Discovering
the causes of
recurrent
pregnancy
loss

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RISE

Recurrent pregnancy loss
Investigational StudiEs
RISE is a nation-wide study led by Yale School of Medicine to discover the genetic causes of recurrent pregnancy loss.

Click here to join the study.

Are you interested in joining our study?

We are looking for couples who have experiences more than one pregnancy loss and are willing to participate in our study’s activities.

Meet the Team

Our study is led by experts in pregnancy loss, maternal-fetal health, clinical genetics and genomics. Click on each bio to learn more.

Principal Investigator

Yong-hui Jiang, MD, PhD

Professor of Genetics, of Pediatrics and of Neuroscience
Yale School of Medicine

Chief of Medical Genetics
Yale New Haven Hospital

Principal Investigator

Hugh Taylor, MD

Professor and Chair of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, and Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology;
Yale School of Medicine

Chief of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Yale New Haven Hospital

Principal Investigator

Uma Reddy, MD, MPH

Professor Adjunct of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences
Yale School of Medicine

Professor and Vice Chair of Research of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Principal Investigator

Ira Hall, PhD

Professor of Genetics
Director, Yale Center for Genomic Health

Yale School of Medicine

For Providers

We are interested in couples who have experienced more than one pregnancy loss (biochemical losses included) without an identifiable cause. 

Our
Locations

RISE is a nation-wide study spanning 10 world-leading academic and medical research sites. Find your nearest location below or contact us for more info.

“There’s so much we don’t understand about recurrent pregnancy loss. This study hopes to change that and to give answers to couples who want to know more about the possible causes of their own pregnancy loss”.  

Yong-hui Jiang, MD, PhD
Principal Investigator

Contact Us

Call or email us to find out more about our study.