Craig Andrew Peters, MD
- Pediatric Urologist, Professor at UT Southwestern Medical Center, Division Director at Children's Health
- Languages spoken: English
- Locations (3)
Biography
Craig Peters, M.D., treats children with urological problems and specializes in urinary tract infections, fetal urology and minimally invasive surgery. He is the Division Director of Pediatric Urology at Children's Health℠ and a Professor of Urology at UT Southwestern Medical Center.
Dr. Peters is on a mission to make surgery faster, easier and less scary for his patients. He joined Children’s Health in 2015 and spearheaded our robotic surgery program, where doctors use a robotic surgical system to make surgery more accurate and precise. Every surgeon in this program is certified in the da Vinci Robotic Surgical System, which is one of the most advanced robotic systems available today. This minimizes complications and helps many children recover faster.
Dr. Peters and his colleagues perform some of the country’s highest numbers of laparoscopic and robotic surgeries for pediatric urology conditions. Laparoscopic surgery uses tiny instruments and a camera to perform operations through small incisions. This means less-noticeable scars, less pain and a shorter hospital stay.
Dr. Peters has helped define best clinical practices in pediatric urology, and led the writing of the most recent guidelines in managing vesicoureteral reflux, a common urological condition in children. He has also been an advisor to the NIH and the American Urological Association. He is also the pediatric editor of the premier Urology textbook.
Dr. Peters earned his medical degree from John Hopkins University. He completed his urology residency at the Brady Urological Institute at Johns Hopkins, and did fellowship training at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
He lives in Dallas with his wife of 35 years and enjoys cycling vacations with his family.
Education and Training
- Medical School
- Johns Hopkins University (1981)
- Internship
- John Hopkins Hospital (1982), General Surgery
- Residency
- John Hopkins Hospital (1987), Urology
- Johns Hopkins Hospital (1983), General Surgery
- Fellowship
- Boston Children's Hospital (1990), Pediatric Urology
- Board Certification
- American Board of Urology(Pediatric Urology)
Conditions Treated
- Absence of vagina or inadequate vaginal length in adolescents
- Adolescent urethral prolapse
- Bladder exstrophy
- Caudal regression syndrome (CRS)
- Chordee (penile curvature)
- Cloacal anomaly
- Cloacal exstrophy
- Concealed or buried penis
- Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)
- Congenital penile torsion
- Duplicated uterus and or vagina
- Ectopic ureter
- Epispadias
- Gonadal dysgenesis
- Hypospadias in boys
- Meatal stenosis in boys
- Micropenis
- Multicystic dysplastic kidney in children (MCDK)
- Pediatric ambiguous genitalia
- Pediatric androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS)
- Pediatric bedwetting (nocturnal enuresis)
- Pediatric bladder stones
- Pediatric constipation
- Pediatric cystinuria (inherited kidney stone disorder)
- Pediatric daytime wetting (urinary incontinence)
- Pediatric duplex kidney (duplicated collecting system)
- Pediatric epididymal cyst (spermatocele)
- Pediatric hematuria (blood in urine)
- Pediatric horseshoe kidney (renal fusion)
- Pediatric hydrocele
- Pediatric hydronephrosis
- Pediatric inguinal hernia (groin)
- Pediatric labial adhesions
- Pediatric megaureter
- Pediatric nephrolithiasis (kidney and ureteral stones)
- Pediatric neurogenic bladder
- Pediatric penile lesion
- Pediatric phimosis
- Pediatric recurrent urinary tract infections (UTI)
- Pediatric spinal cord injury
- Pediatric torsion of the appendix testis and appendix epididymis
- Pediatric undescended testes (cryptorchidism - UDT)
- Pediatric urethral stricture
- Pediatric urinary tract infection (UTI)
- Pediatric urinary urgency and/or frequency
- Pediatric varicocele
- Pediatric vesicoureteral reflux (VUR)
- Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) in children
- Posterior urethral valves (PUV)
- Prune belly syndrome (Eagle-Barrett syndrome)
- Retractile testicles in boys
- Spina bifida
- Testicular torsion in males
- Tethered spinal cord in children
- Ureterocele
- Ureteropelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) in children
- Ureterovesical junction obstruction (UVJ) in children
- Urogenital sinus in girls
Treatments
- Pediatric buccal mucosa vaginoplasty
- Pediatric circumcision
- Pediatric extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL)
- Pediatric robotic assisted laparoscopic bladder reconstruction
- Pediatric robotic assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty
- Pediatric robotic assisted laparoscopic ureteral reimplant
- Pediatric ureteroscopy
- Pediatric video urodynamic study (VUDS)