UNMC_Acronym_Vert_sm_4c
University of Nebraska Medical Center

Carlos A. Gomez, MD

Associate Professor, UNMC Division of Infectious Diseases

402-559-8650
402-551-5581

Carlos Gomez

Dr. Carlos A. Gomez is an associate professor of internal medicine and infectious diseases at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, where he specializes in transplant infectious diseases and infections in immunocompromised hosts. His clinical practice focuses on the prevention and management of complex infections in solid organ transplant recipients, patients with hematologic malignancies and individuals receiving biologic or cellular therapies. He works closely with multidisciplinary transplant and oncology programs, contributing to infection prevention strategies, protocol development and care pathways for high-risk populations.

Dr. Gomez serves as co-director of the transplant infectious diseases research program, where he provides strategic oversight of a growing clinical research portfolio that includes Phase II–III industry-sponsored and NIH-funded trials. His research interests include cytomegalovirus management, toxoplasmosis in immunocompromised hosts and the clinical application of molecular diagnostics, including metagenomic next-generation sequencing, to improve diagnostic precision and antimicrobial stewardship. He serves as principal investigator and co-investigator on multiple clinical trials focused on vaccines, antiviral therapeutics and novel diagnostics.

Dr. Gomez earned his medical degree from Universidad Nacional de Colombia, completed internal medicine training at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and pursued fellowship training in infectious diseases, medical microbiology and transplant/immunocompromised host infectious diseases at Stanford University. He is board-certified in infectious diseases and medical microbiology.

  • Medical School: Universidad Nacional de Colombia, 2006
  • Residency: University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), 2014
  • Fellowship: Infectious Diseases, Stanford University, 2016
  • Fellowship: Medical Microbiology, Stanford University, 2017
  • Fellowship: Immunocompromised Host and Transplant ID, Stanford University, 2018