The Christie hospital | |
Org/Group: | The Christie NHS Foundation Trust |
Coordinates: | 53.4297°N -2.2286°W |
Location: | Manchester |
State: | England |
Healthcare: | NHS |
Type: | Specialist |
Beds: | 257 |
Speciality: | Cancer |
Founded: | 1892 |
Map Type: | Greater Manchester |
The Christie, formerly known as Christie Hospital, is a specialist National Health Service oncology hospital in Manchester, England. It is one of the largest cancer treatment centres in Europe. It is managed by The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, which had a turnover of £472 million and around 3,500 staff, and its work is also supported by The Christie Charity.
The hospital was established in 1890 as the Cancer Pavilion and Home for Incurables by a committee under the chairmanship of Richard Christie. The name was changed by the addition of "Christie" in 1901, and moved to a purpose-built facility in Withington in 1932. It joined joined the National Health Service in 1948. It rebranded from Christie Hospital to The Christie in 2008.
In 2023-24, The Christie treated over 60,000 patients.[1] it was the lead cancer centre for the Greater Manchester and Cheshire Cancer Network, covering a population of 3.2 million, and runs clinics at 16 other general hospitals.[2]
the Christie had 257 inpatient beds with an average length of stay of seven days.[2] In 2023-24 it delivered 96,000 systemic anti-cancer treatments (chemotherapies, immunotherapies and targeted drug therapies)., it is the largest provider of radiotherapy in Europe, delivering 120,000 fractions in 2023-24.[1]
The hospital has one of the eight dedicated teenage cancer units in the United Kingdom. it had one of the largest clinical trials units in the United Kingdom for phase I/II cancer trials, with around 1,200 patients going on new trials.[2]
It is a partner in the Manchester Cancer Research Centre and home to the North West Cancer Information Service, the cancer registry for the whole of the North West region, and the Wolfson Molecular Imaging Centre.[3]
In 2020 the Christie started using Isansys Lifecare's Patient Status Engine for COVID-19 patients both in hospital and at home. It collects continuous physiological data, including heart rate, respiration rate, heart rate variability, ECG, oxygen saturation, blood pressure, and body temperature. This generates an early warning score which enables earlier identification of those patients most in need of intervention.[4]
It started a new electronic Patient Reported Outcome Measures service in 2022. There are over 680 forms to be digitalised.[5]
The Christie had its beginnings in the largesse of Sir Joseph Whitworth, a wealthy Mancunian inventor who left money in his will in 1887. He wanted this to be spent on good causes in Manchester and entrusted his bequest to three legatees, one of whom was Richard Copley Christie.[6] Some of that money was used to buy land at Lorne Street, off Oxford Road, adjacent to Owens College and intended to allow the movement of the central Manchester hospitals out of the crowded city centre.[7] [8] [9]
A committee chaired by Richard Copley Christie, a lawyer and academic, was established in 1890 and, partly funded by a legacy of £10,000 from Daniel Proctor, a Cancer Pavilion and Home for Incurables was founded on the site in 1892, south-east of the eye hospital.[10] [11] In 1901 it was renamed the Christie Hospital in honour of Christie and his wife Mary.[12] It was the only hospital outside London for the treatment of cancer alone and active in pathological research.[13]
The name of the pavilion was changed by the addition of "Christie" in 1901, after Christie himself had died. In 1929 it had 34 beds and was used by patients from northern England and north Wales, when it was the only provincial hospital dedicated to cancer treatment. Associated with it was the Radium Institute, which was founded in 1914 and moved to Nelson Street in 1921. In 1928, the hospital had 14 beds, 374 in-patients and over 7,000 out-patients who were given radium treatment.[14]
