Kenneth Bagshawe was a physician, a scientist and an architect of modern oncology. He was first to show that combination chemotherapy can cure a non-haematological cancer, choriocarcinoma. He demonstrated how a tumour marker in blood and urine can give a quantitative representation of the total amount of tumour, providing a monitor of response to treatment or relapse and an indicator of prognosis. He enhanced understanding and treatment of gestational trophoblastic diseases (GTD), a group of which choriocarcinoma is the most lethal member. The most common form of GTD is hydatidiform mole and he developed a national system for management, resulting in a cure rate of virtually 100%. For choriocarcinoma, the figure is today approaching 98%. His system is used in many countries, and over several decades has contributed to the cure and preservation of fertility in hundreds of thousands of women who previously had little or no hope. He used the same principles to treat testicular and ovarian germ cell tumours, again achieving high levels of cure in patients whose disease had spread and would previously have been fatal. He innovated throughout his career, seeking improved tumour specificity in diagnosis and treatment of GTD and inventing antibody-directed enzyme prodrug therapy for more common cancers. He founded the first department of oncology in the UK and devoted much time to developing the speciality, directing research funding organizations and supporting the development of the speciality worldwide. He was a dedicated, original and hugely productive pioneer of oncology.
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