About

Daniel Eun is a pioneering urologic surgeon and researcher whose work has fundamentally advanced the field of robot-assisted urological surgery. Based at a leading academic medical center, Eun has built a distinguished reputation in minimally invasive approaches to complex urological reconstruction and oncology, with particular expertise in robotic partial nephrectomy, ureteral reconstruction, and renal tumor management. Among his most celebrated contributions is his innovative application of indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence imaging during robotic ureteral procedures, including a landmark 2013 study on real-time ureteral stenosis localization that has accumulated 93 citations, and a 2014 follow-up garnering 179 citations. His multi-institutional work on buccal mucosa graft ureteroplasty has reshaped how surgeons approach complex ureteral strictures, while his contributions to robotic partial nephrectomy for large clinical T2 tumors and inferior vena cava thrombectomy have expanded the boundaries of minimally invasive oncologic surgery. A 2018 nomogram predicting kidney function decline post-surgery (107 citations) reflects his commitment to patient-centered outcomes. Early work on maximizing console surgeon autonomy and augmented-reality surgical training further demonstrates Eun's broad influence across both technique innovation and surgical education.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

39
H-Index
147
Papers
4,176
Total Citations
28
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Use of Indocyanine Green During Robot-assisted Ureteral Reconstructions
179 citations · 2014
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2020 (23 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 543
🏛 Institutions: Temple University, Henry Ford Hospital, Temple University Hospital, Henry Ford Health System, University of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Hospital

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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