Andrew Stewart Coats Explained

Andrew Stewart Coats
Nationality:Australian
British
Birth Name:Andrew Justin Stewart Coats
Birth Date:1958 2, df=yes
Birth Place:Melbourne, Australia
Profession:Academic
senior university administrator
Specialism:Cardiology
Known For:Chronic heart failure research
Work Institutions:University of Oxford
Royal Brompton Hospital of Imperial College London
University of Sydney
Norwich Research Park
University of Warwick
Monash University
Prizes:Linacre Medal
Michael L Pollock Award

Andrew Justin Stewart Coats (born 1 February 1958) is an Australian–British academic cardiologist who has particular interest in the management of heart failure. His research suggested exercise training (rather than bed rest) as a more effective treatment for chronic heart failure. He is known for putting forward the "muscle hypothesis" of heart failure. In addition to this, Coats is a fundraiser, university administrator, and inventor. His Imperial College patents have formed the basis of companies specialising in the treatment of cachexia (Myotec[1] [2] and PsiOxus[3]).

Early life and education

Andrew Stewart Coats was born and raised in Melbourne. His father, Douglas A. Coats, was a Professor of Resuscitation who first described essential fatty acids.[4]

Stewart Coats was educated at Melbourne Grammar School, where he was proxime accessit Head of School and a School Officer; St Catherine's College, Oxford, where he graduated with a B.A. in Physiological Sciences with First-Class Honours and won the Rose Prize; and Clare College, Cambridge, where he read medicine, earning a M.B. B.Chir., and was top of his year with two distinctions.

Career

Medical career

After qualifying in medicine in 1980, Stewart Coats started his career at St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne under Professor David Penington and then at the University of Oxford under Professor Peter Sleight. In 1991, he was appointed Senior Lecturer, supported by the British Heart Foundation, at the National Heart and Lung Institute [NHLI] under Professor Philip Poole-Wilson.

In 1996, he was appointed the Viscount Royston Professor of Cardiology at Imperial College. He was also honorary consultant physician at the Royal Brompton Hospital in London, and its Clinical Director for Cardiology and its Associate Medical Director. In 2002, Stewart Coats became the 17th Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Sydney.[5] In 2006, he was appointed Deputy Vice-Chancellor (External Communications) of the University of Sydney.[6] In 2009, Stewart Coats was appointed the second Norwich Research Park Professor-at-Large, second to Baron Solly Zuckerman.[7] [8] In 2011, Stewart Coats was appointed chief executive officer of the Norwich Research Park. In 2013, he took up the position of Joint Academic Vice-President of Monash University, Australia and the University of Warwick, UK.[9] [10] [11]

Research career

Stewart Coats commenced his research career in hypertension, where he did some of the early work on the clinical value of 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring.[12] [13] His subsequent career, forming the bulk of his more than 550 research papers, has been in the field of heart failure where he conducted the first ever randomised trial of exercise training in chronic heart failure.[14]

He coined the term "The Muscle Hypothesis", the now accepted explanation for the generation of exercise-limiting symptoms in chronic heart failure, but at the time a radical theory.[15]

He has been chairman or a member of the steering committee of many large-scale international drug trials that have influenced treatment of cardiovascular disease. These include the Carvedilol Prospective Randomized Cumulative Survival (COPERNICUS) Trial,[16] OPTIMAAL (angiotensin receptor antagonist in heart failure),[17] and SENIORS (management of heart failure in the elderly).[18]

He has published over 450 items on PubMed [19] and has been Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Cardiology since 1999.

In 2016, he was the keynote speaker at the International Conference of Undergraduate Research, held concurrently in Australia, the UK, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan, South Africa and the US.[20]

National and international work

Stewart Coats was appointed chair of Australia's peak policy body for Health Informatics, the Australian Health Information Council (AHIC). He sat on many committees and chaired the New South Wales Ministerial Advisory Committee on Health and Medical Research (MACMHR).[21] In his three years as Deputy Vice-Chancellor in charge of External Relations and Development at Sydney, the university achieved the highest ever fund-raising total for any Australian university, in excess of A$50 million per year.[22]

Commercial career

Stewart Coats completed an MBA at London Business School and subsequently became a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and a member of London's Institute of Directors. He has also been a board director of a number of private and public companies, including Myotec,[23] PsiOxus,[24] Lone Star Heart Inc.,[25] Centenary Institute, the Heart Research Institute, Cardiodirect (UK) Limited, the Woolcock Institute of Medical Research,[26] and the George Institute of International Health.[27] [28]

Personal life

Stewart Coats has two brothers, one of whom, Peter, works for Minter Ellison in Melbourne. Peter has previously been the firm's managing partner over a number of years, specialising in asbestos litigation, coronial inquests, liability claims and occupational health and safety prosecutions, and insurance law and is a graduate of the Melbourne Law School (LL.B.) and University of Melbourne (B.A.).[29] [30]

In 2017 Stewart Coats was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia for distinguished service to medical research and tertiary education in the field of cardiology, as an academic and author, and as a mentor and role model for young scientists.[31]

