Masters of Medicine!
Our website is dedicated to various masters of medicine!
Canadian-born American surgeon and urologist whose investigations demonstrated
the relationship between hormones and certain types of cancer. For his
discoveries Huggins received (with Peyton Rous) the Nobel Prize for Physiology
or Medicine in 1966.
Huggins was educated at Acadia University (Wolfville, N.S.) and at Harvard
University, where he received his M.D. in 1924. He went to the University of
Michigan for further training in surgery (1924-27) and then joined the faculty
of the University of Chicago, where he served as director of the Ben May
Laboratory for Cancer Research from 1951 to 1969.
Huggins was a specialist on the male urological and genital tract. In the
early 1940s he found he could retard the growth of prostate cancer by blocking
the action of the patient's male hormones with doses of the female hormone
estrogen. This research demonstrated that some cancer cells, like normal body
cells, are dependent on hormonal signals to survive and grow and that, by
depriving cancer cells of the correct signals, the growth of tumours could be
slowed down, at least temporarily. In 1951 Huggins showed that breast cancers
are also dependent on specific hormones. By removing the ovaries and adrenal
glands, which are the source of estrogen, he could achieve significant tumour
regression in some of his patients. Owing to his work, drugs that block the
body's production of estrogen became important resources in treating breast
cancer.
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