|
Statistics |
Members: 6
News: 157
Web Links: 18
Visitors: 543071
|
|
|
|
|
European Society of Surgical Oncology (ESSO) Award Every two years, during the ECCO conference, the European Society of Surgical Oncology confers the ESSO Award in recognition of significant achievements in basic or translational research in oncology, clinical and educational contributions to oncology in general and surgical oncology in particular.
On the occasion of ECCO 14, the ESSO Award was presented to
Professor Irving Taylor
Irving Taylor
Irving Taylor is Professor of Surgery and Vice-Dean and Director of Clinical Studies, University College London. He is a past-President of the British Association of Surgical Oncology and President of the European Society of Surgical Oncology. His main clinical interest relates to the management of colorectal cancer and colorectal liver metastases. He is an elected member of the Royal College of Surgeons of England and sits on the Intercollegiate Cancer Committee. Professor Taylor has published over 600 papers and written or edited 25 books. in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the treatment of colorectal cancer and colorectal liver metastases, for his continuous support of ESSO actions and for his incisive editorial activity.
Professor Taylor gave the award lecture on the personalized treatment for colorectal liver metastases. Click here to read the abstract and view the presentation.
Previous recipients of this award have been J. Oldhoff (1991), F.J. Lejeune (1993), J.A. van Dongen (1995), W. Mattheiem 1997), C.J.H. van de Velde (1999), A.E.M.R. Lerut (2001), L. Cataliotti (2003) and L. Pahlman (2005).
ESSO 2008 best poster awards 195 posters will be presented during the ESSO 2008 Congress in The Hague (10-12 September). On the occasion of the ESSO 2008 Congress in The Hague, the ESSO Education Committee conferred to the following presenters the ESSO best poster award:
Dr. Takahashi Norio (Japan)
Experimental studies on reconstruction mechanism of rat lymphatic tracts after total iliac lymphadenectomy and identification and characterization of rat lymphatic endothelial cells in vitro
Poster_287 Takahashi Norio
Dr. Gabriel Liberale (Belgium)
Role of multidisciplinary meeting in the treatment decision making of patients with gastro-intestinal cancer: results of a prospective study
poster_375 Gabriele Liberale
Dr. Leonid Petrov (Russia)
The role of pelvic exenteration for treatment of locally advanced recurrent rectal cancer
poster_260 Leonid Petrov
The awards were conferred during the closing session of the Congress by the Conference Chair, Professor Cornelis van de Velde. Each awardee will receive a prize money of 500 €. FECS Clinical Research Award The European Society of Surgical Oncology is proud to announce that the prestigious FECS Clinical Research Award was presented, on the occasion of ECCO 14, to ESSO President-Elect,
Professor Cornelis Van De Velde
Cornelis van de Velde Cornelis van de Velde has been since 1982 connected as a staff surgeon with the Department of Surgery of the Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC). In 1988 he was appointed as a full clinical professor of surgery. Since the same year he is leading the section Surgical Oncology and since 1999 also the section Gastrointestinal Surgery and Endocrine and Head and Neck Tumours of the Department of Surgery. Cornelis van de Velde is an initiator and co-ordinator of collaborative networks of national and international basic and clinical research groups.
Cornelis van de Velde is especially known as a leading surgeon and scientist in the field of cancer treatment and diagnosis of colorectal cancer, breast cancer and gastric cancer. He is an initiator of basic and clinical research to improve prospects for cancer patients. The focus is on the development of new cancer treatment modalities (immunotherapy and gene therapy), the improvement of current cancer therapies (surgery of primary tumours and metastases, chemotherapy or radiotherapy in addition to surgical treatment; local treatment by isolated liver perfusion), new techniques for cancer diagnosis and prognosis (identification of sentinel lymph nodes, detection of minimal residual disease by using molecular techniques, identification of biomarkers that determine prognosis, and genomic and proteomic profiling of tumours and other tissues and blood samples).
Cornelis van de Velde has initiated and co-ordinated several clinical phase I, II, and III studies that have led to significant changes in the treatment of cancer patients. He has introduced and developed isolated liver perfusion as treatment for of liver-confined cancer metastases in the Netherlands. He is worldwide known for his studies on treatment of rectal cancer and gastric cancer. The TME (Total Mesorectal Excision) study, set up and co-ordinated by Cornelis van de Velde, as well as his study in which a Japanese approach in surgical method both influenced these treatment approaches at the global level. TME combined with preoperative local radiotherapy, as found in the clinical trial of Cornelis van de Velde to be the optimal treatment, is now the world wide standard therapy for rectal cancer. The gastric cancer and TME trials are regarded worldwide as exemplas of how clinical trials should be performed, in particular for the extensive quality control that was applied not only for data handling, but also for the method of surgery and pathology.
, in recognition of his outstanding international contribution to the integration of scientific research and clinical practice in the field of cancer. This prestigious award acknowledges Professor Van De Velde’s work in clinical trials, particularly in breast and colorectal cancer.
Professor Van De Velde’s award lecture addressed the pivotal of the surgical oncologist in the improvement of cancer outcome. Click here to read the abstract and view the presentation.
Previous recipients of this award have been E. van der Schueren , K. Lundhom, H. zur Hausen, G. Bonadonna, M. Overgaard, L. Pahlman, P. Kleihues, P. Isaacson and R. Peto
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|