Jesse Mez, MD, MS

Co-Director, Clinical Research, BU CTE Center
Associate Director, BU ADRC
Associate Professor of Neurology, Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine
Co-Leader, Framingham Heart Study Brain Aging Program Clinical Core
- Education
- MD, MS
- Office
- L5
- jessemez@bu.edu
Jesse Mez, MD, MS, is an Associate Professor of Neurology at Boston University (BU) Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine. A neurologist with clinical training in aging and dementia and research training in biostatistics/statistical genetics and epidemiology, he is the Associate Director of the BU Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC), Co-Director of Clinical Research of the BU Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) Center and co-leads the Framingham Heart Study Brain Aging Program Clinical Core. He is also an AD Genetic Consortium and AD Sequencing Project Investigator. His research seeks to understand the genetic, neuropathological, epidemiological, and clinical aspects of AD, CTE, and related dementias. He is an internationally recognized expert on CTE, having been a lead or co-author on several of the most highly cited manuscripts and an invited lecturer in national and international venues on the topic. Ongoing research themes include 1) the relationship between traumatic brain injury, exposure to repetitive head impacts from contact sports and military service, and dementia-related outcomes and their interaction with genetic factors, 2) clinicopathologic correlation in CTE with the goal to accurately diagnose CTE in life, 3) genetic architecture, neuropathology and clinical course of AD subtypes, as defined by variation in neuropsychological presentation and 4) interaction between genetic and environmental factors and risk for and resilience from AD. He is a Principal Investigator or Core/Project Leader, on six NIH and DOD-funded grants and is an author of more than 150 research articles, reviews, editorials, and book chapters. He also cares for patients with AD and related dementias, including those at risk for CTE in the BU/Boston Medical Center Memory and Aging Clinic.
He received his AB from Cornell University in Mathematics, his MD from the University of Maryland School of Medicine, and his MS in Biostatistics with an emphasis on Statistical Genetics from the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. He completed his Neurology Residency at the Harvard Mass General Brigham Program in Boston. This was followed by a Clinical Fellowship in Aging and Dementia and a Research Fellowship in Neuroepidemiology at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.
- Fields
- Hariri Faculty Affiliate