Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre


The Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, also known as the Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute and commonly abbreviated as the Peter Mac, is an Australian oncology research institute, cancer treatment, and professional oncologist training centre located in Melbourne, Victoria. The Centre is named in honour of Sir Peter MacCallum. Since June 2016, the Peter Mac has been located within the Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre in.
The Peter Mac is Australia’s first public hospital dedicated to cancer treatment, research and education.
Research programs at the centre include the Australian Cancer Research Foundation Cancer Cell Biology Program and the ACRF Victorian Centre for Functional Genomics in Cancer.

History

In 1949 the Victorian Cancer Institute was established, and the following year its outpatient services were named the Peter MacCallum Clinic. It was named after the dean of the Faculty of Medicine at Melbourne University, Peter MacCallum, who along with Rutherford Kaye-Scott had a significant role in its founding. At the time it was a common practice not to inform patients that they had cancer. It was thought that because radiotherapy was also quite commonly used at that time to treat non-cancerous conditions such as severe acne, "strawberry birthmarks", frozen shoulders, keloid scars and also to provide a valuable and non-invasive means for medical sterilisation, the name "Peter MacCallum Clinic" would be much less threatening because the clinic could be positioned as a specialist radiotherapeutic centre rather than it being thought of as a dedicated cancer hospital.
The Clinic was originally located in a single room of the Queen Victoria Hospital in central Melbourne. Its main facility was based at the corner William Street and Little Lonsdale Street, near Flagstaff Gardens where the County Court of Victoria buildings were later built.. The Institute established Australia's first training school for radiotherapists. In 1986, the Institute were collectively renamed as the Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute. By 1994, the Institute was operating out of 11 sites across Melbourne. At this time, it moved into St Andrew's Hospital in, it having purchased been purchased from the Uniting Church of Australia and Presbyterian Church of Victoria by the state government in 1990.

Location

In June 2016, the Institute moved to the purpose-built building at the entrance to Melbourne’s Parkville bio-medical precinct, located at 305 Grattan Street, Melbourne, with satellite services at the Bendigo Base Hospital, Epworth Eastern, the Monash Medical Centre and Sunshine Hospital in St Albans. It involves some shared services with the nearby Royal Melbourne Hospital, the Royal Women's Hospital and the Royal Children's Hospital. Its current site was previously home to the Royal Dental Hospital.