European School of Oncology

Author:

Anna Wagstaff


Date of publication: 23 July 2024
Last update: 23 July 2024

Introduction

The European School of Oncology (ESO) is a provider of continuing medical education to oncology professionals, with a particular focus on areas of Central and Eastern Europe and the Balkans region. [1] [2]

History of ESO

The School was founded in 1982 by Umberto Veronesi, an Italian breast surgeon and Scientific Director of the National Cancer Institute [https://www.oncopedia.wiki/research-centres/national-tumour-institute] of Milan. The concept, first outlined at the 1981 founding congress of the European Society of Surgical Oncology, was for a permanent interdisciplinary and international school, free from non-medical influence, and in line with the medical traditions of the ‘Old Continent’ of Europe, which were seen as distinct from the medical culture in the US, in putting a greater emphasis on the therapeutic importance of the doctor‒patient relationship. [4]

The founding scientific leadership of the School was drawn from a range of oncology disciplines and European countries. [5] [6]

They included Michael Peckham, a UK-based radiotherapist and co-founder of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology (now European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology); [7] Herbert Pinedo, a leader in the emerging specialism of medical oncology, based in the Netherlands, and author of early editions of Cancer Chemotherapy; [8] Franco Cavalli, a Swiss haematologist and founding member of the European Society for Medical Oncology, Louis Denis, a urologist and founder member of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer genito-urinary group; [9] and [Umberto Veronesi]/@umberto-veronesi) himself, an Italian breast surgeon, who had developed and trialled the quadrantectomy technique for breast conserving surgery [10]
and initiated the first trials investigating the impact of adjuvant chemotherapy in operable breast cancer. [11]

Multiprofessional cancer care education

The first ESO oncology course was held in 1982 in the Castello di Pomerio in Lombardy northern Italy, near Milan. [4] [5] The teaching faculty comprised most of the School's founders, and the course covered the principles of management of the main cancers from a multidisciplinary standpoint. In its early years the School concentrated on post-graduate courses in medical oncology, which at that time was treated in most of Europe as a branch of internal medicine, rather than a specialism requiring its own curriculum and qualifications. [12] From 2001, the School began to focus much of its work on countries in Central and Eastern Europe and the Balkans region, where survival rates for cancer were markedly lower than in Western Europe and Northern Europe. [2] [13] It also started to widen its areas of work to support oncologists at different stages in their careers, starting from the time they leave medical school. In 2002 ESO ran the first five-day Masterclass in Clinical Oncology. [14] [15] In 2004 it initiated a summertime Oncology for Medical Students course. [16] [17] In 2008 the e-ESO distance learning programme was started, to increase global access to oncology education. [18] In 2012 ESO launched a visiting professors programme, primarily to support clinical institutes in Eastern Europe and the Balkan Region. [2] In 2013 it added a scheme for clinical training fellowships at centres of excellence across Europe, [19] and also set up certificates of competence as specialist qualifications in lymphoma, [20] breast cancer, [21] and gastrointestinal cancer, [22] and a certificate of advanced studies in lung cancer, [23] which run in collaboration with the University of Ulm, the University of Zurich and the Università della Svizzera italiana. In 2020 the School set up the ESO college ESCO, [24] to bring all these different initiatives into a structure that alumni can pursue step by step.

Societies

ESO is a member of the Union for International Cancer Control and the European Cancer Organisation.

Journal

The ESO official journal is Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology, which publishes critical reviews in all fields of oncology and hematology, as well as reviews and original research in the field of geriatric oncology.

1982

After a summer of preparations, encouraged by a group of donors, Professor Umberto Veronesi establishes the general secretariat of the School at the National Institute for the Study and Treatment of Tumors in Milan. On September 9th, the official ESO logo is presented, and on October 26th, 1982, during the annual congress of ESGO in Athens, the foundation of the European School of Oncology is officially announced.

1983

Princess Laudomia Del Drago of Rome is elected President, Professor Umberto Veronesi becomes Chairman of the Scientific Committee, and Dr. Alberto Costa is appointed Director. In April 1983, the first course of the school is organized at Castello Pomerio on Lake Como in Italy.

1988

The ESOF foundation is established with headquarters in Lugano, Switzerland, to financially support the activities of the School, akin to its Italian counterpart FFO.

1993

The School becomes a member of FECS (the Federation of European Cancer Societies).

1994

The School contributes to the founding of Europa Donna, a coalition against breast cancer.

2001

The School's scientific magazine Cancer Futures is launched, published by Springer Verlag.

2002

The first Masterclass in Clinical Oncology is organized in Montecatini Terme, Tuscany. The School promotes the establishment of EuropaUomo.

2003

The ESO office in Bellinzona is inaugurated to promote projects in Canton Ticino. ESO becomes the publisher of its scientific journal, renamed CancerWorld Magazine.

2004

ESO creates Senonetwork, a network of European Breast Units.

2008

The weekly program called e-Grandrounds is launched, marking the beginning of the distance education project, e-ESO.

2011

The ABC conference series is launched in Lisbon, dedicated to Advanced Breast Cancer.

2012

The first edition of the World Oncology Forum (WOF) takes place in Lugano, organized by ESO in collaboration with The Lancet Oncology.

2013

In collaboration with the University of Ulm in Germany, the first edition of the Certificate of Competence in Lymphoma is launched, reinforcing the concept of "Career Development." Similar "Postgraduate" programs on lung, breast, gynecological, prostate, and gastrointestinal cancer will be organized in the following years, always in collaboration with prestigious European universities.

2014

The "Clinical Training Centres" program is launched, allowing oncologists to spend 3 to 6 months in their area of interest at selected European institutes.

2018

The Umberto Veronesi Senology Academy is established in collaboration with the Veronesi Foundation.

2019

ESO becomes entirely independent from any sponsorship by pharmaceutical companies.

2020

ESCO, the College of the European School of Oncology, is founded to guide oncologists through their careers and provide them with a training path through activities produced by ESO.

2021

The first Ambassadors of ESO are appointed, former Alumni tasked with promoting the School's activities in their respective countries, sharing their personal experiences.

2022

ESO is involved in the European plan "Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan" to fight cancer.