Kate Drummond
Professor Kate Drummond, AM, MD, MBBS, FRACS, graduated from the University of Sydney in 1988 and trained in Neurosurgery in Sydney and Melbourne. She furthered her training with both clinical and research fellowships in Neuro-oncology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard University in Boston. She was awarded an MD from the University of Melbourne in 2008. She is Director of Neurosurgery at The Royal Melbourne Hospital and Head of Central Nervous System Tumours for the Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre, Parkville Precinct. Her chief research and clinical interests are in the biology and clinical management of brain tumours. She is a specialist in awake craniotomy with cortical mapping, intraoperative MRI and fluorescence-assisted brain tumour resection. Her major research projects span the full range of brain tumour care from the basic science of immunotherapy, liquid biopsy and biomarkers in glioma, to innovative surgical techniques and supportive care of patients with brain tumours and their carers. She has published more than 190 peer-reviewed articles, many book chapters and is frequently invited to speak nationally and internationally. She has received more than $35 million in grant funding from government and philanthropic sources. Her h-index is 46, i10-index 109
She is the former chair of the Neuro-oncology Committee of the Victorian Cooperative Oncology Group for the Cancer Council Victoria and serves on the committees of a number of national cancer and brain tumour groups, including the Neuro-Oncology Committee of the Clinical Oncological Society of Australasia and the Cooperative Trials Group for Neuro-Oncology. She supports community groups and charities advocating for patients with brain tumours and their families.
She is Co-Editor in Chief of the Journal of Clinical Neuroscience and on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Neurosurgery. She is past Chief Examiner in Neurosurgery for the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS), serves on the RACS Surgical Education and Training Board and has received the RACS Medal for Services to RACS. She is Chair of Pangea Global Health Education, a for-impact organisation specialising in health education in low resource settings and teaches in Africa yearly. She is President of the Asian Australasian Society of Neurological Surgeons (AASNS). She is President of Academia Eurasiana Neurochirurgica.
In 2019 she was awarded Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for services to medicine, particularly in the field of neuro-oncology and community health.
Abstracts this author is presenting: