Obituary: Roger M Greenhalgh
This obituary was written by his son Stephen, also a frequent attender at AIVS in his younger days.
Roger Malcolm Greenhalgh, the internationally renowned surgeon for his major contributions to education, training and research in vascular surgery, has died peacefully on October 6, aged 82. He was emeritus professor of surgery at Imperial College in London and head of its Vascular Surgery Research Group.
Roger Greenhalgh, born in Derbyshire, was not from a medical background. His parents were very entrepreneurial in their different ways and his grandfather, Fred Poynton, broke the world record in road walking over 20 miles in 1924. He went to Ilkeston Grammar School, a state school with entry by scholarship only. There he followed the advice of his headmaster, John Hewitson, that he should consider medicine as a career. He was the first in his family to attend university and at Clare College, Cambridge, his medical tutor, Dr Gordon Wright, announced in 1960, to his college colleagues, that Roger Greenhalgh would be a surgeon. At St Thomas’s Hospital in London, he qualified as a doctor and was allowed to move up the surgical ladder with a rotation to learn research method at the Hammersmith Hospital after his surgical training at St Thomas’s. During this time he discovered a love of vascular surgery. The pioneer vascular surgeon, Peter Martin, inspired him by telling that he would go on to solve problems that he could not. Whilst in training, in 1974, he won the prestigious Moynihan Fellowship of the Association of Surgeons of Great Britain & Ireland. The £1000 stipend enabled him to visit many worldwide vascular centres of excellence using the connections of his mentors Peter Martin, Frank Cockett and Professor Gerry Taylor.
Greenhalgh joined the surgical consultant staff at Charing Cross Hospital in 1976, less than 10 years after being a medical student. He went on to become professor of surgery, head of the university department and dean and principal of Charing Cross & Westminster Medical School for four years, between 1993 and 1997, during which time he oversaw a merger with Imperial College London. A psychic patient, Joseph Benjamin, had predicted this and other events long ago when he qualified from St Thomas’s in 1966. He did not follow a conventional path and his one-time junior at St Bart’s and then Secretary of the Vascular Society of Great Britain and Ireland (VSGBI), Professor Bruce Campbell, said to Greenhalgh, who was the millennium president of the Vascular Society from 1999 to 2000: “You always do your own thing, you know you do.”
Professor Greenhalgh’s long and distinguished research career started with an interest in hyperlipidaemia when he was a resident when he attempted to elucidate the role played by serum lipids and lipoproteins in arterial disease as lead author of a 1971 paper published in The Lancet. His research, with more than 300 original published papers, spanned all areas of vascular surgery: venous, carotid, peripheral and aortic. His most significant contributions came from his early adoption of the rigour of prospective randomised trials to address the grey areas in vascular disease management. He led more than a dozen trials in the field of aneurysm management to promote level-one evidence in clinical practice, including the UK Small Aneurysms Trial (UKSAT) and the UK endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR 1 and 2) trials. UKSAT was the first trial to show that there was no long-term survival benefit of early elective open repair of small abdominal aortic aneurysms. The 15 years follow up of the EVAR 1 and 2 trials were published in The Lancet in 2016 showing EVAR has an early survival benefit but an inferior late survival compared with open repair, which needs to be addressed by lifelong surveillance of EVAR and reintervention if necessary. Greenhalgh was also the principal investigator of the mild to moderate intermittent claudication (MIMIC) trials which finally proved the adjuvant benefit of angioplasty over supervised exercise and best medical therapy in patients with stable mild and moderate intermittent claudication. Inspired by the impact of these many landmark trials, Andrew W Bradbury, Sampson Gamgee Professor of Vascular Surgery, University of Birmingham, UK, and principal investigator of the randomised controlled BASIL trials, wrote to Greenhalgh: “Your achievements are greater than anyone alive or dead.” Bradbury recently presented first-time results from the BASIL-2 trial at CX 2023 during a session chaired by Greenhalgh.
Greenhalgh founded the Charing Cross series of international symposia and annual books in 1978 when he was 37 years of age. This started as a small focused symposium, with topics such as smoking and arterial disease, held at the Charing Cross Hospital. The earliest symposia had just 100–200 delegates but were always accompanied by a book covering the main presentations and discussions. The Charing Cross (CX) Symposium has grown exponentially and has been forced to move to much bigger venues to cope with the increasing popularity of the meeting which peaked at over 4000 in-person attendees in the years immediately before the Covid pandemic. Pioneers such as Michael DeBakey, Denton Cooley, Jesse Thompson, John Mannick, John Bergan, Jimmy Yao, Ted Diethrich Juan Parodi and Frank Veith have all graced the podium. Tom Fogarty spoke of his catheter and Andreas Grüntzig spoke of his angioplasty in the 1980s. Julio Palmaz gave news of endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) at CX 1990. CX continues to provide top class vascular education and critical discussion of cutting edge developments in the management of vascular disease. He presided over the 45th symposium earlier this year. Many speakers feared his acerbic wit and the tolling of the bell if they strayed overtime.
