Message from the President |
Dr Dominic Spagnolo, President 2000-2001
It is that time of year again when our division moves up a gear in preparation for our next scientific meeting - our 28th Annual Scientific Meeting will again be held at the Convention Centre on Darling Harbour
from June 1 - 3, 2001. At the outset, I should like to thank the small number of registrants at this year's meeting who completed the Meeting Evaluation Questionnaires.
We value the comments received which included not only bouquets, but also a few brick bats - we will certainly take on board the feedback and endeavour to improve wherever we can. Such feedback is vital
for the continuing improvement of our ASMs. While it is pleasing to note that most comments were overwhelmingly positive and confirmatory of the successful approach to our meetings in recent years,
there is always room for improvement.
I exhort all future registrants to fill out the evaluation questionnaires for it is only through such comment that we can continue to fine tune our meetings. As foreshadowed at this year's meeting, there will be a
change in the format for the Friday programme next year to enable registrants to attend more of the Specialty Club Meetings. We are fortunate in having a band of enthusiastic convenors of a large number
of high quality specialty conferences each year, but the compression of these sessions into an afternoon has limited registrants to attending only a few of these - this has been one of the issues of concern raised
by our membership. Next year the Specialty Club Meetings will be spread through the entire day, much along the lines of the US/Canadian IAP meetings, and the day will end with a Plenary Lecture to be given
by a high profile speaker, either from within our Division, or from elsewhere.
The "approach to" lectures normally held on the Friday morning can be incorporated into the Specialty
Club Meetings at the discretion of the Convenors, along with slide seminars etc. It is likely that next year there will be two additional Specialty Club Meetings dealing with breast pathology and neuropathology,
bringing the total number of sessions to 14! Next year's two systems to be covered by our overseas speakers are Breast and Lymph Node pathology - these serendipidously happened to be the two popular
future topics suggested by several people in their meeting evaluation questionnaires this year, indicating that the time is right to revisit these systems.
We have secured two outstanding overseas speakers for next year's programme. Dr. Stuart Schnitt is one of today's foremost breast pathologists and an excellent lecturer. Many of us will already have had the
pleasure of listening to his presentations. He is Associate Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School, and holds several hospital appointments including the Associate Directorship at the Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Centre, and he is the Director of the Dana Farber/Harvard Cancer Centre Human Pathology Core Facility for Breast Cancer. He is a vigorous researcher in the field of breast diseases, and
has particular expertise in breast pathology in needle core biopsies and the role of HER2/neu protein expression in breast cancer. Dr Schnitt will deliver two lectures, and he will also conduct a slide seminar.
The lecture titles are "Benign Breast Disease and Breast Cancer Risk: Morphology and Beyond" and
"Ductal Carcinoma In Situ: Factors to Consider in Selecting Treatment Options". The session on breast cancer will be further enhanced with a lecture to be given by our own Associate Professor Michael Bilous, Director of Tissue Pathology at the Institute of Clinical
Pathology and Medical Research at Westmead Hospital.
Siva Das Thuraisingham (Gribble's Lab at Ipoh, Malaysia), Tom Simon (Whyalla), John Roberts (Albury) at the June 2000 Meeting
Marsali Newman, Jodi White, Yu-Wei Goh and Bruce Latham - all from Perth, at the June, 2000 meeting.
Michael is well-known to us as an outstanding breast pathologist who has made a large contribution to national breast screening programmes, and for his commitment to developing best practice in
breast pathology. He will present a topical lecture provisionally entitled "The Current Status of HER2 testing in Breast Cancer'. This promises to be a stimulating day of breast pathology. Our
second overseas guest speaker also needs no introduction. Dr Lawrence Weiss hails from the City of Hope National Medical Centre in Duarte, California, where he is Chairman of Pathology, and he is also the
Chief Medical Director of the US Laboratories Anatomic Pathology Reference Laboratory at Irvine, CA. Dr Weiss is world-reknowned for his expertise in general surgical pathology, but more specifically for his
distinguished career as a haematopathologist, and one who has contributed enormously to our understanding of Hodgkin's disease. He is a prolific writer and an indefatigable, enthusiastic lecturer. Dr.
Weiss honours our Division by accepting the invitation to deliver the inaugural Plenary Lecture in 2001, provisionally entitled "The Molecular Biology of Hodgkin's Disease". His two other lectures will be
"Problems in the Diagnosis of Hodgkin's Disease" and "The Immunohistochemistry of Haematolymphoid Disorders".
