This is a 10 PA consultant appointment for a Consultant Clinical Oncologist, with a special interest in Lung and Pancreatic cancers. The Lung service work in this post would be based in Leeds and at Calderdale & Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust, one of our WYATT partners. The Pancreas service work in this post would be based at the Leeds Cancer Centre, Bexley Wing, St James University Hospital. The post holder will provide non-surgical management, radiotherapy and SACT for patients with lung and pancreatic cancers.
The successful candidate will work alongside the non-surgical Oncology Lung team led by Dr Pooja Bhatnagar (supported by Dr Kevin Franks, Dr Katy Clarke, Dr Peter Dickinson, Dr Mark Teo and Dr Alison Young), and Upper GI Clinical Oncologist Rebecca Goody (supported by Natalie Casanova, Eldho Joseph). The Lung service receives approximately 963 new patient referrals per year for radiotherapy treatment. The Pancreas service receives approximately 36 new patient referrals per year for radiotherapy treatment. The expectation is that the post holder will manage approximately 18 new patient referrals per year in the Pancreas service, and approximately 126 new patients per year in the Lung service.
As part of the Trusts resource commitment, the post holder will have access to secretarial assistance as required and will be supplied with adequate office space and IT equipment to support fulfilling their job plan. The Bexley Wing is one of the largest oncology facilities in the UK, within one of the largest acute general hospitals in Europe. There are 350 beds, day-care and out-patient facilities and a patient hotel. The Bexley Wing incorporates services in non-surgical oncology, haematology, the Academic Unit clinical offices and support areas and substantial services in cancer surgery.
There is a dedicated Clinical Research Facility for patients in early-phase clinical trials. Clinical and Medical Oncology are based in the Bexley Wing and run as an integrated service within a single bed base, and integrated site specialist teams. The service provides comprehensive non-surgical oncology services to the Trust and to the population of West and the majority of North Yorkshire. They are key components of the Leeds Cancer Centre.
There is a hub and spoke arrangement with the surrounding cancer units in Airedale, Bradford, Dewsbury, Halifax, Harrogate, Huddersfield, Pontefract, Wakefield and York. This covers a population of approximately 2.7 million. In addition, there are other tertiary referrals from a more extensive catchment area from East Yorkshire, East Lancashire and North Yorkshire. The Leeds radiotherapy service treats over 7000 new patients a year with radiotherapy.
The department has twelve linear accelerators. There are three CT simulators and an MRI simulator. The building houses a dedicated brachytherapy suite containing two theatres. Shielded treatment rooms on the wards support unsealed source therapy.
There are dedicated clinical cancer research facilities with beds and a nursing research team. The links to the Academic Unit of Cancer Medicine are strong and there are world class molecular oncology labs and research programmes on site. The Leeds radiotherapy service has a workforce which includes 135 radiographers, 10 nurses, 32 clinical scientists and 62 clinical technologists.