Dr. Gordon is a professor of medicine and the director of endoscopy at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. He received his medical degree from the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and he completed his training in internal medicine and gastroenterology at Dartmouth – where he has spent his entire career. After completing his fellowship training in 1994, Dr. Gordon developed an active interest in therapeutic endoscopy, including ERCP and EUS. He credits his mentors and colleagues at Dartmouth, as well as associates and resources from the ASGE, for advancing and enhancing his advanced endoscopy skills.
Dr. Gordon’s clinical and research interests include therapeutic pancreaticobiliary endoscopy and mucosal ablative and resection techniques for the management of premalignant and early gastrointestinal cancers and palliative therapies and endoluminal stenting for obstructing neoplasms.
Dr. Gordon has authored close to 100 peer reviewed publications in the field of gastrointestinal endoscopy, he has trained numerous fellows and he helped to create (and directs) the Advanced Endoscopy Fellowship Program at Dartmouth. It is also worth noting that he is a proud recipient of the 2019 Robert J. Cimis Distinguished Teaching Award.
An active member of the ASGE since 1992, Dr. Gordon has been a frequent reviewer and editorial writer for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy and an invited faculty for ASGE fellows courses, including the First Year Fellows Endoscopy Course and the Advanced Fourth Year Fellows ASGE Passport Program. He also has an interest in international endoscopic training and was fortunate to participate in the ASGE Ambassador’s Program to promote endoscopy in the Solomon Islands. And Dr. Gordon traveled to Rwanda as part of the GI Rising Program to teach endoscopy and where he performed the first ERCP in 2017.