These will be followed by a slide seminar on Lymph Node pathology. I hope this brief summary will whet your appetites for what promises to be an exciting and instructive 3 days in June. The poster
presentations are an integral part of the success of our meetings. It was very pleasing to see the marked increase in the number of posters at ASM 2000, all of which were of outstanding quality. My thanks go to
Professor Soon Lee for convening the very successful poster presentations, and to his fellow-judges for their time in assessing the posters. It was clear from this year's posters that entries came from widely
diverse sources and included both research conducted primarily by registrars, and work undertaken by more senior investigators including consultants or those engaged in research towards a higher degree. To
ensure that the assessment process was fair to all entrants, and that posters were judged on an equal footing, it was decided to award two first prizes.
Next year the guidelines for poster entries, which are currently being re-drafted, will require poster entrants to choose between two categories of entry. Registrars should therefore be assured that their
original work will be judged against like work by other registrars. Please encourage and support registrars to prepare poster presentations - their work is highly valued and should be shared at scientific fora such
as our ASMs. Preparation for the International Congress to be held in Brisbane in 2004 continues on track under the able guidance of Professor Robin Cooke and his colleagues. Several members from our
Division were able to attend the International Congress in Nagoya this year, and no doubt valuable insights were obtained into the conduct of the international congress which should prove useful in planning for 2004.
There is considerable expense for the host Division in organising such a Congress. Several pathology firms have already made valuable financial contributions to the Division towards the cost of running the
Congress, and I would hope that other Australian and New Zealand pathology firms might make similar contributions. Our Division will be on show to the rest of the international pathology community, and we
all have an interest in ensuring that we host the best Congress possible. On the housekeeping front, we should have credit card facilities available soon, certainly in time for registration for this year's ASM, and
for the payment of annual subscriptions. I hope to see as many of you as possible at the ASM which is shaping up to be an exciting meeting.
Dominic Spagnolo
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Cape Programme
Commentary by Andrew Tie, Wellington RCPA, Council Representative for New Zealand
Note - Part II Candidates RCPA Slide Examination
The CAPE programme consists of ten discs each with fifteen cases. It is "tailor-made" as 10 practice exams for Part 2. Do each one under examination conditions, time yourself
and then ask someone to check your written answers to see whether your reports have been done according to the instructions for candidates which accompany the "real"
examination slides.
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This is an innovative CD-ROM based continuing education tool for histopathologists. It springs from Professor Robin Cooke's long involvement with the APESE programme. The format has logistical advantages, with no
limit on number of copies, obviating circulated glass slide sets, and minimising ethical considerations about patient material.
The format is simple and user friendly, and I particularly liked the ability to scan with the mouse arrow on the opening page of each case. Macroscopic images (not conveniently included with glass slide sets) are
available. The image quality is good, at least to my admittedly uncritical eye. The viewer is restricted to the recorded illumination intensity, but the clarity is acceptable, and presumably is capable of further
improvement.

Andrew Tie (Wellington), Martin Whitehead (Christchurch) at the IAP Meeting in June 2000
There is some limitation in examining nuclear detail. The obvious difference in interpretation from a glass slide format is that salient features are unavoidably presented, and secondary features may not be,
because of memory limitations or complexity, so that interpretative skill tested is narrower than in real life, or
with glass slides. This is not to deny the usefulness or relevance of the program, but it does result in a rather different assessment from the APESE program, which it supercedes.
Presumably with increasing sophistication and computer power, it may be possible to alter such a program to allow selection of parts of images at each magnification for further enlargement, with a "tile"
layout, although this may require unrealistic storage capacity, but would approximate a glass slide assessment more realistically. With mandated participation in CME in New Zealand imminent and
compulsary in NSW from 2001, this kind of program has attractions because of its relative simplicity. Performance data, such as comparisons with contributors' diagnoses, could be easily recorded and filed.
Compliance with recertification requirements is quite an issue for already overworked pathologists.
This program takes a novel approach, and since all case circulation programmes are artificial in one sense or another, the limitations of an electronic format must be weighed against questions of
reproducibility, cost and logistical simplicity. The programme could be website-based, which would eliminate even the circulation of CDs, and could be tailored to a points-based CME programme, although
New Zealand's present requirements in pathology are time-based for recertification, whereby a minimum annual recorded participation of 100 hours in CPDP is required. Participation in external Q.A.
programmes will also be required. It seems doubtful that electronic images will replace glass slides in external Q.A. programmes in the near future, but who knows?
For further information contact Mr Rob Watts at KBS. Ph.3869 0994 Fax 3269 6444 Email rob@kbs.com.au
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Our Gambian Connection.
