Tuesday 4 September 2018

2018 Central Clinical School Public Lecture

Obesity: a serious disease that deserves serious treatment


You are invited to attend the annual CCS public lecture. This year the lecture will be hosted by the Department of Surgery.

Obesity is the most prevalent disease in Australia affecting 28% of the adult population and has become our most important health care challenge. Prevention would be the ideal. However, for those already suffering effective treatment options are desperately needed. Once a given individual has gained weight it is very difficult to lose and maintain that loss as the body defends its fat mass vigorously. Bariatric (weight loss) surgery is currently the most predictably effective treatment for obesity. These procedures help to manage a person’s appetite and enable them to manage their weight into the long term. Bariatric Surgery also provides an opportunity to better understand the pathways that lead to sustained weight loss. Importantly, with weight loss achieved with bariatric surgery there are significant health gains for the individual and cost savings for the community.

This lecture will review the disease of obesity, describe the role of bariatric surgery as an effective treatment option and potential model for future treatments. Challenges and barriers to providing bariatric surgery at a population level will also be addressed.

Details
Date: Thursday 18 October 2018
Time: 6.30pm for a 7.00pm start. Lecture will be followed by Q&A session
Venue: AMREP Lecture Theatre
Cost: Free
RSVP: Eventbrite registration link

 

About our speaker

Professor Wendy Brown is an Upper GI and Bariatric Surgeon. She is Chair of the Monash University Department of Surgery at the Alfred Hospital, Director of the Monash University Centre for Obesity Research and Education and Clinical Director of the National Bariatric Surgery Registry and Victorian State Upper GI Cancer Registry. Her sub-specialist interests are oesophago-gastric cancer, gastrooesophageal reflux disease and bariatric surgery. Her research interests include health outcomes from bariatric surgery, animal models of bariatric surgery and basic mechanisms underlying satiety. She is Past President of OSSANZ and President of ANZGOSA, Immediate Past Senior Examiner in General Surgery for the RACS, Deputy Chair of the Victorian State Consultative Surgical Council and Chair of the Scientific Committee of the International Federation for Surgery for Obesity and Metabolic Disorders. She was awarded the prestigious RACS John Mitchell Crouch Fellowship for Surgical Research Excellence in 2018.

Thursday 19 July 2018

The John Masterton Public Lecture, “Thyroid Cancer, towards a better paradigm” Mr James Lee


AMREP Lecture Theatre and Foyer, AMREP Education Centre, Alfred Health

5.30 pm                        Drinks and canapes

6.00 pm                        Lecture to begin with Introduction by Mr Roger Wale

Introduction

The incidence of thyroid cancer has almost tripled over the last four decades. In 2017, in Australia, it was the 7th most commonly diagnosed cancer in females. The true underlying cause of this increase is unclear, but what is clear is that a new treatment paradigm is needed. The behaviour of thyroid cancers varies widely – from extremely indolent to universally lethal. Thankfully, the latter is rare. Due to the wide spectrum of aggressiveness, a personalised treatment plan is the holy grail of thyroid cancer management, striving for that perfect balance between optimal treatment and minimising treatment side-effects. With appropriate treatment, long-term survival can be expected in the majority of patients diagnosed with thyroid cancer. Therefore, ensuring an optimal quality of life post cancer treatment is also a priority. Thyroid cancer is managed with a multi-disciplinary team approach involving surgeons, endocrinologists, pathologists, nuclear medicine physicians, radiologists, nurses, and other allied health staff. However, the mainstay of treatment for thyroid cancer is surgery. Thyroid surgery has undergone dramatic changes over the last 150 years. It has been transformed from a high-risk procedure, once banned by the French Academy of Medicine in the mid-1800’s, to one with very low morbidity and near-zero mortality today.
In this lecture, James will briefly describe the key turning points of interest in the history of thyroid surgery. In addition, the trends in the management of thyroid cancer will be discussed. Finally, James will address the challenges and potential strategies in achieving a new management paradigm that is necessary to meet the dramatic rise in the incidence of thyroid cancer diagnosis.

