Shropshire Star

Shropshire breast surgeon wins research award

A breast surgeon at Shropshire’s two main hospitals has been awarded a research prize in recognition of her outstanding contribution to patient care.

Published
Blossom Lake (left) with her team and the award

Blossom Lake, who works at The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust (Sath), was presented with the award for her work entitled ‘Magseed for localisation of impalpable breast cancers is associated with high patient satisfaction and lower excision rates’.

The award was presented to Blossom at the recent William Farr event, which was held at the Shropshire Conference Centre in Shrewsbury, and celebrates the life and work of William Farr as the ‘father of medical statistics’.

Blossom, a keen advocate for research in breast cancer who has presented internationally and nationally, said: “Research is key to patient treatment of breast cancer to provide the best individualised care for each patient.

“Traditionally, wired guidance is used to localise impalpable breast cancers.

"Whereas Magseed localisation uses a small radiation-free seed to localise breast cancer without the need of wire placement.

“This has been recently trialled at Sath and our studies showed that Magseed excision is safe and feasible with lower re-excision rates and has high patient satisfaction.

"It allows significant service improvement with reduction in both radiological and surgical localisation timing, improved pre-operative process and flexibility in radiological provision.”

Dr Kevin Eardley, care group medical director at Sath, which runs the Princess Royal Hospital in Telford and Royal Shrewsbury Hospital, organised the William Farr event.

He said: “The event, now in its second year, provides people with a great opportunity to hear about the life of William Farr and how his work still influences our lives today.

“His upbringing was in poverty until he was adopted at the age of seven in 1817. His education was basic but he had an insatiable desire to learn.

"He was taken under the wing of the Salop Infirmary's physician, a Dr Webster, and here he learnt medicine.

“Ultimately moving to London he became the first in the world to use medical statistics to highlight social and sanitary factors that affected health and wellbeing of the population.

"He supported other key figures of the time, including Florence Nightingale, with whom he was very close.

"His work and statistical methods are still used today to help address health inequities and therefore I believe should be better recognised locally.”