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University of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1990–2026
Suneeta Senapati, M.D., M.S.C.E., is an Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. She specializes in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, serving as an Attending at Pennsylvania Hospital and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Senapati is also a Consultant in the Department of Surgery at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. She holds leadership roles as the Director of Third Party Reproduction and Co-Director of Fertility Preservation at Penn Fertility Care, University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine. Her clinical expertise encompasses infertility, fertility preservation, third-party reproduction, endometriosis, and ectopic pregnancy. Her research focuses on epigenetics and reproduction, outcomes after assisted reproductive technologies, and early pregnancy biomarkers and outcomes. Dr. Senapati has contributed to the field through numerous publications and is actively involved in advancing reproductive medicine through both clinical practice and research.
Recurrent pregnancy loss: a committee opinion
Fertility and Sterility · 2026-04-01
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2026-04-14
Abstract Background Perinatal mood and anxiety disorders (PMADs) are among the most common and consequential complications of pregnancy. The perinatal period is also characterized by profound hormonal fluctuations and large-scale brain plasticity. However, the mechanisms linking these neurobiological changes to psychiatric risk are poorly understood. Prospective, clinically informed studies are needed to identify quantitative biomarkers and clarify pathways linking perinatal neurobiology to PMADs risk. Methods This report describes the design of a prospective, longitudinal cohort study integrating multimodal neuroimaging, biofluid sampling, and deep clinical phenotyping to enable precision characterization of neurobiological trajectories of PMADs risk. Twenty-five individuals at elevated risk for PMADs will be recruited prior to conception and followed across six in-person timepoints spanning the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and early postpartum, with additional remote follow-ups through the first postpartum year. Data collection includes high-resolution structural MRI, functional brain mapping using multi-echo resting-state fMRI, diffusion MRI, arterial spin labeling, ultra-high field MR-based techniques for measuring glutamate (GluCEST and 1 HMRS), biofluid sampling, and comprehensive clinical, behavioral, and cognitive assessments. Structured clinical interviews assess categorical diagnoses while dimensional symptom measures capture heterogeneity and transdiagnostic features of perinatal psychopathology. Longitudinal analyses will model nonlinear trajectories of brain and symptom change across the perinatal period as well as evaluate whether preconception network features and menstrual cycle-related brain changes are associated with subsequent perinatal symptom emergence. Discussion This cohort study establishes a longitudinal, multimodal framework for investigating neurobiological changes across the transition to pregnancy in individuals at elevated risk for PMADs. By anchoring pregnancy-related brain changes to preconception and menstrual cycle-related variability within the same individuals, this study is designed to evaluate associations between preconception hormone sensitivity, pregnancy-induced neuroplasticity, and PMADs risk. The resulting dataset will provide a deeply phenotyped longitudinal resource for investigating brain-behavior relationships across the perinatal period. Findings are expected to inform future larger-scale studies aimed at advancing mechanistic understanding of PMADs, improving individualized risk stratification, and supporting development of personalized preventive and neuromodulatory interventions.
Project 2: Epigenetic, Behavioral, and Physiological Outcomes in a Mouse ART Model
NIH · $23.7M · 2011–2028
Mary D. Sammel
Kurt T. Barnhart
University of Pennsylvania
Christos Coutifaris
Esther Eisenberg
Michael P. Diamond
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Intracytoplasmic sperm injection for nonmale factor indications: a Committee opinion
Fertility and Sterility · 2026-05-01
Fertility and Sterility · 2026-04-01
Fertility preservation in patients with medical indications: a committee opinion
Fertility and Sterility · 2026-01-05 · 3 citations
Racial/ethnic variation in ovarian responsiveness and live birth after in vitro fertilization
Fertility and Sterility · 2026-02-01
PAIN, PATHWAYS, AND POLYMORPHISMS: GENETIC DRIVERS OF ENDOMETRIOSIS AND ADENOMYOSIS PHENOTYPES
Fertility and Sterility · 2025-12-01 · 1 citations
14708 Tackling the Terrible TOA: Surgical Tips for Laparoscopic Management of Tuboovarian Abscesses
Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology · 2025-10-22
Research Square · 2025-12-04
Fertility and Sterility · 2025-07-15
Heping Zhang
Public Health Department
Nanette Santoro
Emily S. Jungheim