The Urology Foundation

Last updated
The Urology Foundation
Formation1995
Founders
Legal statusCharity
PurposeTo prevent, treat, and cure urology diseases
Headquarters1-2 St Andrew's Hill, London EC4V 5BY
Origins
Methods
  • Financing research
  • Supporting training
FieldsDiseases of the male and female urinary-tract system and the male reproductive organs
President
Roger Kirby
Chairman
Paul Fletcher
Chief Executive
Louise de Winter
Ambassador
Stephen Fry
Secessions
Website Official website
Formerly called
The British Urological Foundation

The Urology Foundation (TUF) is a charity that works across the UK and Ireland with the aim of improving the knowledge and skills of surgeons who operate on diseases of the male and female urinary-tract system and the male reproductive organs and funds research to improve outcomes of all urological conditions and urological cancers.

Contents

Its work is solely supported by donations. By financing research, it develops diagnostic tests and minimally invasive procedures for urological diseases. By supporting training, it improves surgical skills, and by awarding grants it provides opportunities for surgeons to travel to various parts of the world and practise new techniques.

TUF was founded under the banner of 'The British Urological Foundation' in 1995 by urologists Roger Kirby and John M. Fitzpatrick, and introduced robotic surgical training for urologists in 2011. It holds teaching sessions to prepare final year trainees for consultant posts and works in collaboration with the Fulbright Commission to grant 'The Fulbright Urology Foundation Award', for a research assignment in an academic higher education institution in the States. Projects granted funding by TUF have included those concentrating on cancers of the prostate, bladder and kidney, sexual dysfunction, urinary incontinence, BPH and prostatitis.

TUF organises a number of fundraising and awareness events, including their 'Annual Urology Awareness Month' and charity bike rides. Its contributions have included funding into the research of a tool developed to predict a person's personalised prognosis following a diagnosis of prostate cancer.

History

The British Urological Foundation was founded in 1995 by urologists Roger Kirby [1] and John M. Fitzpatrick. [2] Funding came from the British Journal of Urology International (BJUI) and the British Association of Urological Surgeons (BAUS), [3] and its work has been solely supported by donations. [4] It later became known as The Urology Foundation. [3]

2003 marked the beginning of educational visits to the Cleveland Clinic, Ohio, US, [5] and eight years later, robotic surgical training for urologists was promoted by TUF. [6]

In its first 15 years, projects granted funding by TUF have included those concentrating on cancers of the prostate, bladder and kidney, sexual dysfunction, urinary incontinence, BPH and prostatitis. [3]

Purpose

TUF aims to raise awareness of urological diseases, [7] and works across the UK and Ireland with the purpose of improving the knowledge and skills of surgeons who operate on diseases of the male and female urinary-tract system and the male reproductive organs and funds research to improve outcomes of all urological conditions and urological cancers. [8] [9]

TUF's objectives are:

To advance, promote, encourage, develop and improve the study and knowledge of urology, urological surgery and the general knowledge of science and medicine and all matters relating to the progress and development of that branch of science and medicine, and for that purpose to fund, aid, maintain and endow scholarships, fellowships, chairs and bursaries and generally to assist in the funding, instruction and support of persons and institutions engaged or involved in urological research work [3]

The method used to achieve their objective is by developing diagnostic tests and minimally invasive procedures for urological diseases by financing research, by improving surgical skills by supporting training and by providing opportunities for surgeons to travel to parts of the world and practise new techniques and treatments by supporting them with grants. [3]

Members

Patrons of TUF include Handel Evans, Rosemary Macaire, Jane MacQuitty, Steven Norris and Sir Ranulph Fiennes, [9] who in 2014, in support of TUF, gave a lecture at the Royal Geographical Society titled "Living Dangerously". [10] Having been diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2007, he underwent a five-hour robotic prostatectomy at the Royal Marsden Hospital before reaching the summit of Mount Everest in 2009. The proceeds of his lecture about his expeditions were donated to TUF. [11]

Trustees of TUF include Baroness Wyld and Ben Challacombe, and partners of TUF include: [9]

Since 2011, 'The Urology Foundation Alumni' has existed as a forum for grant beneficiaries to share information and knowledge and have a role in the development of the charity. [3]

