
He is currently a Scientist
at the American Health Foundation, the only Cancer Center in the US devoted
exclusively to cancer prevention, and Professor of Medicine at New York Medical
College in Valhalla NY.
He is the director of the Molecular Cancer Prevention Section. Dr. Rigas graduated
summa cum laude from Athens Medical School and did his Internal Medicine residency
at Brown University, in Providence RI. Subsequently, he spent three years
as a postdoctoral fellow in the Graduate Department of Biochemistry at Brandeis
University in Waltham, MA working on prostaglandins, enzyme kinetics and physical
biochemistry.
He then did his Gastroenterology fellowship at Yale University. He spent his
two research years in the Department of Human Genetics at Yale working on
the use of RecA protein in homologous recombination.
He joined the Department of Medicine at Cornell in 1986, serving for two years
as the acting chief of the Division of Digestive Diseases. During this period
of time he developed the first ever method to study cells and tissues by infrared
spectroscopy for which he was awarded several patents.
He also begun studying colon cancer, demonstrating, among others, elevated
PG levels in colon cancer tissues and altered HLA antigen expression during
human colon carcinogenesis.
His lab was the first to demonstrate that NSAIDs induce the expression of
HLA genes, suppress proliferation and induce apoptosis of colon cancer cells
and that they can achieve this by COX-independent pathways.
He has also studied in detail the effect of NSAIDs on cell cycle and the molecules
that control it. Prior to joining the American Health Foundation, he served
on the faculty at Rockefeller University where he conducted several studies
on colon cancer. Currently, his lab is evaluating NO-NSAIDs as potential chemopreventive
agents against colon cancer and the role of DNA repair (homologous and non-homologous
repair mechanisms) in colon carcinogenesis. Throughout his career, Dr. Rigas
has remained active clinically as a gastroenterologist, occasionally conducting
clinical studies.
Of particular interest is his work on the chronobiology of biliary pain and
on the SEN virus.
He is the author or co-author of numerous papers and of a textbook on gastroenterology,
which has been translated into four languages including Italian.
He is an Attending Gastroenterologist at the Westchester Medical Center/New
York Medical College and a member of several societies. He holds several patents
for his biomedical inventions and serves or has served on editorial boards
of scientific journals and on boards of pharmaceutical or biotechnology companies.
He has received several awards. His hobbies are history and the chemistry
of ancient frescos.