This is unpublished

Andrea
Kalus
MD

she/her/hers
Faculty
Pinned
Academic
Associate Professor, Department of Dermatology
John E. Olerud Endowed Chair for Dermatology Training
Professional
Director, Phototherapy Unit
Co-Director, Rheumatology-Dermatology Clinic at the University of Washington
Sites of Practice
UW Medical Center – Roosevelt Dermatology Center

Appointments

UW Medical Center – Roosevelt Dermatology Center  

206.598.4067
Schedule Online

4225 Roosevelt Way NE, Floor 4
Seattle, WA 98105

 

Biography

Dr. Andrea Kalus is an Associate Professor in the UW Department of Dermatology and the current holder of the John E. Olerud Endowed Chair for Dermatology Training. She is board-certified dermatologist at the UW Medical Center-Roosevelt Dermatology Center, Co-Director of the Rheumatology-Dermatology Clinic and Director of Phototherapy for UW Medicine. She earned her MD at the University of Washington, and completed residency training in both internal medicine and dermatology serving as a chief resident for both. 

She is the Pathway Director for the Humanities and the Arts Pathway, a 4-year elective for medical students exploring the intersection of the humanities disciplines and medicine. In collaboration with a museum educator, she teaches observation skills using the visual exploration of original art objects. She teaches medical students at all levels of training and supervises and mentors residents throughout their three years of dermatology training. She was selected by the residents for a teaching award in 2010 and received the UW Excellence in Mentoring Award in 2017.

Her clinical practice focuses on autoimmune diseases, complex medical dermatology and phototherapy. Dr. Kalus partners with multidisciplinary research teams to study lupus, dermatomyositis and skin manifestations of systemic disease.  

She is the immediate past president (2020) and current member of the Washington State Dermatology Association, as well as member of the Association of Professors of Dermatology, Rheumatology Dermatology Society, American Academy of Dermatology. She supports her local community through volunteering and advocacy at the state and national level.

Education & Training

MD, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle WA (1999)

Internal Medicine Residency, University of Washington, Seattle WA (1999-2002)

Clinician Teacher Fellow in Internal Medicine (2002-2003)

Dermatology Residency, University of Washington, Seattle WA (2003-2006)

B.S. in Chemistry and Biology, George Fox College, Newburg OR (1993)

Honors

UW Medicine Excellence in Mentoring Award (2017)

John E. Olerud Resident Teaching Award (2010)

Research Interests

  • Partnering with multidisciplinary research teams to investigate lupus, dermatomyositis and skin changes in patients with systemic disease.
  • Understanding cell specific responses to UV light in lupus
  • Understanding skin response to insulin infusion in diabetes
  • Clinical trial of Baricitinib in dermatomyositis

Clinical Interests

  • Medical Dermatology requiring systemic therapy
  • Connective Tissue Diseases
  • Dermatomyositis
  • Cutaneous Lupus
  • Eosinophilic fasciitis
  • Morphea
  • Mastocytosis
  • Vasculitis
  • Psoriasis
  • Phototherapy
  • Novel dermatology care options in underserved areas locally and globally

Publications

 

Selected Publications

Kalus, A. (2015) Rheumatologic skin disease. Med Clin N Amer. 2015 Nov;99(6):1287-303. 

Sladjana Skopelja-Gardner, Jie An, Joyce Tai, Lena Tanaka, Xizhang Sun, Payton Hermanson, Masaoki Kawasumi, Richard Green, Michael Gale, Andrea Kalus, Victoria P. Werth, Keith B. Elkon. (2020) The early local and systemic Type I interferon responses to ultraviolet B light exposure are cGAS dependent. Sci Rep 2020 May 13;10(1):7908

Moriarty N, Alam M, Kalus A, O’Connor K. (2019). Current understanding and approach to delusional infestation. Am J Med. Dec;132(12):1401-1409

Falsey, RR, Kinzer, MH, Hurst S, Kalus A, Pottinger PS, Duchin JS, Zhang J, Noble-Wang J, Shinohara MM. (2013) Cutaneous inoculation of nontuberculous mycobacteria during professional tattooing: a case series and epidemiologic study. Clin Infect Dis. Sep;57(6):e143-7.

Keller JJ, Tavakkol Z, Kalus A. (2011) Rare and deadly. Am J Med.  Jan 124(1):32-4.

Kalus AA, Fredericks LP, Hacker BM, Dommisch H, Presland RB, Kimball JR, Dale BA. (2009) Association of a genetic polymorphism (-44 C/G SNP) in the human DEFB1 gene with expression and inducibility of multiple beta-defensins in gingival keratinocytes. BMC Oral Health. Aug 27;9:21.

Stetsenko G, McFarlane R, Kalus A, Olerud J, Cherian S, Fromm J, George E, Argenyi Z (2008).  CD4+/CD56+ hematodermic neoplasm: a report of a rare variant with a T-cell receptor gene rearrangement.  J Cutaneous Pathology 2008 Jun;35(6):579-84