Training

A laparoscopic robotic surgery machine Laproscopic Surgery Robot.jpg
A laparoscopic robotic surgery machine

TUF has sent surgeons to a number of specialist centres around the world to train in new technologies. [12] These have included training in cystectomy and creation of a neobladder in Mansoura in Egypt. [3]

Teaching of robotic laparoscopy was initially arranged in 2003 with Cleveland Clinic's surgeon Indy Gill [13] and later, robotic training programmes included working with Gill at the University of Southern California, Joseph "Jay" A. Smith at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville and Mani Menon at the Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, US. [3] [14]

The Freeman Hospital in Newcastle, is one of the UK's robotic training centres. [15]

Preparing final year trainees for consultant posts have been taught through TUF-arranged interview skill courses. [3]

Fundraising

In 2005, the BAUS awarded Roger Kirby the St Peter's Medal for his fundraising activities for TUF. [16]

In 2014, the annual 'Urology Awareness Month' campaign was launched and has subsequently taken place every September, [8] with the aim of increasing awareness of all urological diseases, not only cancers. [17]

For more than 10 years funds have been raised in the 'Hike for Hope' programme. [18] This included in 2017 almost 40 people who cycled 500 kilometres (310 mi) through Vietnam and Cambodia to raise funds for TUF. [19] TUF activities have been supported by Stephen Fry. [20] [21] In the same year and for the same purpose, surgeon Michal Smolski from Burnley hospital cycled 300 miles in two days from London to Amsterdam. [22]

In 2018, its fifth year, the theme was "We have heard of the prostate, but do we know what it is?" [8] TUF ran this campaign with the support of Stephen Fry, [23] to dispel taboos surrounding cancers of the genitourinary tract. [17] The following year, just prior to an interview conducted by BBC panorama journalist, Jane Corbin, Fry publicly thanked TUF:

My run-in with prostate cancer taught me about the importance of charities who are working hard on behalf of patients like myself. Thanks to the work The Urology Foundation (TUF) did long before my diagnosis, my experience of prostate cancer was far less fraught than it could have been. My excellent surgeon was trained through TUF and so it's a pleasure to be joining them for what I'm sure will be a riotous evening. [24]

In December 2018, for the purpose of fundraising, four men from Cornwall, with a supporting tweet from Stephen Fry, [25] set off in a 28-foot (8.5 m) ocean rowing boat with a mission to row 3,000 miles (4,800 km) and cross the Atlantic Ocean, from La Gomera, in the Canary Islands. They were successful and arrived in Antigua 43 days later on 24 January 2019. [26] [27] Two of the seamen subsequently gave TUF's 'Guest Lecture'. [26] [28]

Awards

Senior Clinical Researcher in Robotic Surgery and Urology at the Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, Prasanna Sooriakumaran, was awarded the TUF medal for "Best Research Proposal" of 2016. [29]

TUF works in collaboration with the Fulbright Commission to present The Fulbright Urology Foundation Award. Covering projects concerned with urological diseases, the grant allows academics, urologists or specialist nurses to follow a three- to nine-month research assignment in an academic higher education institution in the States. [30] [31]

Achievements

By its twentieth year, research into improving urology care had received more than £3 million from TUF. [32]

A significant change in the way that urological surgery is performed in the West Midlands resulted from the work of urologist Peter Cooke, who had previously received robotic training in 2012 via TUF, at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, US. [33]

In 2018, TUF carried out a survey of how often British men checked their testicles, which showed that only half of them did so in the last year. [8] As a result, TUF established #tufnutsTuesdays, a campaign to encourage men to examine their testicles on the first Tuesday of every month. [8] [34] [35]

A special service for people with kidney cancer was developed at the Royal Free Hospital, London, by surgeons whose training was funded by TUF. [36]

TUF contributed funding into the research of 'PREDICT Prostate', a tool launched in 2019 and developed to predict a person's personalised prognosis following a diagnosis of prostate cancer. [37]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Urology</span> Medical specialty

Urology, also known as genitourinary surgery, is the branch of medicine that focuses on surgical and medical diseases of the urinary-tract system and the reproductive organs. Organs under the domain of urology include the kidneys, adrenal glands, ureters, urinary bladder, urethra, and the male reproductive organs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mani Menon</span>

