Dr. Michael Saag received a BS in chemistry with honors from Tulane University and earned his medical degree with honors from the University of Louisville. During medical school, he served for three years on the Medical School Admissions Committee and received the Presley Martin Memorial Award for Excellence in Clinical Medicine. He completed his residency and infectious disease and molecular virology fellowship training at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. During his fellowship training, Dr. Saag made seminal discoveries in the genetic evolution of HIV in vivo. He evaluated isolates of virus obtained from individual patients at different periods in time and cloned and molecularly characterized these isolates to determine the degree of diversity of coexisting viral variants and to describe their evolution over time (Nature, 1988). While working with Dr. Dismukes, Dr. Saag designed and led a multicenter national AIDS clinical trial on the management of cryptococcal meningitis. This study included 194 patients and demonstrated the role of oral azole therapy in the treatment of this disorder in HIV-infected patients (NEJM, 1992). During the last six months of his fellowship, Dr. Saag conceived the concept of the 1917 Clinic, a comprehensive HIV outpatient clinic dedicated to the provision of comprehensive patient care in conjunction with the conduct of high quality clinic trials, basic science, and clinical outcomes research. Within the clinic structure, he established a clinical trials unit, a data management center, and a clinical specimen repository designed to support the activities of the newly established Center for AIDS Research at UAB. In essence, the clinic became a hub for the clinical, basic science, and behavioral science investigators within the center by creating a dynamic interface between the patients and the investigators.
Since the establishment of the clinic, Dr. Saag has participated in many studies of antiretroviral therapy and of novel treatments for opportunistic infections. He has published over 300 articles in peer-reviewed journals, including the first description of the use of viral load in clinical practice (Science, 1993), the first description of the rapid dynamics of viral replication (Nature, 1995), the first guidelines for use of viral load in practice (Nature Medicine, 1996), the first proof of concept of fusion inhibition as a therapeutic option (Nature Medicine, 1998), and directed the first inpatient studies of seven of the twenty-five antiretroviral drugs currently on the market (including indinavir, efavirenz, abacavir, and enfuvirtide). Dr. Saag has contributed over fifty chapters to medical textbooks, has served on the editorial board of AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, coedited a textbook entitled AIDS Therapy (Churchill Livingston, now in its third edition), and currently serves as an editor of the Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy and the Sanford Guide to HIV/AIDS Therapy. He has served on the board of directors of the American Board of Internal Medicine (and as chair of the Infectious Disease Subspecialty Board), has twice served as a member of the HIV Disease Committee of the Medical Knowledge Self-Assessment Program for the American College of Physicians, and has served on the NIH Office of AIDS Research Advisory Council. Dr. Saag currently serves on the International AIDS Society-USA board of directors, is a past president of the HIV Medical Association, is a member of the HHS Guidelines Panel on Antiretroviral Therapy, and is on numerous state, local, and national committees. He was elected into the American Society of Clinical Investigation in 1997 and the Association of American Physicians in 2011. Among his other awards, Dr. Saag has received the Myrtle Wreath Award from Hadassah, was listed as one of the top ten cited HIV researchers by Science (1996), and has been listed as one of the “Best Doctors in America” since 1994. He received the Outstanding Medical Research Achievement Award from the AIDS Task Force of Alabama, an Excellence in Teaching Award from the Medical Association of the State of Alabama, was named a “Health Care Hero” by the Birmingham Business Journal (2003), received a Service Award from the AIDS Survival Project in Atlanta (2003), was a 2004 honoree of the Birmingham chapter of the National Conference on Community and Justice, was a recipient of the Birmingham Chamber of Commerce Spirit of Birmingham Award (2005), was a recipient of the Leonard Tow Humanism in Medicine Award (The Arnold P. Gold Foundation), was a recipient of the UAB Alumni Society Hettie Butler Terry Community Service Award (2007), and received four Argus Awards for Best Lectures to the first-year medical students at UAB in 2009 and three others in 2010, 2011, and 2013. In December 2010, Dr. Saag was awarded the President’s Medal of UAB, the highest honor given at this institution. He is married to Amy Weil Saag, his wife of thirty-six years, and they have three children, Andy (who is married to Brittany), Harry, and Julie.