Speaker


MR JAMES LEE, SENIOR LECTURER, SURGERY ALFRED HOSPITAL
James is an academic surgeon, specialising in Endocrine Surgery (of the thyroid, parathyroid and adrenal glands). His public hospital appointments are at The Alfred and Monash Health, and his private practice is based at Epworth Richmond. James is a Senior Lecturer at Monash University, where he currently holds the prestigious Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS) Senior Lecturer Fellowship. James’ research focuses on patient-centred outcomes of thyroid cancer and surgery. He has published numerous papers in this area, both in clinical and basic science research. James also regularly presents his research findings in national and international meetings. His research is supported by Perpetual IMPACT Philanthropy, The Aftershock Foundation, and Epworth Research Institute. James is the Deputy Co-Chair of the RACS Younger Fellows Committee, the Younger Fellows Representative on the Section of Academic Surgery Committee, and a Member of the Victorian Regional Committee. In 2016, James founded the Surgical Research Essentials course, which has enabled aspiring academic surgeons to enter the world of surgical research.

Thursday 24 May 2018

2018 Surgical Research Forum – Innovation for better patient care

Thursday 26 July, 2018
1.30 pm 5.30 pm
Lecture Theatre, Level 5 Alfred Centre
Purpose: 
To showcase the research activities of the Alfred Hospital Surgical Departments
 
Session 1 – The Hugh Dudley Symposium on Surgical Innovation
Chair – A/Prof Bill Johnson Director of Surgery Alfred Health


Time
Presenter
Topic
1.30 pm

A/Prof Jeremy Grummet

Innovations in the diagnosis of prostate cancer

1.45 pm

Prof Mark Fitzgerald

New tools for streamlining trauma care

2.00 pm

Mr Cheng Lo

Clinical application of cultured epithelial autografts (CEA) in burns injuries

2.15 pm

A/Prof Heather Cleland

Novel ways to achieve skin closure in burns patients

2.30 pm

A/Prof Susan Liew
 
Custom implants and instruments

2.45 pm

Mr Charles Milne

An integrated approach to the operating room – Hybrid Technology

The Sir Edward Hughes Keynote Lecture
Introduced by Adrian Polglase 



3.00 pm

Prof David McGiffin

Novel ideas to improve therapy for patients with end stage heart disease

3.30 3.45 pm Afternoon tea
Session 2 – The Paul O'Brien Younger Surgical Researchers Symposium
This Symposium will highlight the work of our Higher Degree Students and Post Doctoral Fellows
Chair – Professor Wendy Brown Chair, Department of Surgery


Time
Presenter
Topic
3.45 pm

Dr Geraldine Ooi

Improving   liver function through weight loss

4.00 pm

Mr Matt Read

Barretts oesophagus – towards a better future

4.15 pm

Mr Stephen Bell

ADIPOSE trial – the effect of weight loss on Rectal Cancer Surgery - Cabrini

4.30 pm

Dr Rebekah Engel

Organoid research and colorectal cancer - Cabrini

4.45 pm

Rowan Miller

Urology Masters

5.00 pm

Mr Frank Raiola

Osseointegration changing lives

5.15 pm

Mr Charles Pilgrim

IRE – new hope for inoperable Pancreatic Cancer

The John Masterton Public Lecture

"Thyroid Cancer, towards a better paradigm"  Mr James Lee

AMREP Lecture Theatre and Foyer, AMREP Education Centre, Alfred Health
5.30 pm    Drinks and canapes
6.00 pm    Lecture to begin with Introduction by Mr Roger Wale

Enquiries: Dr Daphne Vogiagis daphne.vogiagis@monash.edu
Web: www.monash.edu/medicine/ccs/surgery-alfred

Sunday 18 March 2018

Intensive course: Surgical Research Essentials (SuRE) 16-17 Jun, 28-29 Jul, 8-9 Sep 2018

RACS
SuRE is accredited by RACS
Mr James Lee is the Surgical
Research Essentials  (SuRE)
course convenor
Mr James Lee is offering his highly successful introductory course: Surgical Research Essentials (SuRE) for the third year running. Register your interest now.

Why do this course?

A good understanding of surgical research is essential for a surgeon. Good quality research and the ability to apply it clinically is the cornerstone in evidence based practice. In training the surgeons of the future, compulsory research requirements have now been incorporated into every surgical training program. Not only that, research experience and output has become one of the differentiators in many job and training position applications.

Even if being an active researcher does not become part of your surgical career, a sound working knowledge of the ins and outs of research is essential. There is no better way to understand evidence based surgery than to be involved in a few research projects.

