Sean Patrick Francis Hughes (2 December 1941 â 4 May 2025) was British emeritus professor of orthopaedic surgery at Imperial College London where he was previously professor of orthopaedic surgery and head of the department of surgery, anaesthetics and intensive care. Earlier in his career he had been professor of orthopaedic surgery at the University of Edinburgh.
His clinical research topics included fracture healing, musculoskeletal infection and the surgery of degenerateÃÂ lumbar and cervical discs. His basic science research publications included studies of the microcirculation of bone, bone infection and the role of nitric oxide in bone and joint disease. He served as vice president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, and chairman of DISCS, the charity funding research into spinal conditions.
His interests in the history of medicine were focused on the history of orthopaedic surgery, and the doctor and poet John Keats.
Sean Hughes was born in Farnham, Surrey, England on 2 December 1941, the son of Patrick J. and Kathleen E. Hughes. He completed his early education at Downside School. He studied medicine at the University of London, qualifying MB BS in 1966. His surgical training in orthopaedics took place in London and he became a senior registrar in orthopaedic and trauma surgery at the Middlesex Hospital and the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital. He attained his FRCSEd in 1971 and FRCSEng and FRCSI the following year. Subsequently, he was awarded the degree of MS from University of London with a thesis on bone blood flow, completed while he was research fellow at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, US.
In 1979, Hughes was appointed Senior Lecturer and honorary consultant orthopaedic surgeon, Royal Postgraduate Medical School in London. Later that year he was appointed to the Chair of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Edinburgh. In 1984/85, he held an academic mentorship for Rüdiger Döhler. The International Skeletal Society's 25th anniversary book lists him as a member.
In 1991, Hughes became professor of orthopaedic surgery, Imperial College London and honorary consultant orthopaedic surgeon, Hammersmith Hospitals NHS Trust (1991âÂÂ2006). At the same time he took on the role of Chief of Service Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery, Hammersmith Hospitals NHS Trust, a post which he held until 1997, when he became the Trust's Clinical Director for Surgery and Anaesthetics. He was Non-Executive Director of the West Middlesex University Hospital (2001âÂÂ2005) and was Medical Director of Ravenscourt Park Hospital from 2002âÂÂ2004. Hughes was Clinical Director of the Hillingdon Primary Care Trust from 2008âÂÂ10.
In addition to his clinical and academic responsibilities, Hughes was Vice President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (1994âÂÂ97) and President of the British Orthopaedic Research Society (1995âÂÂ97). He served as chairman of the charity Action Research, now called Action Medical Research (1998âÂÂ1991).
Hughes was on the International Advisory Board of the Journal of Orthopaedics, Trauma and was Chairman of the charity Discovering Innovative Solutions for Conditions of the Spine (DISCS). He was also a primary editor of The Bone & Joint Journal.
Hughes performed basic research on bone blood flow mineral exchange, musculoskeletal infections and stem cell research. He had a special interest in degenerative disc disease and external fixation of fractures (Hughes-Suhktian fixator).
Hughes gave lectures on the history of orthopaedics and, in 2017, delivered the Keats Memorial Lecture at the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries, entitled "How Did John KeatsâÂÂs Medical Training Influence His Poetry?" In his 2021 paper on Keats, co-authored with Noell Snell, he argued that historians had been unduly critical in their assessment of James Clarke's treatment of Keats.
From 2021 to 2022, Hughes served as president of the History of Medicine Society at the Royal Society of Medicine (RSM), London. There, he established the Sarah Hughes Trust Lecture, which is delivered annually at the RSM. The annual event includes a prize for work on exposing fake news, awarded jointly by the RSM and the Medical Journalists' Association. He was also editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Biography. In 2024, he was named president-elect of the Osler Club of London, succeeding Daniel Sokol.
Hughes married Felicity Mary Anderson and they had two daughters and one son. Their elder daughter was the journalist Sarah Hughes.
Hughes died from lung cancer on 4 May 2025, at the age of 83.
Hughes wrote or contributed to over 200 publications in scientific journals, thirty-two chapters in books and thirteen books, including at least one with Rodney Sweetnam.