Karol Sikora
Quick Facts
Biography
Karol Sikora (born 17 June 1948) is a British physician specialising in oncology. He is Medical Director of Rutherford Health plc, Director of Medical Oncology at the Bahamas Cancer Centre, a partner in and dean of the University of Buckingham's medical school.
Early life
Karol Sikora was born in 1948. His father was a captain in the Polish Army who arrived in Great Britain during World War II. Karol's childhood was spent in Edinburgh, Stafford and London.
He had a London County Council scholarship to Dulwich College before going to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge where he became a Foundation Scholar and obtained a double first. He received his PhD at Stanford University, where he also served a clinical fellowship.
Career
After leaving Stanford University, Dr. Sikora returned to Cambridge to direct the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research. From 1985 to 1997, he served as the clinical director for cancer services at Hammersmith Hospital in London, where he established a cancer research laboratory. In 1997, he accepted a position as the Chief of the Cancer Program of the World Health Organization, which he held for two years. He served as the Vice-President of Global Clinical Research in Oncology at the Pharmacia Corporation from 1999 to 2002. He has also been a member of the UK Health Department's Expert Advisory Group on Cancer, as well as the Committee on the Safety of Medicines.
He is currently Medical Director of Proton Partners International and dean of the University of Buckingham's medical school; the only private medical school in the UK. He is an unpaid member of the Meat Advisory Panel, an industry-backed group of researchers, scientists and health care professionals that provide information and advice about meat as part of a balanced diet. He is a member of the Oncology Scientific Advisory Board at biopharmaceutical company Cyclacel Limited, and serves as an oncology consultant for AstraZeneca. Dr. Sikora will also serve as the Interim Director of Radiation Oncology for the newly constructed Cancer Centre Eastern Caribbean in Antigua, filling in after the original director, Dr. Arthur Porter, was diagnosed with cancer.
Sikora has co-authored or edited twenty books, including Treatment of Cancer and the Economics of Cancer Care.Sikora is known for his outspoken views, and has written for the Times, the Observer, the New Statesman, and other publications.
Criticism of National Health Service
Sikora is very critical of cancer care available on the National Health Service (NHS). During US President Barack Obama's push to enact healthcare reform, in early May 2009 he appeared in a Republican Party attack ad in the US criticising National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the NHS. Sikora told The Guardian that he did not know he would be used in the ad campaign, and that he agreed with Obama about the American health care system. In the attack ad, Sikora was referred to as professor of oncology at Imperial College. This led Imperial to seek legal advice to stop Sikora from claiming to be a professor of cancer medicine at Imperial; a claim that he was understood to have made repeatedly over the previous five years. On 29 January 2009, Sikora had introduced himself to a Commons health select committee as "...professor of oncology at Imperial College for 22 years."
On Newsnight in 2017, he described the NHS as "the last bastion of communism".
Promotion of alternative medicine
Sikora and the School of Medicine at Buckingham have in the past been supportive of alternative medicine. For a short time, Buckingham offered a diploma in "integrated medicine" (a euphemism for alternative medicine). Sikora was a Foundation Fellow of Prince Charles' now-defunct alternative medicine lobby group The Prince's Foundation for Integrated Health and Chair of the Faculty of Integrated Medicine, which is unaffiliated with any university; it includes Drs Rosy Daniel and Mark Atkinson, who led Buckingham's "integrated medicine" course.
Sikora is also a "professional member" of the College of Medicine, a patient-oriented healthcare lobby group also linked to the Prince of Wales that appeared shortly after the collapse of the Prince's Foundation. The College has been criticised extensively in the British Medical Journal for its promotion of alternative medicine. These claims have been contested by the College. He is on the advisory panel of complementary cancer care charity Penny Brohn Cancer Care (formerly the Bristol Cancer Help Centre) of whom Prince Charles is a patron, and is a patron of the Iain Rennie Hospice at Home. Statements by Sikora have been critical of unproven methods of alternative medicine, after Parliament member Lord Maurice Saatchi proposed a bill allowing doctors to use unproven experimental therapies, and he has spoken out against claims that an alkaline diet can cure cancer.
Release of Lockerbie bomber
In September 2009, the convicted Lockerbie bomber, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi was released from a Scottish prison on compassionate grounds. The Daily Telegraph reported that Sikora was one of the three doctors hired by the Libyan government to assess Megrahi's condition.
Sikora's report concluded that Megrahi had only three months to live due to terminal prostate cancer. In fact, Megrahi died on 20 May 2012, two years and nine months after his release. Sikora has since admitted that the "three months" timescale was suggested to him by the Libyans. According to The Daily Telegraph, this was not the first time that Sikora had been economical with the truth. Sikora's medical diagnosis was not used by the Scottish Justice Minister since it had been paid for by Libya, but his diagnosis did agree with the medical evidence that was used. Once released, Megrahi returned to Libya and far outlived the 3-month prognosis.
In July 2010, in an interview with The Sunday Times, Sikora said that "it was 'embarrassing' that Megrahi has lived much longer than expected" and "There was always a chance he could live for ten years, 20 years . . . But it's very unusual." This quote was then used first by the UK press and then by a group of USA Senators to undermine the Scottish decision to release Megrahi on compassionate grounds, and then to link the release instead with BP contracts in Libya. In reply, the Scottish Government stated categorically that Sikora's medical opinion was not used by the Scottish Justice Minister. Sikora has since complained about the way journalists have reported his views and stated that there was probably a less than one percent chance of Megrahi living 10 years.
Works
- Interferon and cancer, 1983
- Clinical Physiology (with Campbell, Dickinson, Slater and Edwards), 1984
- Endocrine Problems in Cancer (with Roland T. Jung), 1984
- Monoclonal Antibodies (with Howard Smedley), 1984
- Molecular Biology and Human Disease (with Sandy McCleod), 1984
- Cancer – what it is and how it's treated (with Rob Stepney and Howard Smedley), 1985
- Cancer – a study guide (with Howard Smedley), 1985
- Cancer (with Howard Smedley), 1988
- The Molecular Biology of Cancer (with Jonathan Waxman), 1989
- Fight Cancer (with Hilary Thomas), 1989
- Treatment of Cancer (with Keith Halnan and Pat Price), 1990, 1995, 2002, 2008
- Genes and Cancer (editor), 1990
- The cancer cell (with Gerard Evan and James Watson), 1991
- Human genetic therapy (with Jonathan Harris), 1994
- Cancer: a positive approach (with Hilary Thomas), 1995
- Handbook of oncology (with Victor Barley and Jeff Tobias), 1998, 2004
- The Realities of Rationing (with John Spiers et al.), 1999
- The cancer survival kit (with Rosy Daniel), 2004
- Cancer 2025: The future of cancer care (editor), 2005
- Economics of Cancer Care (with Nick Bosanquet), 2006