Tributes to Prof. Tony Gershlick

Tributes to Prof. Tony Gershlick

11th December 2020

This page is dedicated to tributes for the late Prof. Tony Gershlick who passed away on 20 November 2020 from COVID-19.

See a personal tribute from Prof. Nick Curzen here and a joint statement on his passing from BCS, BCIS and the BHF here.

If you would like to add your personal tribute, please forward your stories, photos and memories to BCIS@millbrookconferences.co.uk.


I have tried hard over the past week or so to find some way to articulate the personal impact Tony had on me over the years I knew him. It was back in 2002 I first met him, actually more in passing at Advanced Angioplasty as it was then, on the Lilly stand when he came to have a chat with Beccy about something or another… I don’t remember the details, but I do remember him laughing out loud to something I said. I think I felt a bit insecure at the time and unsure as to whether that was a good reaction or not! We next crossed paths at AHA in 2004, New Orleans, where I was truly blown away by his endless energy, thirst for knowledge and genuine care for his colleagues and friends. We had a lot of fun, Sunday brunch at Brennan’s, drinking a glass of fizz (when we could still do that) and enjoying some wonderful Jazz will always be a highlight, along with a slightly less cultural evening at Pat O’Brien’s drinking Hurricanes. He was already well on the way to completing the landmark REACT trial at that time. Here comes the honest exposure of my own failings, full disclosure, warts and all…… the really profound impact Tony had on me. It was an advisory board, Oxford, he was winding me up, teasing me over the quality of data for Reopro, provoking everyone round the table, generally being challenging. I behaved very unprofessionally and snapped, and said “well REACT, that was not such a great trial”……… what followed is one of those life lessons that I will never forget. He turned to me and said that patients volunteer to be part of something bigger than themselves, doctors put themselves on the line to push boundaries, nurses, statisticians, everyone who supports a trial does it for the benefit of humanity, and he pointedly said – who was I to even dare speak like that…….. He was so right, I felt humiliation and guilt, and I absolutely deserved it. The days that followed, in fact a couple of years, were not great – I had apologised of course, and he accepted that like a gentleman he was, but somehow I knew it was going to take an awful lot from me to repair that bridge. So I set about really thinking about everything I said, how it impacts others, what a privilege and  honour it is to work in the business of healthcare and be humble. I truly owe a lot of my career to Tony. We gradually became friends again and in fact enjoyed many congress banter for many years plus the occasional odd email or text when he would ask me about how to get from A to B, or which airline/train to take – very random stuff!! I recall fondly how observant he was at the ESC in Barcelona 2012, when a group of us walked back to the hotel, he turned to me and said “Em, that was the 1st time in all the years that I have known you that you didn’t leave the table to smoke – did you ever realise how much we enjoyed conversations with you and that would all end abruptly for a fag!” I can honestly say I never had realised, and I never smoked a cigarette again!  One of  our last international meetings was the ESC in Rome, where he brought Kathy, and they were happy together, easy in each other’s company – it was lovely to see. When I look back at everything now the one word that perhaps resonates with me about Tony is Generosity – of spirit, knowledge, time, and he really cared………

 – Emma van Eeden


Tony Gershlick was a wonderful man, and I still cannot believe he has gone. Tony has been ever-present throughout my career in intervention, and his loss is hard to take. I can still see him smiling, I can still hear him talking way past his time as the session chair shakes his head, or launching into another scribbled interpretation of Reverse-CART on the big screen. Tony made an unparalleled contribution to UK intervention through his innovation, research, and collaboration. He was a force of nature. But he was also a great bloke – one of those people who, whenever I saw him for the first time at whatever conference or meeting, made me feel happy just to be with. I’m so pleased that BCIS was able to give Tony the first ever Lifetime Achievement award, and I wish he was here to see how just how much he is loved. Thanks for everything Tony.

– Dr Dan Blackman


Tony gave me the one and only break in my short Cardiology career when he took me on as a Hospital Practitioner in Cardiology at Glenfield Hospital Leicester in 1990. I did a weekly session in his outpatient clinic for several enjoyable years. His infectious enthusiasm for the subject had me hooked early on and he regularly took time out to teach the finer points of the subject so dear to his heart. I remember feeling very daunted coming from a GP background but with his help and patience he instilled in me a confidence that enabled me to feel a valued member of his team.

His sparkling wit and deep compassion for his patients was always evident and it was easy to see how he built up the loyal following that he did amongst patients and colleagues alike.

My last memory and indeed last meeting with him was after a jazz concert we attended one evening at The Musician in Leicester. We had not met for several years and he was somewhat preoccupied having just discovered that he had left his car in a dodgy car park and returned to find the gates securely locked. Despite this, he welcomed me warmly and we reminisced briefly about our time together.

