biomarkers for CKD/diabetic kidney disease in several large cohort studies, including the ACCORD, VA NEPHRON-D, CANVAS, and DAPA-CKD clinical trials, as well as the Mount Sinai BioMe Biobank and the UPenn Medicine Biobank. He has been an active investigator in several large NIH consortia, including the TRIBE-AKI, ASSESS-AKI, CKD Biocon, and Kidney Precision Medicine Project (KPMP). Over the past 3 years, he has led collaborations to advance use of machine-learning techniques and multidimensional data acquisition to create risk-stratification tools for patients at risk or with prevalent chronic kidney disease, and studied the impact of exercise on longitudinal changes in the kidney. His work has led to the FDA approval and commercial implementation of the bioprognostic test, KidneyIntelX, a validated risk score for progression of CKD in adults with type 2 diabetes.
Since 2005, Dr. Coca has published numerous peer-reviewed research articles, reviews, and editorials, and has given numerous invited talks at national and international conferences and academic medical centers. He has engaged in multiple collaborative efforts in translational and clinical research, and served as a research mentor for many fellows, residents, medical students, and junior faculty members. He also serves on the editorial boards for the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephology, and Kidney International, and as an Associate Editor for Kidney360, and is a frequent reviewer on NIH study sections.
Dr. Coca received his D.O. degree from the University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine, and completed his residency and nephrology fellowship at the Yale University School of Medicine. He received his Master of Science in Epidemiology and Public Health from the Yale University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.
Fingerprint
- 1 Similar Profiles
Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
-
Baseline Risk and Longitudinal Changes in kidneyintelX.dkd and Its Association With Kidney Outcomes in the CANVAS and CREDENCE Trials
Moedt, E., Coca, S. G., Edwards, K., Neuen, B. L., Arnott, C., Bakker, S. J. L., Fleming, F. & Heerspink, H. J. L., Jan 2026, In: Diabetes Care. 49, 1, p. 92-98 7 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access1 Scopus citations -
Concordance of Pre-Biopsy and Post-Biopsy Diagnosis in Hospitalized Patients with Acute Kidney Injury
McGredy, M., Hu, D., Philbrook, H. T., Corona-Villalobos, C. P., Rosenberg, A. Z., Moledina, D. G., Coca, S. G., Parikh, C. R. & Menez, S., 2026, In: Kidney360. Publish Ahead of PrintResearch output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access -
Health-Related Social Needs Are Associated with Lower Self-Reported Quality of Life in Patients on Hemodialysis
Yetman, H., Wen, H. H., Wang, L. C., Dong, Z., Tisdale, L., Foby, Y., Horowitz, C. R., Usvyat, L., Scherer, J., Thijssen, S., Kotanko, P., Coca, S., Nadkarni, G. & Chan, L., 5 Feb 2026, In: Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. Publish Ahead of Print, 10.2215/CJN.0000000946.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access -
Low Urine Uromodulin Levels are Associated With Interstitial Fibrosis and Tubular Atrophy in Native Kidney Biopsies
Kidney Precision Medicine Project, Apr 2026, In: Kidney International Reports. 11, 4, 106351.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access -
Author Correction: LILRB3 genetic variation is associated with kidney transplant failure in African American recipients (Nature Medicine, (2025), 31, 5, (1677-1687), 10.1038/s41591-025-03568-z)
Sun, Z., Yi, Z., Wei, C., Wang, W., Ren, T., Cravedi, P., Tedla, F., Ward, S. C., Azeloglu, E., Schrider, D. R., Li, Y., Khan, A., Zanoni, F., Fu, J., Ali, S., Liu, S., Liang, D., Liu, T., Li, H. & Xi, C. & 28 others, , May 2025, In: Nature Medicine. 31, 5, p. 1712 1 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Comment/debate
Open Access
Press/Media
-
-
Recent Findings in COVID-19 Described by a Researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (Peripheral Transcriptomics in Acute and Long-Term Kidney Dysfunction in SARS-CoV-2 Infection)
Beckmann, N., Vasquez Rios , G., Jayaraman, P., Liharska, L., Oh, W., Merad, M., Dellepiane, S., Kim-Schulze, S., Nadkarni, G., Suarez-Farinas, M., Rajagopal, M., Coca, S., Chan, L., Charney, A., Gnjatic, S., Sakhuja, A. & Thompson, R.
21/01/26
1 item of Media coverage
Press/Media