From PathCentre, Western Australia
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In March 1992, PathCentre's C.E.O., Dr. Keith Shilkin (then Head of Histopathology at SCGH) received a letter from France, which was to alter dramatically the life of a young Gambian doctor, Dr Omar Sam. The letter
was from Professor Bruce Armstrong, the Deputy Director of the World Health Organisation's International Agency for Research on Cancer (Professor Armstrong was at one time W.A.'s Commissioner for Health). One of
Professor Armstrong's tasks was to oversee a major research project in The Republic of The Gambia, evaluating the effectiveness of vaccination against the Hepatitis B virus in the prevention of primary liver cell
cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma Ð HCC).
The Gambia unfortunately boasts one of the world's highest
incidence rates of HCC, which is known to be causally associated with Hepatitis B virus infection of the liver. The Gambia Hepatitis Intervention Study as it is known, is a non
-randomised controlled trial of 124,000 Gambian children who are being followed for up to 40 years, and who will be monitored for the development of HCC throughout their lives.
The proper conduct of this study requires accurate histopathological diagnosis of HCC and accurate cancer registration facilities, and herein was the WHO's and The Gambia's dilemma.
The pathology services at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Banjul, Gambia's capital, were being provided by a retired former head of pathology, and there were no trained pathologists in the nation.Professor
Armstrong saw the need to bolster Gambia's pathology services, and sought Dr. Shilkin's assistance to train a young Gambian doctor in pathology. The Gambian Health Department had identified Dr. Sam as a
willing and suitable person for this task. Dr. Shilkin readily accepted Prof. Armstrong's proposition and determined that The Gambia would be best served by having Dr. Sam formally enrolled into the Royal
College of Pathologists of Australasia (RCPA) five year Fellowship training programme. Thus, on the 28th March 1993, Dr. Sam, supported by a W.H.O. Fellowship, was warmly welcomed into the SCGH
Histopathology Department, and later PathCentre, as a pathology Registrar and a registered trainee of the RCPA.
Needless to say there was the inevitable culture shock over the course of the first few weeks. Dr. Sam hailed from the smallest country on the African continent, with a population of some 1.3 million people,
vastly different from the wide open spaces of W.A. with its different people and customs. The Gambia occupies a mere 11,300 sq km in West Africa, and is surrounded by Senegal on all sides except for its
free western border with the Atlantic Ocean. In fact, The Gambia's terrain consists of The Gambia River's flood plain. The Gambia flanks the lower Gambian River for 320km inland from its Atlantic coast, and is
only about 50km at its widest. Dr. Sam was a graduate of the College of Medicine at the University of Calabar in Nigeria, where he graduated in 1987, and was the recipient of the prestigious Chief Dr. E.L.
Iwuanyanwu Prize for the best all round graduating student. He was embarked on a surgical career in Banjul, when his career path was radically altered in response to his Government's call to undertake
specialist training in pathology.
Once in Perth, Dr. Sam threw himself wholeheartedly into his pathology training. It was soon evident that his Government had made an excellent choice in selecting him for this onerous task. He was highly
intelligent and extremely capable, and he very quickly demonstrated an aptitude for the speciality of Anatomical Pathology. His training programme was identical to that of the local pathology registrars
whom he joined as an integral team member. It was not long before he came to understand the local vernacular, and respectful informality soon replaced the formality and hierarchy-conscious diffidence
which was apparent on his arrival Ð his "ozzification' was remarkably quick, and his sense of humour developed a distinctive Australian flavour. The next six years were to test his resilience and dedication.
The original 5 years of anticipated training were extended at the request of his Government so that he could gain some experience in Haematology, which he did in Dr. Erber's Haematology Department at
PathCentre. Being removed from family and friends for so long was no easy matter, and bouts of homesickness were inevitable. Financially he was also under great strain, as he was self-funded on a
meagre WHO stipend. Add to this the rigours and demands of the training programme, and the service commitment to the Pathology Department, then the enormity of his effort can be well-appreciated.
Despite these vicissitudes, he always went about his task with enthusiasm, diligence, and with a quiet dignity which was his hallmark.
He successfully completed all the RCPA's requirements by formal examinations, the last one successfully passed in early July 1999. En route, he won the first prize for his poster presentation at the
1999 Annual Scientific Meeting of the Australasian Division of the International Academy of Pathology, where he presented some of his original research carried out in PathCentre's Anatomical Pathology and
Haematology Departments. After what seemed a relatively short time for us, but must at times have seemed an eternity to Dr. Sam, he finally came to the end of a long and hard road, an achievement which
cannot be overstated and which we salute warmly. On the way Dr. Sam made many friends and endeared himself to all in the Department.
