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Yun Soo Hong

Yun Soo Hong

Yun Soo Hong

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Assistant Professor of Epidemiology

Professional overview

Yun Soo Hong is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the NYU School of Global Public Health. Dr. Hong is a physician epidemiologist who received her medical degree in Ewha Womans University (Seoul), completed her internship and residency in Samsung Medical Center (Seoul), and received her MHS and PhD degrees in epidemiology from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (Baltimore). In addition, she completed her postdoctoral training at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine (Baltimore). 

Dr. Hong's research focuses on cardiovascular disease epidemiology, integrating genetics, multi-omics, and environmental exposures to identify novel determinants of cardiometabolic health. She leverages large-scale population-based cohort studies, including the UK Biobank, the All of Us Research Program, the Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed), and the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study, to address critical questions in cardiovascular disease epidemiology and prevention. Dr. Hong’s work (80 original articles) has been published in leading journals including Nature Communications, European Respiratory Journal, Heart, and Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

At the School of Global Public Health, Dr. Hong is teaching epidemiological methods (Epidemiological Methods and Design), covering different study designs and causal inference methods. Dr. Hong is also a methods consultant editor at Annals of Internal Medicine. Through her work, Dr. Hong aims to advance precision medicine and public health approaches that can inform strategies for cardiovascular and chronic disease prevention and treatment. She is also interested in advancing training and academic programs for master’s and PhD students.

Education

MHS, Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
PhD, Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
MD, Ewha Womans University

Publications

Publications

Mitochondrial heteroplasmy is a risk factor for the development of chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Pasca, S., Hong, Y. S. S., Shi, W., Puiu, D., Lake, N. J., Lek, M., Guallar, E., Arking, D. E., Gondek, L. P., & Hong, Y. S. (n.d.).

Publication year

2026

Journal title

Nature communications

Volume

17

Issue

1
Abstract
Abstract
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) can arise from lymphoid clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (L-CHIP), but many individuals who develop CLL lack detectable L-CHIP prior to diagnosis. To identify additional predictors of CLL risk, we analyze mitochondrial heteroplasmy in 419,154 individuals from the UK Biobank (UKB). Heteroplasmy is associated with a 1.5-fold increased risk of developing CLL, and this risk rises to 4-fold when accounting for deleterious heteroplasmic variants. These findings are confirmed in an independent cohort, the All of Us Research Program (AoU). Notably, the associations remain significant even in the absence of L-CHIP, highlighting heteroplasmy's potential utility as an independent biomarker. Moreover, heteroplasmy is enriched in individuals with high-risk L-CHIP genotypes and large clonal burden, suggesting a potential biological role in malignant transformation. Here, we show that mitochondrial heteroplasmy, especially functionally deleterious variants, identifies individuals at increased risk of CLL who would otherwise go undetected by L-CHIP-based assessments.

Hearing changes and trajectories during the menopausal transition and their association with metabolic factors

Jang, Y., Chang, Y., Lee, J., Seo, B., Cho, Y., Kim, M., Park, J. H. H., Kang, J., Kwon, R., Lim, G.-Y. Y., Kim, K.-H. H., Kim, H., Hong, Y. S. S., Park, J., Zhao, D., Cho, J., Guallar, E., Ryu, S., & Hong, Y. S. (n.d.).

Publication year

2025

Journal title

Maturitas

Volume

201

Page(s)

108686
Abstract
Abstract
Hearing loss is an emerging public health concern, with women typically experiencing deterioration during menopause; however, longitudinal studies across this transition are limited. This study examined hearing changes across the menopausal transition in order to identify distinct patterns of hearing decline from 11 years before to 9 years after the final menstrual period, with the goal of informing strategies for early detection and intervention.

Longitudinal patterns and group heterogeneity of depressive symptoms during menopausal transition in middle-aged Korean women

Jang, Y., Chang, Y., Park, J., Jeon, S. W. W., Seo, B., Park, J. H. H., Kang, J., Kwon, R., Lim, G.-Y. Y., Kim, K.-H. H., Kim, H., Hong, Y. S. S., Park, J., Zhao, D., Cho, J., Guallar, E., Ryu, S., & Hong, Y. S. (n.d.).

Publication year

2025

Journal title

Epidemiology and psychiatric sciences

Volume

34

Page(s)

e57
Abstract
Abstract
While depressive symptoms are common during menopausal transition, the relationship between the two remains unclear. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the longitudinal changes in depressive symptoms among middle-aged Korean women and identify those with elevated and worsening symptoms during this period.

Menopausal stage transitions and associations with overall and domain-specific perceived stress in middle-aged Korean women

Jang, Y., Chang, Y., Jeon, S. W. W., Park, J., Seo, B., Kang, J., Kwon, R., Lim, G.-Y. Y., Kim, K.-H. H., Kim, H., Hong, Y. S. S., Park, J., Zhao, D., Cho, J., Guallar, E., Ryu, S., & Hong, Y. S. (n.d.).

Publication year

2025

Journal title

Maturitas

Volume

200

Page(s)

108660
Abstract
Abstract
The menopausal transition, closely linked to later-life health, involves substantial physiological and psychological changes, potentially increasing perceived stress. However, longitudinal studies have reported inconsistent results, with limited data for Asian women, despite the potential for perceived stress to vary with both race and socioeconomic status. Therefore, this study investigated the longitudinal association between menopausal transition and perceived stress among middle-aged Korean women.

Reversible compromise of physiological resilience by accumulation of heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations

Huang, H., Wang, Y., Zsengeller, Z. K., Gorham, J. M., Vemireddy, V., Clark, A. J., Pan, H., Dreyfuss, J. M., Jotwani, V., Shlipak, M. G., Sarnak, M. J., Parikh, C. R., Thiessen-Philbrook, H., Katz, R., Waikar, S. S., Lake, N. J., Lek, M., Shi, W., Puiu, D., … Hong, Y. S. (n.d.).

Publication year

2025

Journal title

Science (New York, N.Y.)

Volume

390

Issue

6769

Page(s)

164-172
Abstract
Abstract
Somatically acquired mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations accumulate with age, but the mechanisms and consequences of this accumulation are poorly understood. Here we show that transient injuries induce a burst of persistent mtDNA mutations that impair resilience to future injuries. mtDNA mutations suppressed energy-intensive nucleotide metabolism. Repletion of adenosine, but not other nucleotides, restored adenosine triphosphate generation, which required a nuclear-encoded purine biosynthetic enzyme, adenylate kinase 4 (AK4). Analysis of 369,912 UK Biobank participants revealed a graded association between mutation burden and chronic kidney disease severity as well as an independent increase in the risk of future acute kidney injury events ( < 10). Heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations may therefore reflect the cumulative effect of acute injuries to metabolically active cells, impairing major functions in a fashion amenable to nuclear-controlled purine biosynthesis.

Contact

yun.soo.hong@nyu.edu 708 Broadway New York, NY, 10003