Christos S. Bartsocas (Greek: çÃÂîÃÂÃÂÿàãÃÂ. ÃÂÃÂñÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂúñÃÂ), is a Greek pediatric endocrinologist and clinical geneticist, presently Professor Emeritus at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. He is known for the first report of the Bartsocas-Papas Syndrome (OMIM: 263650 on chromosome 21q22, LD26.4Y in ICD-11 and ORPHA:1234) and for his contribution to the development of pediatric diabetes care in Greece.
Bartsocas was born in Athens, Greece, in 1937. He received his elementary education at the Experimental School of the University of Athens, which was completed at South Pasadena High School, South Pasadena, California, on an American Field Service scholarship, in 1954. He attended the University of Athens Medical School receiving his MD in 1960 and a D.Med.Sc. degree in 1963. Between 1960 and 1963, he served as a Medical Officer in the Hellenic Navy. He began training in pediatrics in Athens, followed by a senior assistant residency and a senior residency at the Department of Pediatrics, Yale University School of Medicine (1964âÂÂ1966). Training in Pediatric Endocrinology, Metabolism and Medical Genetics followed at the Children's Endocrine Service of the Massachusetts General Hospital/ Harvard Medical School (1966âÂÂ1968).
Bartsocas served at senior positions in the Children's Hospitals in Athens and the University of Athens Medical and Nursing Faculties, being elected Lecturer in 1977 and Professor of Pediatrics in 1993, and retired in 2004 as a Professor Emeritus.
Nonetheless, he organized and ran the âÂÂMiteraâ Children's Hospital in Athens (2003âÂÂ2014) . Finally, he retired as a Consultant for Development from the Athens Medical Center in 2017. He is Board Certified in Pediatrics (FAAP) and Clinical Genetics (FACMG) in the US, as well as in Pediatrics and Endocrinology in Greece. He held Licenses-Board Certifications to practice Medicine in Athens (Greece), Massachusetts and Illinois.
He was also the national representative at the European Union Committee of Experts on Rare Diseases - EUCERD (2010âÂÂ2015), and the corresponding Fellow American Academy of Pediatrics, of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and Corresponding member of the Société Française de Pédiatrie and the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kinder- und Jugendmedizin.
Apart from teaching Pediatrics, Diabetes and Medical Genetics at undergraduate, graduate and postgraduate levels in Greece, Bartsocas taught as Guest Lecturer, MGH (1972); as Visiting Professor at Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine, Chicago (1973); SUNY at Stony Brook (1985âÂÂ1987); Yale University (1981); UC San Diego; Las Vegas; Chicago; Ghent, Belgium; à Âódà º, Poland (1979); Helsinki, Finland; University of Essen; Münster and Hamburg, Germany (1979); Amman, Jordan; Samsun, Turkey; and Cape Town, Johannesburg and Pretoria, South Africa.
Christos S. Bartsocas, has been the leading figure for the development of diabetes care in children and adolescents in Greece since the 1970s. Following his return to Greece he established a clinic for patients with diabetes at the "P.&A. Kyriakou" Athens Children's Hospital in the 1970s, which was declared officially as a Pediatric Diabetes Center in 1990, the only one in the country for some time. He was able to run the Center until his retirement from the University of Athens in September 2004. Parentsâ groups and seminars for physicians and parents have been organized by Bartsocas since the 1970s and summer camps for patients have been organized every year since 1997.
With assistance from the Pediatric Nursing Faculty of the University of Athens, Bartsocas organizes an annual course for nursesâ certification in Diabetes Education and Care, as well as a school nursesâ training program for diabetes. Since 1976, Bartsocas was the organizer of International Clinical Genetics Seminars every 3 years, held until 2004.
Bartsocas organized the 1993 ISGD/ISPAD Annual Meeting, aboard MTS âÂÂArcadiaâ on the Aegean Sea.
He was the Vice-President of the EASD Meeting in Athens, 2005, and the organizer of the Satellite Meeting in Delphi, titled "2000 years of Diabetes".
Bartsocas established support groups for parents of children with diabetes (of which he was the founder and first president), a parents' association (PEAND) and the Greek Affiliate of Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (1983âÂÂ2007).
Bartsocas' research focused initially on metabolic amino-acid transport diseases (Lowe's syndrome, Hartnup disease) and particularly on the lysosomal disorders) reporting Type C Sanfilippo disease as well as dysmorphology. Most important contribution was the report of a severe malformation, the so-called now Bartsocas-Papas syndrome, in the Journal of Medical Genetics in 1972, 9:222-226. He contributed to the identification of G6PD "Ierapetra" with E. Beutler and the Samfilippo Type C syndrome with H. Kresse. The fast increasing prevalence of Type 1 diabetes mellitus has been the focus of his interest during the last four decades. He actively participated in the European Union Concerted Action groups EURODIAB, DIAMOND, ENDIT, VirDiab, SmartDiab etc., the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) and the International Society of Pediatric & Adolescent Diabetes (ISPAD). Nonetheless he has actively contributed to the Rare Diseases in Europe, as the Greek representative in EUCERD.
Bartsocas has received many honors, among them:
Bartsocas has also received multiple Honorary and Research Awards by the Hellenic Diabetes Association, the Hellenic Diabetes Federation, the Hellenic Society for Endocrinology, the Hellenic Pediatric Association, Lions Clubs of Greece and civic organizations.
Bartsocas has published over 200 scientific articles.
Some of his most important books are listed below: