Matteo Schimberni MD
MD, IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele, Milano, Lombardia · Italy
Editorial leadership for Journal of Women's Reproductive Health ISSN 2381-862X
Research interests
- Gynaecological Surgery
- Endometriosis
- Laparotomy
- Surgical Techniques
- Reproductive Medicine
- Laparoscopic Surgery
- Ovary
- Gynecologic Oncology
Biography
Dr. Matteo Schimberni, MD, is affiliated with IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele in Milano, Lombardia, Italy. His research encompasses environmental health and maternal-fetal medicine, with particular emphasis on the impact of environmental exposures during pregnancy. His most influential work to date is a systematic review and meta-analysis examining the association between maternal arsenic exposure and gestational diabetes, published in 2020, which has been cited 41 times and has contributed to the understanding of environmental risk factors in pregnancy-related metabolic disorders. Dr. Schimberni's scholarship reflects a commitment to evidence synthesis in perinatal and environmental epidemiology.
Selected publications
- Maternal Arsenic Exposure and Gestational Diabetes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis 2020 cited 41×
- Assessment of Coagulation Parameters in Women Affected by Endometriosis: Validation Study and Systematic Review of the Literature 2020 cited 30×
- A Systematic Review of Atypical Endometriosis-Associated Biomarkers 2022 cited 25×
- Endometriosis and Phytoestrogens: Friends or Foes? A Systematic Review 2021 cited 24×
- Long-Term Postoperative Recurrence Rates and Fertility Outcomes After Endometrioma CO2-Laser Vaporization: A Five-Year Follow-Up Experience Recent 2025 cited 4×
- Lateral distribution of endometriotic lesions: the anatomical recesses hypothesis. A systematic review and meta-analysis Recent 2025 cited 3×
Ranked by citation impact (Crossref) where available, newest otherwise · verified via ORCID.
Considering JWRH for your work?
This journal is guided by Matteo Schimberni (MD, IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele, Milano, Lombardia) and a peer-review board of practising researchers. Open access, author-retained copyright (CC BY), and a clear editorial process.