Zane Cohen
Director, Zane Cohen Centre for Digestive Diseases
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Zane
Cohen obtained his MD degree in 1969 at the Faculty of Medicine,
University of Toronto and following this he did his general surgical
residency in the Gallie Program at the University of Toronto. During
this time he spent two years doing transplantation immunological
research with Dr. Rudy Falk, and following his general surgical training
he spent two years in the United Kingdom. One clinical year was at St.
Mark’s Hospital for Diseases of the Colon and Rectum, and another
research year was done at the London Hospital in London, England in
transplantation immunology. |
Zane returned to join the staff of
Department of Surgery at the University of Toronto and the Division of
General Surgery at the Toronto General Hospital in 1977 as a Lecturer.
Over the next 12 years he rose through the ranks to become a Professor
of Surgery in the Department of Surgery at the University of Toronto. |
In
1990 Zane Cohen moved to Mount Sinai Hospital to take up the position
of Surgeon-in-Chief. He remained as Surgeon-In-Chief until June 30,
2006. In 1999, he was appointed as Chairman of the Division of General
Surgery at the University of Toronto, an appointment which he now held
until June 30, 2009. He has served as the Chairman of the Promotions
Committee for the Department of Surgery from 1996 to 2001. He is an
active member of the Senior Advisory Committee and the Finance Committee
of the Department of Surgery. |
Zane Cohen’s clinical interests
have been almost entirely in the area of colon and rectal surgery. Zane
had the opportunity to train with Professor Nils Kock on three separate
occasions, and developed and brought to the university innovative
surgical techniques which have helped thousands of patients afflicted
with Inflammatory Bowel Disease and colorectal cancer. He has a specific
interest in sphincter saving operations, and introduced the procedures
of the Kock Pouch and the Pelvic Pouch techniques at the University of
Toronto to patients with ulcerative colitis. |
He also popularized
the use of the double-staple technique for low anterior resections
within the Division of General Surgery. Zane Cohen was the Co-Founder,
along with Philip Gordon, of the Canadian Society of Colon and Rectal
Surgeons and served as its second president. He was instrumental in
developing a Colon and Rectal Training Program at the University of
Toronto, amongst several of the teaching hospitals. His initial research
interests were in the field of intestinal transplantation, and he,
along with Dr. Bernard Langer, carried out the first human intestinal
transplantation in the cyclosporine era. |
Zane Cohen has authored
over 230 manuscripts and book chapters, mainly in the area of
Inflammatory Bowel Disease and colorectal cancer and intestinal
transplantation. He has held peer reviewed research grants from all of
the major granting agencies for his initial work in intestinal
transplantation and his subsequent research work related to outcomes in
inflammatory bowel disease. Zane has been an invited speaker world wide,
he has an international reputation, and he is held in esteem by many of
the general surgical residents, as well as the colorectal
residents/fellows that he has trained. |
He has been recognized
for his achievements on many occasions, most recently by the Finkelstein
Award for Continued Excellence in Research in Inflammatory Bowel
Disease, the Mentors Award from the American Society of Colon and Rectal
Surgeons in 2004, and the Colin R. Woolf Award for Excellence and
Innovation in Course Coordination in 2005 for the General Surgery Update
Course. He has been honored by Ben Gurion University of the Negev with a
gala affair in Toronto attended by over 800 people. |
Most
recently, he has been again honoured with the naming of the Zane Cohen
Centre for Digestive Diseases. Within this centre are 24 clinical
researchers from medical students to surgical and medical trainees, as
well as faculty, who are all involved in IBD and colon cancer research.
The Dr. Zane Cohen lectureship has recently been initiated by a group of
his colleagues.
Centre |
Contact |
Clinical Secretary |
Office Location |
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