Stanley J Goldsmith MD
Radiologist | Diagnostic Radiology
525 E 68th St Box 141 New York NY, 10021About
Stanley J. Goldsmith, M.D. has been Professor of Radiology and Professor of Medicine at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University since 1995. He served as Division Chief of Nuclear Medicine, Dep ...
Education and Training
Suny-Hlth Sci Ctr At Brooklyn, Coll of Med, Brooklyn Ny 1962
Board Certification
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM
Nuclear MedicineAmerican Board of Nuclear MedicineABNM
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Comparison of fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography and Ga-67 scintigraphy in evaluation of lymphoma.
- Current status of radiolabeled peptides in nuclear medicine diagnosis and therapy.
- PET predicts prognosis after 1 cycle of chemotherapy in aggressive lymphoma and Hodgkin's disease.
- The utility of monoclonal antibodies in the imaging of prostate cancer.
- 18F-FDG PET evaluation of the response to therapy for lymphoma and for breast, lung, and colorectal carcinoma.
- Clinical role of FDG PET in evaluation of cancer patients.
- Comparative physical and pharmacologic characteristics of iodine-131 and yttrium-90: implications for radioimmunotherapy for patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
- Targeting metastatic prostate cancer with radiolabeled monoclonal antibody J591 to the extracellular domain of prostate specific membrane antigen.
- Targeted systemic therapy of prostate cancer with a monoclonal antibody to prostate-specific membrane antigen.
- PET in the assessment of therapy response in patients with carcinoma of the head and neck and of the esophagus.
- Improving insight into radiobiology and radionuclide therapy.
- PET-CT fusion imaging in differentiating physiologic from pathologic FDG uptake.
- Radionuclide imaging of thoracic malignancies.
- Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of 111In- and 177Lu-labeled J591 antibody specific for prostate-specific membrane antigen: prediction of 90Y-J591 radiation dosimetry based on 111In or 177Lu?
- Phase I trial of 177lutetium-labeled J591, a monoclonal antibody to prostate-specific membrane antigen, in patients with androgen-independent prostate cancer.
Fellowships
- Mount Sinai Hospital
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