He was a fine ambassador for his country. He is the first doctor from an overseas country to have successfully attained the RCPA's Fellowship by undergoing the full training programme in W.A., although
many others from overseas have spent part of their training time in our Department. The Gambia now has the services of a world-class diagnostic pathologist. Through Dr. Sam the WHO and The Gambia will now
be able to properly evaluate the efficacy of their Hepatitis B vaccination programme. More importantly, Dr. Sam will play a major role in the future development and direction of pathology services in The Gambia.
His time in Perth was really but a small step along a much longer and difficult road which he will travel in the years ahead.
He will need the wholehearted support of his Government, and the continued support of the W.H.O. through it's agencies, to ensure that his laboratory is equipped and staffed at the appropriate level to
provide the best possible service to The Gambian people. We can all feel justifiably proud that we have been able to play a small part in this very important initiative. We hope to stay in contact with Dr. Sam in
ways additional to his continuing to belong to the RCPA. Dr. Sam left Perth in early July 1999 to return to The Gambia, accompanied by the very best wishes of his friends and colleagues at PathCentre, where he
will be missed.His future achievements will be followed with close interest by us all, and we know he will make a significant difference in the provision of health services to The Gambian people.
Dr. Dominic V. Spagnolo Clinical Director, Anatomical Pathology, PathCentre. (Reprinted with permission from "Medicus", the official magazine
of the Western Australia Branch of the Australian Medical Association).
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Report from Dr Omar Sam, December 2000.
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The position I occupy here in the Gambia, a tiny West African Country,
and what I do, is a reflection of my postgraduate training at PathCentre in Perth, Western Australia. My training was in histopathology in Dr Keith Shilkin's and then Dr Dominic Spagnolo's department, but I was
extremely lucky for the opportunity to spend time in Haematology with Dr Wendy Erber and in Forensic Pathology with Dr. Clive Cooke. Time seemed to take on a different dimension while I was in Perth. There
were periods, even during my last year, when I felt that my training would never come to an end, yet at other times everything seemed to be moving too fast!
At the beginning of the programme I had the option of "on the job learning" and gaining experience in identifying liver tissue and making a
diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma which is the main reason why I went to Australia, through an arrangement initiated by Dr. Bruce Armstrong, on behalf of the International Agency for Research in
Cancer, Lyons. The Agency needed someone to evaluate the effectiveness of hepatitis B vaccination in reducing the incidence of long term complications of the virus. Though this option was attractive as I
would have had more time to laze around the beautiful beaches of Perth, I wanted to become a histopathologist, going through the whole training programme of the College like any other trainee.
The Department of Anatomical Pathology (AP) at The Western Australian Centre for Pathology and Medical Research (PathCentre) provided the appropriate environment for my training. There was so much
to learn and above all the staff were friendly and welcoming. The first thing that attracted me was the casual nature in which staff related to each other irrespective of their position or status. It took me some
time getting used to the informality and telling jokes at tea-time sitting next to Greg Sterrett, Dominic Spagnolo, and/or Keith Shilkin, as I was more used to a stratified hierarchy with due respect to, and
restricted communication with seniors. Only Consultants enjoyed Consultants' jokes at home! Amidst that "laid-back" attitude to interpersonal relationships, I discovered a high level of thoroughness and
competence in a department that was, although friendly , not ready to accommodate lazy registrars. As I wanted to be treated like any other registrar, it was a challenge for me to deliver equally, if not more. The
high calibre of the other registrars in the department kept me on my toes at all times.
The training programme offered by the department was comprehensive, and I was exposed to all the various aspects of Anatomical Pathology. Slide interpretation with clinicopathological correlation was
always emphasised and this has stood me in good stead since my return to the Gambia. Registrars in Perth are fortunate in having the opportunity to rotate through six AP departments whose work derives
from the length and breadth of Western Australia. The three and eight months fulltime attachments I did in the departments of Forensic Pathology and Haematology respectively, were very rewarding and useful for
my daily work here. As the head of the National Laboratory Services, I oversee work in clinical chemistry and microbiology, and I am actively involved in haematology and blood transfusion. The first ever National
Blood Transfusion Policy was drafted by me with the help of a WHO technical expert, and I am involved in developing a network for monitoring antibiotic sensitivity patterns within the subregion, to mention a few of
my tasks. I attend short training courses wherever possible to prepare for such projects.
