Associate Professor Strickland |
Researchers and clinicians
at the Monash Health Translation Precinct (MHTP) are now offering world-class
expertise and care for patients with neuroendocrine tumours (NETs).
NETs are growths that begin in neuroendocrine
cells which are distributed widely throughout the body. There are many
different types of NET and while relatively rare, more than 1800 Australians
are diagnosed with NETs every year and over 10,000 Australians are currently
living with these cancers.
Monash Health medical
oncologist Associate Professor Andrew Strickland said that NETs can be quite
indolent and slow growing, and patients live with them for many years.
“Real expertise is required
to manage patients with these tumours, and until now we haven’t had either the
expertise or the infrastructure,” he said.
“With the recent appointment of Professor Eva
Segelov as Director of Oncology at Monash University and Monash Health, we now
have one of Australia’s foremost experts on NETs here at Monash.”
For
the first time, Monash Health has established a dedicated NET multidisciplinary meeting and clinic to care
for the needs of the vast population in Melbourne’s South East.
“Our first meeting was very
well attended with excellent support from surgery, gastroenterology, medical
oncology, nuclear medicine and pathology as well as registrars and fellows.
There was a presentation after the cases by Simone Leyden, CEO of the Unicorn
Foundation about their patient support services and NET patient experiences, as
well as their advocacy program.
“This clinic will require
substantial support from the hospital and we are delighted that Monash Medical
Centre has seen fit to support this endeavour,” said Associate Professor Strickland.
Associate Professor Strickland said there is an enormous need in the community.
"We drain a huge
population and up until now the only specialised clinic in Victoria has been at
Peter Mac—and not even Peter Mac has a formal NET multidisciplinary team
meeting.”
“The Peter Mac clinic is
both geographically inconvenient and overloaded with work so our patients have
had to wait long periods of time for appointments and treatment.”
Associate Professor Strickland
said he expects to be able to see the patients and get started with treatment
in a timely fashion.
“We initially plan to open up 16 appointment
slots per week but expect that the demand will grow rapidly and that the
service will expand from there.”
The weekly NET meeting will
be fully multidisciplinary. Chaired by
Professor Segelov, the meeting is attended by surgeons, nuclear medicine
physicians, radiologists, pathologists, gastroenterologists and endocrinologists.
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