Dr. Sajal Gupta

Dr. Gupta is an Assistant Professor in the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine. Since 2006, she has been serving as the Assistant Coordinator of Research at the American Center for Reproductive Medicine (ACRM) and since 2008 she has been working as the Supervisor of the Andrology Center and Reproductive Tissue Bank.

Dr. Gupta obtained her MBBS degree from the Lady Harding Medical College, University of Delhi, India. After finishing her residency training in Obstetrics and Gynecology from the University of Delhi in 1994, she went on to complete two Fellowships in Reproductive Medicine. This included a WHO Fellowship in 1999, followed by a Research Fellowship at the ACRM from 2004 to 2007.

Dr. Gupta earned several awards during her tenure at ACRM, including the Award for Highest Productivity in Female Infertility Research, an NIH Travel Award in 2006, Research Fellow of the Year in 2007, the 2010 Tommaso Falcone Award for Excellence in Female Infertility Research, Scholarship in Teaching Award by Case Western Reserve Medical School in 2011 and finally the 2012 and 2013 Innovator Award. 

Dr. Gupta has published over 65 reviews and research papers in peer-reviewed scientific journals and authored a dozen book chapters. She has presented about 60 abstracts at both national and international scientific meetings, and has given talks at EMD Serono, Reproductive Medicine symposia and Postgraduate CME courses in Reproductive Medicine. Dr. Gupta is the co-editor of a book on “Andrological Evaluation of Male Infertility: A Laboratory Guide” which was published recently by Springer Publishing House and is an ad-hoc reviewer for several journals such as, Fertility and Sterility, Human Reproduction, Urology and Reproductive Biomedicine Online.

Dr. Gupta is also an investigator on 25 research grants. Her current research interests include the role of free radicals in male and female infertility, proteomics in female infertility and assisted reproductive technology, endometriosis-associated infertility, and gamete cryobiology.