Colonel Sir George Thomas BeatsonKCBKBEDL (26 May 1848[1] – 16 February 1933)[2] was a British physician. He was a pioneer in the field of oncology, developing a new treatment for breast cancer, and has been called "the father of endocrine ablation in cancer management."[3] The Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre and the Cancer Research UK Beatson Institute are named for him.
By 1878 Beatson had moved to Glasgow where he established a medical practice. He also joined the 1st Lanark Artillery, a unit of the Volunteer Forces which later became the Territorial Army. He was appointed assistant Professor of Surgery at Glasgow's Western Infirmary, and in 1893 he became a consulting surgeon at the Glasgow Cancer and Skin Institution.[3] This was renamed the Glasgow Cancer Hospital in 1894, with Beatson as director.[4] Beatson established an innovative domiciliary service, which supplied nursing care to patients in their own homes.[4]
In 1896 he published a paper entitled On Treatment of Inoperable Cases of Carcinoma of the Mamma: Suggestions for a New Method of Treatment, with Illustrative Cases. This detailed his pioneering treatment of three patients with advanced breast cancer through bilateral oophorectomy (removal of the ovaries). Although he did not perform the operation again, oophorectomy became the standard treatment for advanced breast cancer over the following years.[3] He is considered the father of anti-hormonal treatment of breast cancer since he was the first to describe remissions of metastatic breast cancer after this operation.
Meanwhile, he continued his involvement with the Volunteer Army, taking charge of the Glasgow Companies of the Volunteer Medical Corps in 1890. In 1908, he was appointed Principal Medical Officer to the Lowland Division of the Scottish Territorial Forces. He rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and was honorary colonel of the Army Medical Corps (Volunteer).[4] Beatson was also involved with the St. Andrew's Ambulance Association, and he helped to establish the Scottish Red Cross.[3] Beatson's professorship ended in 1913 when he was succeeded by Prof George Henry Edington, who also continued many of Beatson's secondary roles.[7]