Overview
Megan Huchko, MD, MPH, holds a dual appointment as an Associate Professor in the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology and the Duke Global Health Institute. Dr. Huchko was an undergraduate at Duke before moving to New York City to complete medical school at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and residency training at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. She completed her fellowship in Reproductive Infectious Disease the University of California, San Francisco, and was a faculty member there.
Dr. Huchko practices as an ob/gyn generalist and specializes in cervical cancer prevention through her clinical work and global women’s health research. Her research focuses on optimizing the diagnosis and treatment of cervical cancer among vulnerable women in settings where health disparities occur. She has been working with the Family AIDS Care and Education Services (FACES) program in the Nyanza Province of western Kenya since 2006.
She designed and implemented a cervical cancer screening and prevention (CCSP) program for HIV-infected women enrolled in care at FACES. The CCSP program has provided a clinical resource, as well as a cohort to evaluate the epidemiology of cervical cancer among HIV-infected women, the feasibility of integrating cervical cancer prevention programs into HIV and general outpatient clinics, the safety of various diagnostic and treatment modalities, the efficacy of low-cost/low-resource screening modalities in HIV-infected women and provider and patient-level barriers and facilitators to uptake of cervical cancer prevention activities.
Currently, she is carrying out several large studies in central Uganda and western Kenya to evaluate the optimal implementation strategy for HPV-based cervical cancer screening in rural settings. At Duke, she leads the Center of Excellence in Global Women’s Health through the Global Health Institute and serves as Director for the Ob/Gyn Clinical Research Unit (CRU).
Current Appointments & Affiliations
Recent Publications
Predictors of delay in the cervical cancer care cascade in Kampala, Uganda.
Journal Article BMC Womens Health · February 13, 2026 BACKGROUND: Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women with significant global disparities in disease burden. In lower-resource settings, where routine screening for cervical cancer is uncommon, higher incidence of advanced-stage disease ... Full text Link to item CiteThe New U.S. Global Health Strategy - A Reset of America's Health Cooperation.
Journal Article N Engl J Med · December 4, 2025 Full text Link to item CiteExperience with the mobile health application 'mSaada' to facilitate home-based human papillomavirus testing in Western Kenya.
Journal Article BMC Glob Public Health · October 17, 2025 BACKGROUND: Cervical cancer screening using human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA testing is an essential component of prevention efforts. Countries with limited health care infrastructure need innovative strategies to make HPV-based screening feasible. Our team ... Full text Link to item CiteRecent Grants
2/3 CTSA K12 Program at Duke University
ResearchMentor · Awarded by National Institutes of Health · 2025 - 2030Duke Women's Reproductive Health Research Scholars
Inst. Training Prgm or CMEMentor · Awarded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development · 2020 - 2030Technology-enabled Single-Visit Model for Cervical Cancer Prevention at the Community Level
ResearchCo-Principal Investigator · Awarded by National Institutes of Health · 2022 - 2027View All Grants