Greenhalgh, who was quick to embrace digital methods of transmission, recently spoke from the state-of-the-art CX Vascular studio in London to detail the global interest in the Charing Cross brand of education. In 2023, the symposium saw registrations from 2,500 in-person attendees and an additional 7,000 people participated digitally, tuning in mainly from China. He was always in his element at the CX podium, his secret passion for the theatre on full display, enjoying the cut and thrust of discussing the current, hot-button issues in the vascular field with global experts. Age did not wither nor custom stale his delight in unpicking an argument to get to the core of the matter, always endeavouring to outline the research and education required to drive the topic forward. In the days before his passing, Greenhalgh’s passion for the quality of the CX Symposium programme burned brightly right to the very end as he worked on the CX 2024 version in the Hammersmith Hospital’s De Wardener ward intensive care unit just a few days before he died.
Professor Greenhalgh played a pivotal role in the creation of the European Society for Vascular Surgery (ESVS) and the establishment of its journal. The ESVS was launched at CX 1987 and Greenhalgh wrote the constitution. He was founder and chairman of the editorial board for the European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery (EJVES) from 1987 to 2003. He became the first ESVS European honorary member because of his role in the ESVS foundation. He also played a major role in the development of surgical training and standards across Europe through his role as President of the European Board of Surgery for the European Union of Medical Specialists (Union Européenne des Médecins Spécialistes – UEMS) from 1998 to 2002 and the European Board of Vascular Surgery (2002-2006). The European Board of Vascular Surgery honoured Greenhalgh as Honorary Life President in recognition of his founding role.
His brilliant surgical skills were recognised by innumerable international surgical societies as well as the White House Medical Unit for the support he provided during the visit of President George H. Bush to London in 1991. More recently, Greenhalgh became a company director, founding BIBA Medical with his son, Stephen, in 1994. Greenhalgh was editor-in-chief of the company’s foremost medical publication, Vascular News, from its inception in 1999 to 2023, overseeing a total of 100 editions of the newspaper in this time. He captured his experiences in the roles of surgeon, professor and company director in his 2011 autobiography, Born to be a Surgeon.
Greenhalgh received recognition for his lifelong contributions to vascular surgery from multiple prestigious groups, including most recently, an honorary Fellowship of the American College of Surgeons in October 2018 and the first Living Legend or International Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) in June 2018 after being nominated by the ESVS. Enrico Ascher (New York University, New York, USA), who presented the award and is a past president of the SVS, said of Greenhalgh at the time: “He leads by example. Not only by his contributions, or his political influence, or his knowledge, or trials, but actually as a person. As a person who is totally committed to his profession, to his family, to his friends, to his peers. He thinks first about them, and not about himself. That is what makes him a moral leader, and what sets him apart.”
Writing in EJVES following Greenhalgh’s receipt of this award, his long-time research partner, Professor Janet Powell (Imperial College, London, UK) described him as a “brilliant” clinician with a “long and distinguished” research career, as well as highlighting his prowess as an educator and mentor, noting that “medical students and junior doctors have queued for the opportunity to work in his team”. She also hailed Greenhalgh as a “legendary figure” whose wit, humour and charm “have made him many friends across the world”.
Greenhalgh had many sporting skills and interests. He rowed in international regattas with future Olympian, Peter Thomas, at stroke whilst he was captain of boats as a medical student at St Thomas’s Medical School. He remained a strong supporter of the Imperial College Boat Club and even had a boat named after him. Some such as skiing saw him create the Association of International Vascular Surgeons (AIVS) which was used to forge international professional friendships and the AIVS continues to this day under the chairmanship of Mark A. Adelman. He was supported throughout by his Austrian wife, Karin, whose ability to speak multiple European languages and communicate with people from all cultures, proved invaluable.
Greenhalgh was married to Karin—who died in April 2020 from COVID-19—for over 55 years. He is survived by his two children, Stephen (Lord Greenhalgh) and Christina, and three grandchildren.