In 1901, the Christie Management Committee agreed to the request of Dr Robert Biggs Wild to spend £50 on the equipment necessary to test the efficacy of X-ray treatment, after promising results reported from London and from three patients treated in the Physics Laboratory of Professor Arthur Schuster locally in Owens College. The Roentgen apparatus was purchased, but no records survive of treatment, and by 1907 the equipment was no longer being used (it was given to the Skin Hospital in 1910).[15] By 1905, Dr Wild had become interested in the therapeutic use of the newly discovered radium and experimented, once more with aid from Professor Schuster, on three patients. Radium was expensive, however, and the management refused to purchase any more until the results of tests from London hospitals were available. By 1914, a leading local doctor, Sir William Milligan, had begun a campaign in the 'Manchester Guardian' to raise funds for radium treatment. Appealing to a mixture of local pride and the contemporary enthusiasm for the curative powers of radium, an appeal was launched, on the advice of Ernest Rutherford, for £25,000. An initial contribution of £2000 from local brewer Edward Holt was not initially much emulated, but following the intervention of the Mayor, a series of 'Radium days' were organized which eventually raised enough money to start a small Radium Institute, initially housed in the Manchester Royal Infirmary. In 1921 it moved to new premises in Nelson Street donated by Sir Edward and Lady Holt, and became the Manchester and District Radium Institute.[15] By contrast with the dispersed and competitive provision of London radiotherapy, Manchester became the first provider of a centralised radiotherapy service, which would have long-lasting effects on the patterns of British cancer care.[16] [17]
In 1932 the Christie Hospital and the Holt Institute, renamed as the Holt Radium Institute,moved to a new joint site on Wilmslow Road, Withington and began to be jointly managed, although a formal merger did not occur until 1946.[15] The new site was officially opened by Lord Derby.[18]
Ralston Paterson was appointed as Director of the Radium Institute in 1931, and went on, with a small hand picked team, to build a world recognised centre for the treatment of cancer by radiation.[17] Among the team was his wife Edith Paterson, who started research work at the Christie in 1938, initially unpaid, and who became an expert in radiation biology.[19] The first betatron machine was purchased from Paris and installed in the building, run by Marjorie Pearce.[20]
The Christie joined the National Health Service in 1948.[21]
The department was the subject of a live BBC TV programme, "Your Life In Their Hands" in the late 1950s.[22]
After Ralston Paterson's retirement in 1963, Professor Eric Craig Easson, CBE, was appointed Director of the Christie Hospital. He is noted for his contribution to the curability of Hodgkin's disease and to cancer education. He was awarded a personal Professorial Chair at the University of Manchester, and was President of the Royal College of Radiologists (1975–1977). He was the government adviser on cancer for many years, and was a prime mover in the Union Internationale Contre Cancer in Geneva, as well as the WHO cancer group. During Professor Easson's tenure as Director, many doctors from throughout the world visited the Christie Hospital to absorb its ethos and to learn its techniques.[23]
In 2012 it was announced that a new proton therapy centre would be built at the hospital.[24] The machines were delivered in 2017,[25] and the first patients were treated in December 2018.[26]
Early impetuses to research came from new local diseases of industrialisation such as mule spinners' cancer and chimney sweep's cancer, and the search for links to machine oils and airborne soot. Subsequent therapeutic milestones have included:[12]
Professor Laszlo Lajtha was appointed director of research in 1962. New research laboratories, provided by the Women's Trust Fund and named after the Patersons, were opened in 1966. The Women's Trust Fund was a local charity, chaired by Lady Margaret Holt, daughter-in-law of Sir Edward Holt, who left her entire estate of over £8 million to the Christie when she died in 1997.[11] Core funding for the laboratories was secured from the Medical Research Council and the Cancer Research Campaign (CRC; now Cancer Research UK). The CRC also located the CRC Department of Medical Oncology, led by Professor Derek Crowther, at the Paterson.[27]
Lajtha was succeeded as Director in 1983 by Professor David Harnden. Professor Michael Dexter served in the post for a short time before the appointment of Professor Nic Jones as Director in March 1999.[27] Professor Jones stepped down in 2011 and Professor Richard Marais was appointed as the new Director in 2012.[28]
The Paterson Institute for Cancer Research changed its name to the Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute (CRUK MI) on 1 October 2013.[29]
On 26 April 2017 a fire broke out on the institute's roof and rapidly spread through the building, destroying cancer research facilities and leading to the displacement of over 300 scientists and support staff.[30] A forensic investigation conducted by the Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service determined that the most probable cause of the fire was from hot debris from welding work being carried out on the institute roof which landed on cardboard, carpet and other flammable substances.[31] A replacement Paterson Building opened in July 2024.[32]