Administrative work is the most distracting, if not annoying aspect of my work here. It has also been difficult adjusting to not being able to employ at the stroke of a pen, all the ancillary diagnostic modalities
which were readily available in Perth Ð it certainly makes one appreciate even more just how critical proper morphological assessment is! The driving force I have in the Gambia is my commitment to make a
change in the delivery of laboratory services in general pathology, and histopathology in particular. I am working with two other histopathologists, Professor Rafael Sorhegui and Dr. Rafael Rizo who have had
25yrs and 17yrs experience respectively in Cuba, and who provide technical assistance to the Gambia. We share work within the unit and it is their presence that allows me to attend to non-histopathology
activities. Both have developed the utmost respect for the calibre of pathology training in Australia. Because of the large scope of the work around me it is difficult and too early to assess my achievements
to date. In the major referral hospital, the Royal Victoria Hospital, where my office is located, we have improved the quality and volume of biopsy reports, commenced weekly departmental and monthly
hospital clinicopathological meetings, and the clinicians are increasingly using our services.
One of the challenges I face is to convince relatives, and surprisingly some clinicians, of the value of post-mortem examinations. These have increased in number since my return, but the majority of post
-mortems remain medicolegal cases. One of my most challenging tasks in the near future is to commence a national cervical Pap smear screening programme but the support so far has been minimal.
The Gambia has just opened a new University with a Faculty of Medicine and Allied Sciences and I am contributing to the teaching of Anatomy and Histology, and later will also teach pathology. After one year
it has become quite clear to me just how necessary it was for me to embark on the College's training programme, in order for me to have a useful impact on our delivery of health services here, and to make a
difference. The respect I have gained among my colleagues is a reflection of the quality of the training programme I undertook in Australia, for which I am very grateful. I will always have fond memories of my
friends in Perth, and thanks to email, I am able to keep in close contact with them.
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Professor Bernard Ackerman |
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Professor Bernard Ackerman was the first R.C.P.A Visiting Professor to Australia. Bernie attended the I.A.P. Congress in Nagoya and gave a session on dermatopathology in his own inimitable style.
Bernie made his first visit to Australia in the early 1970's.
From this time onwards many Australian pathologists took advantage of his teaching facility which involved joining his daily work reporting sessions around his multi-headed microscope. As his fame
increased and as the technology improved, the number of heads on the microscope and therefore the number of postgraduate students who could attend his sessions at any one time increased.
In 1999 Bernie opened his new place of work - The Ackerman Academy of Dermatopathology - in New York. His latest multiheaded microscope is a Leica microscope which has 27 heads, pictured above in its
natural configuration and also with Bernie and students. Bernie is world renowned not only for his in-house teaching, but also for his wonderful lectures and his many publications. He recently
established his own publishing firm - Ardor Scribendi.
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Report on the IAP Congress in Nagoya, Japan.
October 15-20, 2001.
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Approximately 40 members of the Australasian Division attended the Congress. All of them were active attendees at the various Congress sessions. A high proportion of them also presented papers, acted as Chairmen of
Meetings, participated in the organisational meetings of both the I.A.P. itself and also its many specialty subgroups.
During the Congress a meeting of representatives from the countries on the Western Pacific Rim met to decide where to have the next Conjoint Meeting. Professor Thiti Kwakpaetoon, President of the Thai Division of the
I.A.P. from Bangkok offered to conduct the next meeting in Phuket in January 2003. It is hoped that delegates from Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia,
Phillipines and India will attend the meeting. There will be further communications about this meeting in future News Letters. The following report on the Congress is a personal view of the Editor.
I hope it gives readers some idea of what went on at the Congress. All of the other delegates will have similar, but different experiences to relate. Everyone who participated in presenting papers at the Congress
will know something of the extreme generosity of the Japanese hosts. Not only were they treated well at the scientific meetings, they also attended private functions which the Chairmen of the different sessions
arranged for the speakers on their sessions.
SATURDAY 14/10
9.00am - 3.00pm
Attended Executive Meeting of the Council of the I.A.P.
Reported on:
- Progress for the International Congress in 2004 - as President of that Congress
- The publication of International Pathology - a News Bulletin for the past two years - as Editor of the News Bulletin. It has been published four times a year. Four editions have been in full colour. Circulation
is about 17,000. In the lead-up to the Nagoya Congress there have been many articles on Japan and Japanese medicine. There have been other feature articles on Malaysia and Russia.
