
About
Peter Angelos, MD PhD, is the Kilbride-Siegler-Clinton Professor of Surgery and a Professor of Medicine at the University of Chicago. His clinical interests include adrenal surgery, endocrine tumors, minimally invasive endocrine surgery, neuroendocrine tumors, pancreatic islet cell tumors, parathyroid surgery, pediatric thyroid and parathyroid surgery, pheochromocytoma, thyroid cancer, and thyroid surgery. Dr. Angelos has contributed to the field through his research and publications on surgical ethics, the management of complex surgical cases, and thyroidology, including the implications of the 2024 World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki for thyroidology and the clinical impact of genetic mutations in thyroid carcinoma. His work emphasizes the importance of integrity in academic surgery and shared decision-making in vascular access planning for hemodialysis.
Research topics
- Medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Surgery
- General surgery
- Internal medicine
- Medical emergency
- Pathology
- Computer Science
- Computer Security
- Risk analysis (engineering)
- Oncology
- Emergency medicine
- Environmental health
- Family medicine
Selected publications
Shared Decision-Making and the Ethical Practice of Surgery
Journal of the American College of Surgeons · 2026-03-17
article1st authorCorrespondingJournal of surgical education · 2026-03-16
articleSurgery · 2026-04-20
articleThe Gray Zone Between Quality Improvement and Human Subject Research
The Journal of Clinical Ethics · 2026-02-16
articleSenior authorAbstractIt has become increasingly difficult to distinguish between human subject research and before-after quality improvement projects that do not require informed consent. Is there a boundary between human subject research and quality improvement projects? If so, is it a sharp line or a gray zone?
Journal of the American College of Surgeons · 2026-02-25
articleA Short “Scrubbing” Prayer as a Potentially Valuable Addition to Preoperative Preparation
The American Surgeon · 2026-02-21
articleSurgeon well-being and patient safety remain central priorities in contemporary surgical practice. Many surgeons endorse spirituality-broadly defined-as an important component of personal resilience and professional purpose. We propose a brief moment of private reflective practice, adaptable to diverse belief systems, during the preoperative hand-scrubbing period. This "scrubbing reflection", which may include silent prayer for those who choose, could promote focused attention, reduce stress, and cognitively reinforce essential information such as patient identity, diagnosis, and the planned procedure. As this pause occurs during an already standard process, it adds no operational delay while potentially supporting improved human performance and surgical safety. This perspective encourages consideration of simple, voluntary practices that may strengthen both caregiver well-being and patient protection.
Thyroid Lobectomy Versus Total Thyroidectomy for Papillary Thyroid Cancer
Advances in Surgery · 2025-06-04 · 1 citations
reviewSenior authorSurgeon’s Obligations in the Informed Consent Process
The American Journal of Bioethics · 2025-07-03 · 1 citations
letterJournal of the American College of Surgeons · 2025-07-15
article1st authorCorrespondingInvited Commentary: Managing Contemporary Moral Challenges
Journal of the American College of Surgeons · 2025-02-27
articleSenior author
Frequent coauthors
- 123 shared
Robert S. Krouse
University of Pennsylvania
- 123 shared
David Casarett
Duke University
- 121 shared
Thomas J. Miner
Lifespan
- 121 shared
Julie Swaney
Ovarian Cancer National Alliance
- 121 shared
Alice Laneader
Philadelphia VA Medical Center
- 121 shared
Ann Kolker
Philadelphia VA Medical Center
- 121 shared
Geraldine Padilla
University of California, San Francisco
- 121 shared
Betty Ferrell
City of Hope
Labs
Education
M.D.
Boston University School of Medicine
Other
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Other
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Other
University of Michigan Medical Center
Other
University of Chicago Medicine
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