Eleanor D. Montague | |
---|---|
Born | (1926-02-11)February 11, 1926 |
Died | November 9, 2018(2018-11-09) (aged 92) |
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater | Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania |
Known for | pioneering treatments for breast cancer |
Spouse | Meredith Montague III |
Children | 4 |
Scientific career | |
Fields | radiation oncology |
Institutions | University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center |
Eleanor D. Montague (February 11, 1926 – November 9, 2018)[1] was an Americanradiologist and educator who established breast-conserving therapy in the United States and improved radiation therapy techniques.[2] She became a member of theTexas Women's Hall of Fame in 1993.[3][4]
Montague was bornEleanor Dino inGenoa, Italy, the only child of Frank and Sylvia Dino.[2] Her family moved to EasternPennsylvania when she was in elementary school, where she remained until graduating valedictorian of her high school class.[4][5]
Montague received a bachelor's degree inbiology from theUniversity of Alabama[6] and anMD from theWoman's Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1950. She met her husband, Meredith "Monty" Montague III, while working in the emergency room atKings County Hospital Center; she overheard him saying that he would never marry a woman doctor. They became friends and then were married a few years later.[3] She worked inJapan for two years while her husband was stationed at aMASH unit there.
Montague completed her residency in radiology atColumbia-Presbyterian Medical Center. In 1959, Montague joined the radiotherapy department at theUniversity of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center under anAmerican Cancer Society fellowship. She was employed at MD Anderson from 1961 to 1983. In 1973, she became a radiotherapy professor.[4] She retired in 1987.[2]
Montague was a pioneer inbreast cancer research and treatment. During the 1960s-70s,mastectomy was considered the only cure for breast cancer. Montague instead advocated forlumpectomy, a more moderate surgery, combined with radiation therapy to preserve breast function and appearance for patients with early-stage breast cancer. Following clinical trials and a treatment program that Montague initiated at Anderson, breast-conserving therapy became established practice in the United States.[2] Montague also pioneered new radiation therapy techniques and approaches for patients with advanced breast cancer, paved the way forchemotherapy to become part of a multimodal treatment approach,[2] and criticised the ongoing use of radical mastectomy.[7]
An award in her name, the Eleanor Montague Distinguished Resident Award in Radiation Oncology, was created by the American Association for Women Radiologists.[4]
She was a member of the board of directors for the American Cancer Society of Therapeutic Radiologists and of the executive of the American Radium Society. Montague served on the National Breast Cancer Task Force and with the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast Project.[6]
Montague was a prolific scholar, publishing more than 100 articles during her career. A partial list of her publications:
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