- Development of a Home Page for the I.A.P. The address is www.afip.org/iap/. The page contains copies of the recent News Bulletins, links to the News Letters of the various I.A.P. Divisions, links to the National
Pathology Organisations and other items useful for anatomical pathologists. This site may become a truly international reference point for Anatomical Pathologists. If this is achieved, the page may be able to
attract paid advertising. Attended a select dinner hosted by the American Registry of Pathology at the Hilton Hotel.
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IAP Executive Meeting, Nagoya 14/10/00 L-R. Kon Muller (Australia), Robin Cooke (Editor), Fred Silva (Secretary, USCAP), Cecilia Fenoglio-Preiser (Past President), Ben Goodman (Vice President for
North America and President of USCAP). Photo by Osamu Matsubara.
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Thiti Kwakpaetoon, (President - Thai Division).
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Interstitial Lung Disease and Lung Transplantation: Sun Hi Jung (Korea), Koichi Honma (Japan), San Ho Cho (Korea), Henry Tazelaar (USA), Armando Fraire (USA),
Belinda Clarke (Australia), Toshiaki Manabe (Organiser, Japan), Paul OÕHori (USA), Phil Cagle (USA).
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Update on Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Michael Dixon (Leeds, England), Jeremy Jass (Brisbane, Australia), Heidrun Rotterdam (New York, USA), Hidenobu Watanabe (Niigata, Japan), Robert Riddell
(Canada), Y.Saitoh (a radiologist, Asahikawa, Japan)
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SUNDAY 15/10
9.00am - 1.00pm
Attended the Council Meeting of the I.A.P. and gave abbreviated reports on the Executive Report. 5.00pm - 6.30pm Attended the Opening Ceremony. The Congress was officially opened by Prince Hitachi (brother of the
Emperor, Akihito). He was accompanied by his wife, Princess Hanako. After the official ceremony, they mingled with the delegates for the display of dancing, and light refreshments. For about an hour they met
delegates, and posed for photographs with delegates amidst a barrage of flashing cameras.
MONDAY 16/10
9.00am - 1.00pm
Examined the facilities for the Congress with a view to the meeting in 2004. Examined the Poster Display and the Trade Display.
1.00pm - 2.30pm
Attended a meeting of representatives from the following Divisions - Japan, Australia/New Zealand, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Thailand, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore and India to arrange a South East Asian Regional
Meeting in Phuket in Thailand in 2003.
3.00pm - 6.30pm
Presented a paper on Parathyroid Pathology in the Short Course chaired and arranged by Professors Shinichiro Ushigome (President of the Japanese Division of the IAP) and Steven Silverberg (Professor of
Pathology, University of Maryland and author of a number of successful textbooks on surgical pathology and gynaecological pathology). The Short Course was entitled "Intraoperative Pathology Consultation".
6.30pm
Attended a Tempura dinner at a traditional Japanese restaurant hosted by Professor and Mrs Mikihiro Shamoto (Professor of Pathology, Nagoya University and one of the Congress Organisers).
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Prince Hitachi and Princess Hanako meeting delegates after the Prince formally opened the Congress. Professor Rikuo Machinami, President of the Congress on the right and Professor Shinichiro
Ushigome, President of the Japanese Division of the IAP on the left.
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Some of the world famous Lymphoma Pathologists.L-R. Shigeo Mori (University of Tokyo), Hans Muller-Hermelink (Wurzburg, Germany), Harald Stein (Free University of Berlin, Germany), David Mason
(Oxford University, England), Elaine Jaffe (National Institutes of Health, Washington, USA), Jaques Diebold (Hotel Dieu, Paris).
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TUESDAY 17/10
8.00am - 9.00am
Photographed selected Trade Display booths and discussed their participation in Brisbane in 2004. 9.00am - 12.30pm Attended the session "An Introduction to Digital Imaging and Telepathology" by Bruce Williams and
Florabel Mullick from the A.F.I.P. They have a very big grant from the U.S. Government to develop this facility. They are at the forefront in developing a worldwide network.
2.00pm - 3.00pm
Attended the Keynote Speaker lecture by Haruo Sugano (formerly Professor of Pathology at the National Cancer Institute, Tokyo). He was introduced by Jeremy Jass, Brisbane.
3.00pm - 5.00pm
Attended the second part of the Telepathology Session.
5.00pm - 6.30pm
Attended the Dako-sponsored Symposium on HER2.
7.00pm - 9.00pm
Attended the formal dinner at the Tokyu Hotel hosted by Professor Shinichiro Ushigome for the members of the Congress Organising Committee and foreign VIPs.
