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USC announces a joint biomedical engineering department, bridging medical and engineering schools to accelerate health care innovation

03.31.26 | Keck School of Medicine of USC

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The Keck School of Medicine of USC and the USC Viterbi School of Engineering have announced that the Alfred E. Mann Department of Biomedical Engineering will become a joint department between the two schools, forging a formal partnership in education, research and innovation in technology and medicine. This joint department, one of the first of its kind in California, builds on decades of cross-disciplinary research and breakthroughs at USC, including the world’s first FDA-approved artificial retina, the first brain implant to restore lost memory function, and innovations in immunotherapy to treat cancer.

“By leveraging USC’s interdisciplinary strengths, this joint department will advance biomedical research and accelerate the translation of discoveries into meaningful improvements in human health,” said USC President Beong-Soo Kim .

USCs Alfred E. Mann Department of Biomedical Engineering, celebrating this year its 50th anniversary, was one of the first in California to offer bachelor’s, master’s and PhD degrees. It was named in 2022 with a $35 million gift from the Alfred E. Mann Foundation for Biomedical Engineering. With added support from USC’s president and provost, the newly integrated biomedical engineering department will create new structures and gain new resources dedicated to further accelerating biomedical innovation, enriching educational programs and advancing technology in medicine. It will combine expertise in priority areas spanning medical devices, neuroengineering, imaging science, drug discovery, artificial intelligence (AI) and informatics, cellular and molecular bioengineering, and more.

“We envision the new structure as a transdisciplinary engine for biomedical innovation that will accelerate discovery, transform health care delivery, and educate the next generation of leaders in biomedical engineering and medicine.” said Carolyn C. Meltzer, MD , dean of the Keck School of Medicine and the May S. and John H. Hooval Dean’s Chair in Medicine. “By formally integrating the powerful strengths of USC’s engineering and medical schools, we will be better able to translate biomedical innovation into meaningful health advances.”

“Education, research and innovation in health technology are key pillars of the Viterbi School of Engineering” said Yannis C. Yortsos, PhD , dean of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering and the Zohrab Kaprielian Dean’s Chair in Engineering. “We are thrilled to create a reimagined department that will integrate engineering and medical mindsets, which in our rapidly changing technology landscape will generate novel thinking in biomedical education, innovation and research for the benefit of humanity.”

Engineering meets medicine

Collaborations like this are part of USC’s presidential initiatives, and the new joint department aligns with several of USC’s strategic priorities for education, innovation and research, including medical and technological innovation and collaboration across disciplines. USC experts on both sides of that partnership have been working together for decades, yielding research advances and educational programs that have spurred progress across health and medicine.

Last year, researchers from the two schools showed how ultrasound technology could address a key limitation of CAR T-cell therapy. Cancer immunotherapy, which uses engineered versions of a patient’s own immune cells, works well against blood cancers but has been less effective with solid tumors due to tumor heterogeneity and fewer tumor-specific targets. The researchers used ultrasound waves to prompt tumor cells to express a specific protein and “flag” themselves for elimination by T-cells. Another Keck-Viterbi research group just received a five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health to develop innovative treatments for metastatic breast cancer.

The collaboration has also generated key breakthroughs in ophthalmology, including the landmark development of the Argus II artificial retina , the first FDA-approved “bionic eye.” Ongoing research — including a $47 million project funded by the federal government’s Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health — aims to restore sight through eye transplantation and advance treatment for macular degeneration and other approaches. This collaboration was spurred with the award in 2003 of the NSF Engineering Research Center on Biomimetic MicroElectronic Systems (BMES-ERC), which bridged engineering and medical research. The BMES-ERC, funded across the maximum possible term (2003-2013) has now evolved into the Dr. Allen and Charlotte Ginsburg Institute for Biomedical Therapeutics.

Keck-Viterbi teams are also working at the frontier of neuroengineering, using brain stimulation to restore memory loss caused by Alzheimer’s disease and to help rebalance the brain’s electrical signals in patients with depression and other mood disorders .

Collaboration in action

As research collaborations between the two schools continue to expand, faculty will now have increased freedom to draw on the institutes, centers and shared facilities that make up both the Keck School of Medicine and the Viterbi School of Engineering. In particular, the integrated department will benefit from the expertise being developed in USC Viterbi’s new School of Advanced Computing, opening up tremendous opportunities for the implementation of advanced computing and AI in biomedical engineering and medicine. Bringing engineering and medicine together within a single department also positions USC to pursue larger, more ambitious educational and research efforts, including complex translational projects and multi-institutional collaborations.

Facilities at both the Viterbi School of Engineering and the Keck School of Medicine will be devoted to the joint department, with the chair reporting to both deans. Yingxiao (Peter) Wang, PhD , the department’s current chair, who also holds the Dwight C. and Hildagarde E. Baum Chair in Biomedical Engineering, will help implement the transition by leading the department into its next phase.

Wang noted, “This integration reflects the future of biomedical engineering, where engineers, physicians and scientists work side by side to educate the new generation of biomedical engineers, conduct cutting-edge research, and translate discoveries and insights into technologies that directly benefit patients.”

Keywords

Contact Information

Laura LeBlanc
Keck School of Medicine of USC
laura.leblanc@med.usc.edu
Amy Blumenthal
USC Viterbi School of Engineering
amyblume@usc.edu

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Keck School of Medicine of USC. (2026, March 31). USC announces a joint biomedical engineering department, bridging medical and engineering schools to accelerate health care innovation. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOW6Z2L/usc-announces-a-joint-biomedical-engineering-department-bridging-medical-and-engineering-schools-to-accelerate-health-care-innovation.html
MLA:
"USC announces a joint biomedical engineering department, bridging medical and engineering schools to accelerate health care innovation." Brightsurf News, Mar. 31 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOW6Z2L/usc-announces-a-joint-biomedical-engineering-department-bridging-medical-and-engineering-schools-to-accelerate-health-care-innovation.html.