Mani Menon, born 9 July 1948 in Trichur, India, is an American surgeon whose pioneering work has helped to lay the foundation for modern Robotic Cancer Surgery. He is the founding director and the Raj and Padma Vattikuti Distinguished Chair of the Vattikuti Urology Institute at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, MI, where he established the first cancer-oriented robotics program in the world. Menon is widely regarded for his role in the development of robotic surgery techniques for the treatment of patients with prostate, kidney, and bladder cancers, as well as for the development of robotic kidney transplantation.
Menon is the recipient of the Gold Cystoscope award, Hugh Hampton Young award, the Keyes Medal, the prestigious B.C. Roy award.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ashutosh Tewari</span> American urologist, oncologist

Ashutosh K. Tewari is the chairman of urology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. He is a board certified American urologist, oncologist, and principal investigator. Before moving to the Icahn School of Medicine in 2013, he was the founding director of both the Center for Prostate Cancer at Weill Cornell Medical College and the LeFrak Center for Robotic Surgery at NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital. Dr. Tewari was the Ronald P. Lynch endowed Chair of Urologic Oncology and the hospital's Director of Robotic Prostatectomy, treating patients with prostate, urinary bladder and other urological cancers. He is the current President of the Society for Urologic Robotic Surgeons (SURS) and the Committee Chair of the Prostate Program. Dr. Tewari is a world leading urological surgeon, and has performed over 10,000 robotically assisted procedures using the da Vinci Surgical System. Academically, he is recognized as a world-renowned expert on urologic oncology with over 250 peer reviewed published papers to his credit; he is on such lists as America's Top Doctors, New York Magazine's Best Doctors, and Who's Who in the World. In 2012, he was given the American Urological Association Gold Cystoscope Award for "outstanding contributions to the field of urologic oncology, most notably the treatment of prostate cancer and the development of novel techniques to improve the outcomes of robotic prostatectomy."

Douglas S. Scherr, M.D. is an American surgeon and specialist in Urologic Oncology. He is currently the Clinical Director of Urologic Oncology at Weill Cornell Medicine. He also holds an appointment at the Rockefeller University as a Visiting Associate Physician. Scherr was the first physician at Cornell to perform a robotic prostatectomy as well as a robotic cystectomy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Palese</span>

Dr. Michael A. Palese, is an American urologist specializing in robotic, laparoscopic and endoscopic surgery, with a special emphasis on robotic surgeries relating to kidney cancer and kidney stone disease.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Turner-Warwick</span> British urologist (1925–2020)

Richard Trevor Turner-Warwick was a British urologist who was internationally known for his work on the surgical restoration of the structure and function of the genitourinary tract. He introduced video-cysto-urethrography.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roger Kirby</span> British surgeon

Roger Sinclair Kirby FRCS(Urol), FEBU is a British retired prostate surgeon and professor of urology, researcher, writer on men's health and prostate disease, founding editor of the journal Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases and Trends in Urology and Men's Health and a fundraiser for prostate disease charities, best known for his use of the da Vinci surgical robot for laparoscopic prostatectomy in the treatment of prostate cancer. He is a co-founder and president of the charity The Urology Foundation (TUF), vice-president of the charity Prostate Cancer UK, trustee of the King Edward VII's Hospital and as of 2020 is president of the Royal Society of Medicine (RSM), London.

Mahesh Desai is an Indian urologist who treats various kidney and urological diseases in India. He performs renal transplants in Gujarat, India.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Stifelman</span> American physician and urologist

Michael D. Stifelman, M.D., an internationally recognized American physician and urologist, is known for his work in upper tract urinary reconstructive surgery and use of multi- and single-port robotic surgical technology to perform complex cancer and non-cancer urological procedures. An innovator in the field of urological surgery, Dr. Stifelman leads a renowned Center of Excellence for robotic surgery at Hackensack University Medical Center in Hackensack, New Jersey, and serves as chair of the hospital’s Department of Urology.

