Long Term Follow Up and Recurrence Patterns Following Surgery
Presenter Bio:
Dr. Philip Theodosopoulos is the Director of Skull Base Tumor Program and a Professor and Vice-Chair of neurological surgery at the University of California, San Francisco. He recently came to UCSF from the University of Cincinnati where he served as the Residency Program Director and the Director of Skull Base Surgery for the past decade. Dr. Theodosopoulos completed his undergraduate work at MIT and medical school at Stanford University. He completed his neurosurgical training at UCSF and a fellowship in cerebrovascular and skull base surgery at the Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University.
Dr. Theodosopoulos' primary clinical interests involve the treatment of skull base lesions, particularly acoustic neuromas, meningiomas, pituitary adenomas, and malignancies as well as minimally invasive approaches to the skull base. He has extensive expertise in the endoscopic treatment of pituitary adenomas and chordomas and has been a pioneer in the development of new surgical approaches to the skull base.
He has been faculty on more than 50 national and international surgical courses and serves on the Congress of Neurological Surgeons Education Committee. Dr. Theodosopoulos also has extensive expertise in the field of Outcomes Research having completed the UCSF Outcome Research and Clinical Epidemiology full curriculum as a resident and having remained involved in outcomes research at the local and national level.
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Philip V. Theodosopoulos, MD
Professor and Vice Chair
Neurological Surgery
Chief & Director, Skull Base Tumor Program
Co-Director, Neurosurgery Clinical Programs
University of California San Francisco
Description
Presenter Bio:
Dr. Philip Theodosopoulos is the Director of Skull Base Tumor Program and a Professor and Vice-Chair of neurological surgery at the University of California, San Francisco. He recently came to UCSF from the University of Cincinnati where he served as the Residency Program Director and the Director of Skull Base Surgery for the past decade. Dr. Theodosopoulos completed his undergraduate work at MIT and medical school at Stanford University. He completed his neurosurgical training at UCSF and a fellowship in cerebrovascular and skull base surgery at the Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University.
Dr. Theodosopoulos' primary clinical interests involve the treatment of skull base lesions, particularly acoustic neuromas, meningiomas, pituitary adenomas, and malignancies as well as minimally invasive approaches to the skull base. He has extensive expertise in the endoscopic treatment of pituitary adenomas and chordomas and has been a pioneer in the development of new surgical approaches to the skull base.
He has been faculty on more than 50 national and international surgical courses and serves on the Congress of Neurological Surgeons Education Committee. Dr. Theodosopoulos also has extensive expertise in the field of Outcomes Research having completed the UCSF Outcome Research and Clinical Epidemiology full curriculum as a resident and having remained involved in outcomes research at the local and national level.