He is an assistant professor at the Department of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology of Semmelweis University, formerly at the predecessor institution, the National Institute of Rheumatology and Physiotherapy. He participates in undergraduate and postgraduate education in both Hungarian and English at the Faculties of Medicine and Health Sciences.
He obtained his PhD degree in 2023 at the Doctoral School of Molecular Medicine, Semmelweis University, and completed his specialist training in rheumatology in 2017.
Since 2011, he has been working in national institute and later university outpatient and inpatient care, dealing with the full spectrum of diagnostic and therapeutic management of inflammatory and degenerative musculoskeletal disorders. His main clinical and research interests include immune-mediated and autoimmune rheumatic diseases (such as rheumatoid arthritis and spondyloarthritides), metabolic rheumatologic disorders (crystal arthropathies), and bone metabolism disorders (osteoporosis).
In the field of overuse-related (degenerative) joint diseases, he regularly treats patients with primary and secondary osteoarthritis (both small and large joint forms), spinal degenerative conditions (spondylosis, spondylarthrosis, disc degeneration), and inflammatory or painful soft tissue disorders (e.g. tendinitis, ligament or bursal inflammations).
He graduated from Semmelweis University in 2011. During his undergraduate education, he received a scholarship to the Faculty of Medicine at Université Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg, France), followed by an academic invitation to continue medical studies at Université Libre de Bruxelles (Brussels, Belgium).
He is a board member of the Hungarian Association of Rheumatologists, a member of the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) EMEUNET group, and the Hungarian Society for Osteoporosis and Osteoarthrology. In 2020, he received the **Petros Petrou Award** from the Hungarian Association of Rheumatologists for his “outstanding contributions in patient care, education, and research.