The Daily Telegraph

Surgeon who specialise­d in head and neck cancers

- Peter Rhys Evans Peter Rhys Evans, born May 17 1948, died June 3 2022

PETER RHYS EVANS, who has died aged 74, was a leading ENT surgeon who specialise­d in head and neck cancer. He founded a charity, Oracle, which has raised more than £7 million to fund research.

Cancer of the head and neck region is the fourth most common cancer in men and it is increasing in incidence, particular­ly in younger people. Previous treatments often led to disfigurin­g surgery and damage to the voice box, as well as difficulti­es in swallowing.

Rhys Evans’s research work involved developing personalis­ed treatments, gene and viral therapies and new and less mutilating surgical techniques which, together with advances in imaging and targeted radiothera­py, have helped to improve survival rates while at the same time minimising debilitati­ng side-effects and improving the quality of life for survivors.

Rhys Evans was also fascinated by evolution, and his own observatio­ns over a 30-year period, based on studying the shape of ear canals and sinuses of apes and humans, led him to support the hypothesis originally proposed by the marine biologist Alister Hardy in 1960, and elaborated by Elaine Morgan in her 1972 book The Descent of Woman, which maintained that modern humans had originally been aquatic animals.

Rhys Evans’s 2020 book The Waterside Ape was praised by Sir David Attenborou­gh as an important contributi­on to the debate.

The third of six children, Peter Rhys Evans was born at Tunbridge Wells on May 17 1948. His father, Rhys, was an ENT surgeon who trained at Barts and then moved to Sunderland. His mother, Jean, was a Barts nurse.

From an early age David decided to follow in his father’s footsteps. At Ampleforth he developed a love of rugby; this probably helped him gain admission to Barts medical school, where he helped the rugby team regain the United Hospitals Cup .

As a student Rhys Evans supplement­ed his income by driving an early-morning meat van from Smithfield at 7s 6d an hour. He had more lucrative work as a film extra, obtaining an Equity card.

Rhys Evans had training fellowship­s at the Institut Gustave Roussy in Paris, and in California, where he learnt the latest approaches to restoring the voice and ability to swallow after complex surgery.

He came home to a consultant post in Birmingham before moving to the Royal Marsden Hospital.

While in Birmingham he was involved in a serious road traffic accident which resulted in severe damage to his hands. He was off work for many months but eventually returned, overcame the damage to his fingers and was able to resume his surgery.

Rhys Evans combined his clinical work with research and built up many internatio­nal collaborat­ions. He was a member of the Cartesian Society, a Us-led group of ENT surgeons, and his research resulted in more than 200 papers as well as a standard textbook, Principles and Practice of Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology (with Patrick Gullane and Paul Montgomery), now in its second edition.

Rhys Evans was highly respected by colleagues and patients. He was awarded the Arris and Gale lectureshi­p by the Royal College of Surgeons of London for his research work.

He loved music, which he played in his operating theatres, and regularly organised musical events to raise money for the Oracle Cancer Trust.

There were well-attended Christmas classical concerts at St John’s Smith Square, and often Michael Morpurgo, patron of Oracle, would participat­e. He was also involved in an annual Puccini festival in Italy.

A first marriage was dissolved, and in 1994 Rhys Evans married Fran, whom he had met at the Royal Marsden, where she was a clinical nurse specialist. She survives him with their three children.

 ?? ?? Founded the charity Oracle
Founded the charity Oracle

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