WEDNESDAY 18/10
9.00am - 10.00am
Meeting with the two Marketing Managers of Dako (a company that manufactures monoclonal antibodies used for diagnosis and treatment) from Copenhagen and Jim Crimmins, (Business Manager of the I.A.P.)
to discuss Dako's financial support of I.A.P. meetings, the News Bulletin and the web page.
10.00am - 12.30pm
Attended the Environmental Pathology Symposium on Arsenical Poisoning and Cancer. The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington has a brief from the U.S. Government to investigate
environmental pollution of all sorts - industrial as well as a result of warfare - throughout the world. These investigations are very interesting and they are uncovering a wide range of abnormalities. One topic was
arsenic poisoning of drinking water in India and of coal in some mines in South China.
2.00pm - 3.00pm
Attended the Keynote Lecture on Immunohistochemistry by David Mason from the Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford. His international reputation has been built around his studies on Malignant Lymphoma. He will be
the R.C.P.A. Visiting Professor in Australia in 2001, so I made sure that he has Brisbane firmly included in his itinerary. (He is also keenly interested in medical history).
3.00pm - 6.30pm
Presented a paper on "Pig Bel - Enteritis Necroticans in Papua New Guinea" in the workshop entitled
ÒInfectious and other Regional Diseases in AsiaÓ. I reported the first description of the pathology of this disease and later on had the opportunity to describe the pathology of the identical condition produced
experimentally in guinea pigs by Greg Lawrence working at the Queensland Institute of Medical Research.
7.00pm - 9.00pm
Attended the Nagoya Night for all delegates.
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Bob Eckstein, Roma Cooke and Neal Walker at the Congress Dinner at the Nagoya Castle Hotel.
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Shigeo Mori and Robin Cooke co-chairing the workshop "Talk-In: Messages to Young Pathologists"
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Tempura Restaurant dinner, Monday evening. Hosted by Miki and Miho Shamoto.
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Professor Bernie Ackerman and Robin Cooke in front of one of the posters that featured past contributions of Japanese pathologists to advances in medicine.
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THURSDAY 19/10
9.00am - 12.30pm
Attended part of the sessions on "Skin Tumours" by Bernard Ackerman and Cystic and Pseudocystic Tumours of the Pancreas chaired by Gunter Kloppel (Professor of Pathology at Kiel ; Editor of Virchow's
Archives and Past President of the European Association of Pathology). I discussed with him during the tea break the upcoming meeting in Berlin in September, 2001 (which I am advertising in the News Bulletin
) and linking Virchow's Archives to the I.A.P. home page.
1.00pm - 5.00pm
I joined a tour of the Toyota Company Assembly Factory and a display of their new models. I wrote an article on the Toyota Motor Company in the News Bulletin and suggested that a special tour of the factory
should be made available for the delegates. In the event, it turned out to be a very popular tour. At the display of new models I sat in the driverÕs seat of the Prius, their newly developed hybrid car whose
motor is partly powered by petrol and partly by electricity from a bank of re-chargeable batteries.
7.00pm - 9.00pm
Conference Dinner at the Nagoya Castle Hotel with the view of the stunningly beautiful floodlit Nagoya Castle through the floor to ceiling glass windows of the dining room. During the dinner we were
entertained by a group of Japanese drummers. It was interesting that the last concert in this yearÕs Brisbane Festival featured a group of Australian artists performing a Japanese drumming routine. My wife
and I attended this performance on our return from Nagoya.
FRIDAY 20/10
9.00am - 12.15pm
Co-chaired a workshop entitled "Talk-in: Messages to Young Pathologists". My co-chair and Organiser of the session was Professor Shigeo Mori of Tokai University, a private medical university in Tokyo. He was
chairman of the Scientific Program Committee for the Congress. I presented a paper on "A Method of Continuing Anatomical Pathology Education (CAPE) - using a CD Rom format".
The other speakers were David Davies (President of the R.C.P.A.), James Underwood (President of the British Division of the I.A.P. and Vice President of the RCPath), Anna Kadar (Dean of Semmelweiss
University, Budapest and President of the I.A.P.)., Antonio Llombart-Bosch (Professor and Head of the Department of Pathology, Valencia, Spain ; Chairman of the Education Committee of the I.A.P. and a
former President of the I.A.P.), Jag Butany (Chief of Surgical Pathology, General Hospital, Toronto, Canada), Tseng-tong Kuo (Chief of Surgical Pathology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taipei), M.