The Christie NHS Foundation Trust | |
Headquarters: | 550 Wilmslow Road Withington Manchester M20 4BX |
Type: | NHS foundation trust |
Hospitals: | The Christie hospital |
Chief Exec: | Roger Spencer |
The Christie is managed by an NHS Foundation Trust, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, and is the only hospital under this trust's management. The trust has a total annual turnover of around £143 million. Eight per cent of its income is from private patients. Around 2,000 staff and over 300 volunteers work at the Christie.[2]
Christie Hospital NHS Trust became a NHS Foundation Trust on 1 April 2007. The first Chair of the Trust was Jim Martin. He was replaced in May 2011 by Lord Keith Bradley.[33]
Caroline Shaw, the chief executive of the trust, was suspended from her duties on 19 December 2013 while investigations were conducted as part of a disciplinary process. It was alleged that she had made an improper claim for the payment of expenses for a retreat in Ibiza organised by the Young Presidents' Organization, of which she had become a member with the Trust's agreement.[34] In February 2014 Lord Bradley announced that he would resign from the board as a consequences of disagreements about the way in which the suspension of the Chief Executive was being handled.[35] Sir Hugh Taylor was appointed as interim Chair of the Trust. Shaw resigned in October 2014, having been suspended on full pay for 11 months- amounting to £170,000 and left with another six months salary - just under £100,000.[36]
Dr Kim Holt, chair of the patient safety campaign group Patients First, demanded an independent investigation into claims of bullying, intimidation and dismissal of whistleblowers at the Trust in March 2014.[37] A report by Monitor (NHS) and the CQC concluded there was no evidence of serious failings of governance or widespread cultural issues at the trust.[38] NHS England commissioned a review in 2020 into events at the trust after whistleblowers raised numerous concerns over a research project with pharmaceutical giant Roche. The review, led by Angela Schofield, chair of Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust described the trust's research division as "ineffective" and said it had "allowed inappropriate behaviours to continue without challenge". She went on to say "The leadership of The Christie had a number of opportunities to avert this rapid review as colleagues in the R&I division began to speak up about their concerns. Not only did they not seem to recognise this but there were occasions when they appeared to be defensive and dismissive." The board responded by saying "we do not have systematic problems with discrimination, bullying or responding to concerns."[39]
It was named by the Health Service Journal as one of the top hundred NHS trusts to work for in 2015. At that time it had 2,313 full-time equivalent staff and a sickness absence rate of 3.41%. 92% of staff recommend it as a place for treatment and 73% recommended it as a place to work.[40] The Care Quality Commission rated it as outstanding in 2016.[41]
In 2018 the trust entered into a partnership arrangement with Hoffmann-La Roche which was intended to involve The Christie providing blood samples from 5,000 patients per year, with the company's subsidiaries, Flatiron Health and Foundation Medicine, building a "clinico-genomic database". Reports into the project found that there was "insufficient due diligence on alternative options" and no formal procurement process. Staff concerns raised at the time were brushed aside as was legal advice that it was "not as clear as we might hope that any research…[carried] out will be for the benefit of the trust at all".[42]
HCA Healthcare has run a specialist private cancer unit in partnership with the trust since 2010.[43] 20% of the oncologists who work at the Trust have shares in this venture.[44]
The hospital is supported by a fundraising charity, The Christie Charitable Funds, trading as The Christie Charity. The charity was initially directly controlled by the Hospital Trust, but in line with changes to the charities acts is now a self-governing charity with independent trustees.[45] The charity exists solely to support services at The Christie which are ineligible for NHS funding, including investing in staff, equipment, facilities, support services and research. In 2023-24 it raised £17.4 million.[46]
The hospital also received charitable support in the form of a Maggie's Centre.[47]