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Innovations spin-out Myotec merges with Hybrid Biosystems to form PsiOxus Therapeutics; £3.6m new funding to develop therapeutic pipeline. 15 December 2010. Imperial Innovations. 23 July 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140321093952/http://www.imperialinnovations.co.uk/news-centre/news/innovations-spin-out-myotec-merges-hybrid-biosyste/. 21 March 2014. dead. dmy-all.
  2. Web site: Innovations leads £5.6m investment in Myotec to fund treatments for muscle wasting disease. 1 March 2010. Imperial Innovations. 23 July 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140118011648/http://www.imperialinnovations.co.uk/news-centre/news/innovations-leads-56m-investment-myotec-fund-treat/. 18 January 2014. dead. dmy-all.
  3. Web site: PsiOxus – Advisory Board. PsiOxus.
  4. Coats, D. A. (1969.) "Long-term complete parental nutrition", Z Ernahrungswiss, 9(4):401-2. .
  5. Web site: Key Dates – Faculty of Medicine Online Museum and Archive. Sydney Medical School.
  6. http://www.usyd.edu.au/staff/leadership_strategy/vc/messages/email_2009.shtml
  7. Web site: NRP - News . www.nrp.org.uk . 14 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070211031210/http://www.nrp.org.uk/nrpnews.php . 11 February 2007 . dead.
  8. Web site: Leading cardiologist appointed to harness world-class research . 15 July 2010 . University of East Anglia . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121005111954/http://www.uea.ac.uk/foh/news/Leading%2Bcardiologist%2Bappointed%2Bto%2Bharness%2Bworld%2Bclass%2Bresearch . 5 October 2012 . dmy .
  9. Web site: Jump . Paul . Interview – One man, two guvnors and a single vision | General . Times Higher Education . 13 December 2012 . 21 October 2013.
  10. Web site: Andrew Coats to drive Monash–Warwick alliance. Julie. Hare. The Australian. 18 September 2012.
  11. Web site: Monash–Warwick: what does a global university partnership look like?. Andrew J. Stewart. Coats. 30 October 2012. The Guardian.
  12. Coats, A. J.; Conway, J.; Somers, V. K.; Isea, J. E.; Sleight, P. (1989.) "Ambulatory pressure monitoring in the assessment of antihypertensive therapy", Cardiovasc Drugs Ther, 3 Suppl 1:303-11. .
  13. Daytime ambulatory systolic blood pressure is more effective at predicting mortality than clinic blood pressure. Dawes MG, Coats AJ, Juszczak E. Blood Press Monit. 2006 Jun;11(3):111-8.
  14. Effects of physical training in chronic heart failure. Coats AJ, Adamopoulos S, Meyer TE, Conway J, Sleight P. Lancet. 1990 Jan 13;335(8681):63-6.
  15. Symptoms and quality of life in heart failure: the muscle hypothesis. Coats AJ, Clark AL, Piepoli M, Volterrani M, Poole-Wilson PA. "Br Heart J" 1994 Aug;72(2 Suppl):S36-9.
  16. Effect of carvedilol on survival in severe chronic heart failure. Packer M, Coats AJ, Fowler MB, Katus HA, Krum H, Mohacsi P, Rouleau JL, Tendera M, Castaigne A, Roecker EB, Schultz MK, DeMets DL; Carvedilol Prospective Randomized Cumulative Survival Study Group. N Engl J Med. 2001 May 31;344(22):1651-8.
  17. Dickstein K, Kjekshus J; and the OPTIMAAL Trial Steering Committee for the OPTIMAAL Study Group. Effects of losartan and captopril on mortality and morbidity after acute myocardial infarction: The OPTIMAAL randomized trial. Lancet 2002; 360(9335):752-60
  18. [Marcus Flather|Flather MD]
  19. Web site: Coats A – PubMed – NCBI . Ncbi.nlm.nih.gov . 25 March 2013 . 21 October 2013.
  20. Web site: Icur 2016.
  21. Web site: NSW Research . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110217131215/http://www.msmr.nsw.gov.au/__data/page/21/NSW_Research_-_A_Prescription_for_Health.pdf . 17 February 2011 . 28 February 2011.
  22. Web site: News | The University of Sydney . Usyd.edu.au . 6 January 2009 . 21 October 2013.
  23. Web site: Imperial Innovations: Merger of portfolio company | Company Announcements | Telegraph . 28 February 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110717144006/http://telegraph.uk-wire.com/cgi-bin/articles/201012150700209692X.html?epic=IVO . 17 July 2011 .
  24. Web site: Merger of portfolio company - London Stock Exchange . 28 February 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110713232040/http://www.londonstockexchange.com/exchange/news/market-news/market-news-detail.html?announcementId=10740106 . 13 July 2011 .
  25. Web site: Home . LoneStar Heart, Inc. . 21 October 2013.
  26. Web site: Archived copy . www.woolcock.org.au . 14 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706130505/http://www.woolcock.org.au/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=iOJiPcnBt9A%3D&tabid=63 . 6 July 2011 . dead.
  27. Web site: Financial Report for the Year Ended 30 June 2007. Wearne & Co.. 2007.
  28. Web site: Financial Report for the Year Ended 30 June 2008. Wearne & Co.. 2008.
  29. Web site: Peter Coats. Minter Ellison. 18 February 2015.
  30. Web site: Law at Melbourne . Melbourne Law School . November 2003 . 18 February 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150405081821/http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/files/dmfile/Newsletter51.pdf . 5 April 2015 . dmy .
  31. Web site: Officer (AO) in the General Division of the Order of Australia . Australia Day 2017 Honours List . . 26 January 2017 . 27 January 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171125025437/http://www.gg.gov.au/sites/default/files/files/honours/ad/ad2017/slkh83xzcb/AO%20Final%20Media%20Notes.pdf . 25 November 2017 . dead .
  32. Web site: Advisory Board . PsiOxus . 21 October 2013.