The SOAR (Student Opportunities for Academic Achievement Through Research) program
is a competitive program for rising M2 students, offering an opportunity to engage
in inquiry and scholarly activity with a faculty mentor.
About SOAR
The SOAR program is a full-time eight-week summer program that enables USC SOM medical
students to work closely with faculty mentors, exploring basic science, translational,
or clinical research, or projects focused on health care quality or patient safety,
or educational research. Students and mentors apply for participation in the fall,
followed by a selection and matching process that aims to align students' interests
with mentors' expertise.
Student Spotlight
Second-year medical student and 2025 SOAR participant Preston Harrison recently published
a first-author article, highlighting his work in orthopedic research focused on reducing
occupational radiation exposure among surgical staff. His research advances operating
room safety and provider well-being.
My work in orthopedic research focuses on understanding and reducing occupational
radiation exposure among surgical staff, with the goal of improving long-term safety
in the operating room.
Preston Harrison
“Under the mentorship of Dr. Tyler Gonzalez, I have contributed to efforts that prioritize both clinical excellence and provider
well-being," Preston added. "This research reflects a commitment to protecting those
who deliver care as much as those who receive it."
Amanda Brown publishes first-author study in cancer pathology
Amanda Brown celebrated a first-author publication in Cancers. The review article,
“The Structure, Pathogenesis, and Inhibition of the p53-MDM2 Pathway,” explores the
role of the p53-MDM2 pathway in cancer pathology and highlights its potential as a
target for novel therapies.
SOAR Duo Complete Peer-Reviewed Publications
Kendall Leigh and Srikar Alapati completed their research under Dr. Swapan Ray and
each produced a peer-reviewed publication.
Alapati explored how engineered exosomes may help overcome therapy resistance in aggressive
brain tumors by targeting survival pathways like angiogenesis and autophagy.
Leigh’s article examines how engineered exosomes could deliver targeted therapies
to high-risk pediatric cancers while blocking tumor survival mechanisms.
SOAR Students Stand Out for Their Research on Food Insecurity
At the Prisma Health Education & Research Institute Showcase on November 7th, SOAR
students Catherine Chopade and Jordyn Lombardo received the Outstanding Medical Student
Research Award for their poster, “Physicians Fighting Food Insecurity.”
Their project explored how “prescribing” fresh produce to patients with chronic health
conditions can improve health outcomes and strengthen community wellness.
SOAR Students Reach Semifinals of AMA Research Challenge
Classmates Briana Pope (right) and Njasi Oji (left) qualified for the semifinals in
the American Medical Association Research Challenge, the largest national, multi-specialty
medical research conference for medical students, residents and international medical
graduates to showcase and present research. Advancing to the semifinals means their
abstracts were ranked in the top 3% of all submissions.
Harshitha Visikamalla
Harshitha Visikamalla, a second-year medical student and SOAR program participant,
placed second in the poster competition at the 2025 South Carolina Neurological Association
Conference on September 13th for her abstract Reduced White Matter Tract Integrity
is Related to Tip-of-the-Tongue Phenomena.
Emma Grice and Cecily Kaufmann
2024 SOAR participants Emma Grice and Cecily Kaufmann won outstanding medical student
poster at the Prisma Research Showcase in Greenville, S.C., in October 2024, for their
project titled New Diagnosis HIV linkage to care evaluation in Southeastern United
States: A retrospective cohort study. The team worked with mentor Dr. Sarah Battle.
Anna Baucom
2023 SOAR student Anna Baucom presented her study titled Immediate Postpartum LARC
Devices and the Choose Well Grant: Characteristics Associated with LARC Continuation
> 12 Months at the SAAOG Conference in Sea Island, Georgia in January while working
with mentor, Dr. Patricia Seal.
Lance Schacht
Lance Schacht was published in the Current Infectious Disease Reports as the second
author on a study looking at Intrapartum Infections in expecting mothers, while being
mentored by SOMC faculty member Dr. Patricia Seal.
Challenge the conventional. Create the exceptional. No Limits.