Associate Professor of Otolaryngology and Neurological Surgery
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Garret W. Choby, MD, is an Associate Professor of Otolaryngology with a secondary appointment in Neurological Surgery at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
Dr. Choby completed his otolaryngology residency at UPMC followed by fellowship training in rhinology and skull base surgery at Stanford University. Following fellowship training, he joined the faculty at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, with joint appointments in the Departments of Otolaryngology and Neurosurgery, where he served as the Chair of Quality and had a domestic and international referral practice for sinonasal cancers, skull base tumors and refractory sinus disease. He was subsequently recruited back to UPMC where he serves in his current role.
Dr. Choby is is a diplomate of the American Board of Otolaryngology and a member of the American Rhinologic Society and the North American Skull Base Society. He is a nationally recognized leader in sinus and skull base disorders and is a regular invited lecturer nationally and internationally. He has previously been named departmental Teacher of the Year and is a 3x recipient of the Press-Ganey patient experience award. Dr. Choby is the Chair-Elect of the Skull Base and Orbital Surgery section of the ARS and Chair of the ARS educational courses committee.
Dr. Choby’s clinical focus includes sinonasal malignancies, skull base tumors, inflammatory sinus disease and aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease. Active research areas include improving quality of life (QOL) following endoscopic skull base surgery and improving survival in patients with sinonasal malignancies. Highlights of ongoing studies include proliferative and transcriptomic profiling of sinonasal mucosal melanoma, a multi-site prospective investigation on chemosensory and QOL dysfunction following endoscopic skull base surgery and a multi-site consortium prospectively evaluating survival outcomes and transcriptomic profiling of sinonasal malignancies. He has published over 150 peer-reviewed manuscripts.