Reed Miller Nesbit was an American urologist, surgeon, and professor. He was Head of the Urology Section of the Department of Surgery at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor, Michigan, from 1930–1967. Nesbit was a pioneer of transurethral resection of the prostate. He devised the Nesbit operation for treating Peyronie's disease, and he made prominent contributions to pediatric urology, most notably the Cabot-Nesbit style orchiopexy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Prokar Dasgupta</span>

Prokar Dasgupta FRCS(Urol), FEBU is an Indian surgeon and academic who is professor of surgery at the surgical academy at King's Health Partners, London, UK. Since 2002, he has been consultant urologist to Guy's Hospital, and in 2009 became the first professor of robotic surgery and urology at King's, and subsequently the chairman of the King's College-Vattikuti Institute of Robotic Surgery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John M. Fitzpatrick</span>

John M. Fitzpatrick was an Irish urologist, emeritus professor of surgery at the University College Dublin School of Medicine & Medical Science and Head of Research at the Irish Cancer Society.

Narmada Prasad Gupta is an Indian urologist, medical researcher, writer and the Chairman of Academics and Research Division Urology at the Medanta, the Medicity, New Delhi. He is credited with over 10,000 urological surgical procedures and the highest number of URobotic surgeries in India. He is a former head of department of Urology of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences Delhi and a former president of the Urological Society of India. He received Dr. B. C. Roy Award, the highest Indian award in the medical category, from the Medical Council of India in 2005. The Government of India awarded him the fourth highest civilian honour of the Padma Shri, in 2007, for his contributions to Indian medicine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vipul Patel</span>

Vipul R. Patel, FACS is the founder and Medical Director of the Florida Hospital Global Robotics Institute, founder and Vice President of the Society of Robotic Surgery, and founder and Editor Emeritus of The Journal of Robotic Surgery. He is board certified by the American Urological Association and specializes in robotic surgery for prostate cancer. As of February, 2018 he performed his 11,000th robotic-assisted prostatectomy. The large volume of prostatectomies he has performed has enabled him to amass a large amount of statistical evidence regarding the efficacy of robotic techniques which has been used in developing and refining techniques. Patel credits the use of robotic assisted surgery with helping surgeons achieve better surgical outcomes with the "trifecta" of cancer control, continence and sexual function. In the course of his career Patel has led and participated in studies that have resulted in developing improved outcomes for robotic surgery and urologic treatment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Wickham (urologist)</span>

John Ewart Alfred Wickham was a British urologist and surgeon, who was a pioneer of keyhole surgery and the autonomous transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) robot, foreseeing the subsequent revolution in robotic surgery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Terence Millin</span> Irish urological surgeon, President of the RCSI 1963-1966

Terence John MillinFRCSI FRCS LRCP was a British-born Irish urological surgeon, who in 1945, introduced a surgical treatment of benign large prostates using the retropubic prostatectomy, later known as the Millin's prostatectomy, where he approached the prostate from behind the pubic bone and through the prostatic capsule, removing the prostate through the retropubic space and hence avoided cutting into the bladder. It superseded the technique of transvesical prostatectomy used by Peter Freyer, where the prostate was removed through the bladder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ben Challacombe</span> British urological surgeon

Benjamin James Challacombe is a British consultant urological surgeon at Guy's & St Thomas' Hospitals, and at King’s College London, who specialises in the treatment of kidney and prostatic disease using robotic surgery. In 2005, he was part of the team that published the results of a randomised controlled trial of human versus telerobotics in the field of urology and renal transplant, one of the first of its kind.

Declan G. Murphy, FRACS, FRCS, is a urologist, director of the unit for genitourinary oncology and robotic surgery at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, Australia, professor at the Sir Peter MacCallum Department of Oncology at the University of Melbourne, and associate editor of the British Journal of Urology International. In 2010 he introduced robotic surgery for urology to the public sector health services in Victoria, Australia.

Anthony James Costello, FRACS, FRCSI, is an Australian urologist. He served as head of the department of urology at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, Australia. He established the first robotic prostate cancer surgery programme in Australia and published the first series of men who had laser surgery for benign prostate enlargements.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">St Peter's Medal</span> Award

The St Peter's Medal is awarded annually by the British Association of Urological Surgeons (BAUS) for contributions to the surgical field of urology.

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