Kuroda (a senior pathologist from Tokai University, Tokyo), Konradin Metze (a Professor of Pathology from Sao Paulo, Brazil), Guillermo Herrera (Professor and Head of a very large teaching hospital
Pathology Department of the Louisiana State University in Shreveport, USA), J. Hata (from Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo and President of the Japanese Association of Pathology), Alex Chang (from
New Zealand, now a Professor at the Prince of Wales Hospital, Hong Kong and Thithi Kwokpaetoon, Professor of Pathology, Bangkok, Thailand).
1.00pm - 2.00pm
Following the Closing Ceremony, I was invited to attend a farewell luncheon at the Convention Centre main restaurant for about ten members of the Japanese Organising Committee and about ten foreigners.
The cuisine was exquisite, to match the significance of this special occasion.
SATURDAY/SUNDAY 21/10 - 22/10
Together with thirty other conference delegates from many parts of the world, we took a post-Congress tour of the Hakone - Mt Fuji National Park. This gave us an opportunity to see some of the countryside
around Nagoya and to experience the atmosphere of this popular Japanese resort area. It also allowed us to mix socially and more intimately than is possible during the formal Congress with this group of people.
Saturday was fine and we had a clear view of Mt Fuji from a distance. The rice was being hung out to dry, persimmon trees were laden with ripe yellow fruit. The small garden plots were planted with all kinds of
vegetables. Low, neatly pruned teatrees were planted in rows. Domestic gardens were bursting with multi-coloured flowers, and artistically adorned by lovingly tended and neatly pruned trees and shrubs.
The trees covering the slopes of the mountains were beginning to turn into various shades of yellow, brown and red, heralding the approach of autumn. On Sunday we drove from our comfortable, modern
holiday resort hotel in Hakone up the steep slopes of Mt Fuji to the fifth station, at about 2305 metres altitude. From here there are walking tracks to the summit and around the edge of the crater. Many
people who do this walk to the summit develop "mountain sickness" from the low oxygen pressure. The mountain was covered by thick, fast moving cloud. As we were descending, suddenly the cloud cleared
and we could see the summit from close quarters.
Responding to the excited shouts of his passengers, the driver stopped the bus to allow them to tumble out in an orderly, but urgent evacuation. We then viewed and photographed the scree slopes of the old
volcano in the few minutes before the curtain of cloud rolled across the landscape and again blotted out the view. This was undoubtedly the high point of the tour in all meanings of the term. Later on we visited
the spectacular water falls at Shiraito. The delicate streams of water that constitute the waterfalls are
responsible for the name "white string falls". After the falls we all settled into our seats for the long drive back to Nagoya. We arrived at our hotel at 8.00pm.
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Meetings |
Gynaecological Pathology Symposium March 17-18, 2001. St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne Invited speakers: P Clement, Professor of Pathology
(Vancouver), Professor a Ostor, Professor N Hacker, Professor S Khoo, Dr J Scurry, Mr P Grant, Dr R Jaworski, Dr J Armes. This multidisciplinary meeting will cover cervical adenocarcinoma, familial ovarian
carcinoma, trophoblastic disease, borderline ovarian tumours, stromal uterine tumours and will also include a histological slide seminar. Further details: Dr Nick Mulvany Ph. 03 5174 0800 Fax 03 5174 7335
Email: nmulv@gippspath.com.au
Challenges and Opportunities in Pathology October 4-7, 2001 International Joint Congress Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia, Hong Kong
College of Pathologists, Hong Kong Division of the International Academy of Pathology. Secretariat COP 2001. Ph. 852 2871 8878 Fax 852 2871 8898 Email: confdept@hkam.org.hk
Internet: www.hkcpath.org
18th European Congress of Pathology - European Society of Pathology September 8-13, 2001 Berlin, Germany.
Organiser: Prof Manfred Dietel, Virchow Institute of Pathology. Contact: CTW - Congress Organisation Thomas Wiese GmbH Goblerstr, 30, D-12161, Berlin, Germany. Ph. 49 030 8599620 Fax 49 030 85079826
Email: thomas.wiese@ctw-congress.de Internet: www.ctw-congress.de/pathology
British Division
Joint meeting with the Pathological Society of Great Britain Liverpool, July 2001 Contact: Carol Harris,
Administrative Secretary of the British Division, P.O. Box 73, Westbury on Trym, Bristol BS9 1RY, UK. Ph 0117 907 7940 Fax 0117 907 7941 Email: bdiap@cableinet.co.uk
Internet: www.le.ac.uk/pa/pnf1/IAP/iaphome.htm
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