Toronto General Hospital, Princess Margaret Hospital
Mildred Vera Peters, OC (28 April 1911 – 1 October 1993) was a Canadian oncologist and clinical investigator.
Peters received her medical degree from the University of Toronto in 1934.[1] In 1950 she published a landmark paper demonstrating for the first time that many patients with early Hodgkin's disease, then considered incurable, could be completely cured if given high-dose radiation.[2] She later went on to study the use of radiation therapy in the treatment of breast cancer.[3] Her research, carried out at the Princess Margaret Hospital, demonstrated that breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy) followed by radiation was just as effective as radical mastectomy which had a significant impact on the lives of the many women who experience breast cancer.[4][5][6]
Peters' original research was met with skepticism by the medical establishment in the 1950s and she remarked in an interview that it took over 10 years for her findings to be accepted.[5]
^Peters, MV (4 January 1965). "Radiation Therapy". JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 191 (1): 28–29. doi:10.1001/jama.1965.03080010034008.
^Peters, MV (1970). "Radiation therapy in the management of breast cancer". Proceedings, National Cancer Conference. 6: 163–74. PMID5458090.
^ ab"Dr. M. Vera Peters". Canadian Medical Hall of Fame Inductees. 2015. Retrieved 2015-04-19.
^ abcd"Vera Peters changed cancer therapy: [SU2 Edition]". Toronto Star; Toronto, Ont. Toronto, Ont., Canada, Toronto, Ont. 1993-10-03. pp. –12. ISSN0319-0781. ProQuest436927858.
^Dunlop, Marilyn (1992-05-24). "Where's the cure for breast cancer?: [SU2 Edition]". Toronto Star; Toronto, Ont. Toronto, Ont., Canada. p. 4. ISSN0319-0781. ProQuest436622739.
^Gignac, Tamara (2009-10-17). "U of C med school founder honoured; William Cochrane named to Medical Hall of Fame". Calgary Herald; Calgary, Alta. Calgary, Alta., Canada, Calgary, Alta. pp. –5. ISSN0828-1815. ProQuest243914149.