Details

  • Dates: The course runs over three weekends: 16-17 Jun, 28-29 Jul, 8-9 Sep 2018
  • Time: 8.00 am - 5.00 pm
  • Discount available for students. Please note, this course is only available to year level 3 and above medical students. Please get in contact for more information.
  • Location: Seminar Room 1 Level 5, Alfred Centre
  • Quota: The course will be capped at 20 this year with a minimum of 10 to run.
  • RACS accreditation
  • Web: www.monash.edu/medicine/ccs/surgery-alfred/teaching/sc-sure
  • Register interest

27 April 2018 Bionic limbs and osseointegration forum at the Alfred - all welcome

The Alfred-Monash forum on bionic limbs and osseointegration
is being held 3 pm Friday 27 April. All welcome, RSVP.
Mr Frank Bruscino-Raiola, Director and Head of Plastic Surgery at Alfred Health, and Mr Steven Gray, Director of Osseointegration (OI) & Targeted Muscle Reinnervation (TMR) Surgical and REHAB programme invite you to attend a forum at the AMREP Lecture Theatre

Osseointegration and Bionic Limb Integrated to Bone, Nerves and Muscles

Date: Friday 27 April 2018
Time: 2.30pm arrival/tea for 3.00pm start, followed by refreshments 4.30pm
Venue: AMREP Lecture Theatre, 75-85 Commercial Road, (between the Baker & Burnet Institutes), Melbourne 3004
RSVP for catering purposes: goo.gl/AVYu1k
Enquiries:  Mr Steven Gray, sjgray@alfred.org.au

26 April 2018 public lecture on prostate cancer diagnosis by A/Prof Jeremy Grummet

A/Prof Jeremy Grummet with a colleague. He is an advocate for
non-invasive diagnostic techniques for prostate cancer
You are invited to attend a public lecture by Associate Professor Jeremy Grummet on the Australian revolution in prostate cancer diagnosis, hosted by the Department of Surgery, Central Clinical School, Alfred Centre.

Details
  • Date: Thursday 26 April 2018
  • Time: 5.30pm refreshments for 6.00pm start.  Lecture will be followed by Q&A session
  • Venue: AMREP Lecture Theatre
  • Cost: Free
  • RSVP: link
  • Web: 
  • Enquiries: E daphne.vogiagis@monash.edu T +61 3 9903 0611

Bionic limbs becoming more integrated: Max Ortiz Catalán video


The Department of Surgery hosted a public lecture late last year (Thursday 21 September 2017), given by A/Prof Max Ortiz Catalán. A/Prof Max Ortiz Catalán sheds light on how biology and mechatronics, for the first time, can integrate man and machine through intuitive prosthetics useful in daily life.

Dr. Max Ortiz Catalán is an Associate Professor with Chalmers University of Technology where he founded the Biomechatronics and Neurorehabilitation Laboratory (@ChalmersBNL). He also serves as the Research Director with Integrum AB, Sweden. He received the European Youth Award in 2014, the Delsys Prize in 2016, the SER Prize in 2017, and the Brian & Joyce Blatchford Award in 2017.

Video:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4zQCSnAi1w&t=4s
Photo gallery: https://photos.app.goo.gl/Jw6yvhlCmA5NY4443

Dr Geraldine Ooi wins 2017 D.S. Rosengarten Prize

This year's winner of the annual D.S. Rosengarten Surgical Research Prize, Dr Geraldine Ooi.

Dr Ooi presented on: Lipidomic analysis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in morbid obesity: Pathologic alterations in liver lipid profile and parallel serum changes with progressive disease. Dr Ooi is undertaking research for her PhD supervised by Professor Wendy Brown, Head of Department of Surgery.

See more about the event: www.monash.edu/medicine/ccs/surgery-alfred/prizes/rosengarten and Photo gallery

Prof Clark Gamblin presents on "The forgotten male cancers"


The Department of Surgery hosted a public lecture in November 2017, given by Professor T. Clark Gamblin, Chief of Surgical Oncology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. The informative lecture looked at the progression and treatment of “The forgotten male cancers”.

Professor Gamblin, an internationally renowned surgeon specialising in cancers of the liver and pancreas, is a Fulbright Scholar who visited Australia in 2017 on the Fulbright Specialist Program.