I was shocked to hear the news of his passing and can only gain a degree of comfort in the knowledge that he died in his beloved Glenfield hospital surrounded by his loving friends and colleagues.

RIP Tony you were one of the nicest people I have had the pleasure of knowing.

– Richard and Sue Moriarty


About two years ago, Tony was hosting his annual CTO day course. It was the usual highly educational, slightly chaotic, day and Professor Ochiai from Japan was getting towards the third hour of a twice-failed proximal RCA occlusion. He took a picture of the artery and demonstrated a knotted mass of wires with heavy dye staining. There was a short silence after which Professor Ochiai made encouraging noises about being not far from success. Tony looked at this fluoro image for a while and then said “you know when I was first training in angioplasty, that image that you have just shown would have been the most discouraging and alarming cine you could have wished to see during an angioplasty procedure, and yet here we are thirty years later looking at the same image and anticipating imminent success! It just goes to show that sometimes in a career things really can go full circle”. I loved the comment and laughed out loud because of course he was absolutely right  – it was a very perceptive remark which only he had the perspective to see.

– Prof. David Hildick-Smith


I first meant Prof Gershlick when I was a relatively green, junior registrar about 10 or 11 years ago. I was attending an NSTEMI meeting in Denmark. I was the only trainee from the UK in attendance, and at the end of the first day I was at the dinner reception, feeling decidedly out of my comfort zone. I was, I recall, nervously eating on my own. Prof Gershlick, who was the keynote speaker that day, had spotted me, probably looking uneasy, and despite him having a group of people speaking with him at the time, politely excused himself and came over to speak with me. We had never met, or spoken, but I of course knew of him very well. He then spent an hour or so speaking with me, asking about my background, my interests and my career plans (which I had limited information to give him at the time!). He also commented how he could tell that I had ‘poshed-up’ my original London accent, recounting that he was a proud Essex boy from Southend and often tried to do the same, and then reassured me to always be comfortable in my own skin! It was a chance meeting, that left a powerful imprint on me, his generosity with his time, the sincerity of his words not to mention the kindness of seeing me out of my depth and coming to my aid remain a vivid memory. That initial conversation led to numerous conversations, email dialogue and impromptu drinks at meetings we attended. I subsequently worked with him on a number of projects and he remained an important mentor for me throughout my training and beyond. I sought his advice when applying for consultant positions, where he meticulously poured through and edited my CV and applications. When I was appointed, he emailed me to saying “I am so excited for you and your future. Congratulations”. I will remember Prof Gershlick very fondly, as a pioneering interventional cardiologist and researcher, but most importantly as a kind, generous man with a unique enthusiasm and selflessness. I am hugely grateful for that chance meeting a decade or so ago. May he rest in peace.

– Dr Kalpa De Silva


I had known Tony for more than thirty years and met quite frequently at international conferences.  Many have already spoke of Tony’s love of jazz.  He was himself an accomplished jazz saxophonist.

One of his favourite professional jazz saxophonists was the American giant, now himself passed away, called Michael Brecker (of the Brecker Brothers) – possibly, possibly, a distant relative of mine.

I met Tony, quite by chance, in the cloakroom of the Royal Festival Hall during the interval of Michael Brecker concert.  Tony assumed I must be closely related to Michael – it gave him such deep pleasure to think he knew a relative of his hero that I never corrected him too vigorously!

I will miss Tony terribly.

Attached – photo of the late Michael Brecker, Jazz Saxophonist and one of Tony’s heroes

– Prof. Stephen J.D. Brecker


Attached is a photo from when Prof Gershlick did the Friday ACI 2020 live case with us from Derby.  He loved the sax montage.  

We’re all cut up because he so was so supportive to us all.

He went completely above and beyond when supervising my MD (a typically ‘ambitious’ project!)

The theme about Tony, and I think the reason people are so upset, is that he really was extremely generous with his time, very ‘inclusive’ of others (irrespective of their standing or status) and quite simply was great company and fun.  However, as Nick said he took his role as a mentor and supervisor very seriously- he was a truly inspirational trainer.  He always sounded delighted to hear from you, and highly interested in you, whenever you rang him up (although he probably wasn’t always delighted). I think that’s evidence of a real regard for others.

– Dr Damian Kelly


Here’s a picture of Tony and I from a few years ago. This was him, I say no more.

Missed. So much yet to do. So much yet to learn from him. (We were working on the RAPID NSTEMI trial & covid ACS international registry at the time of his premature death).

Rest in Peace, Tony

– Prof. Chris Gale


I’ll remember him for all the support he gave everyone, from junior doctors on CCU, new trainees with their first time in the lab, and other consultants. He was always keen to try new ideas and was a key developer of the adult cardiology service at Glenfield and East Midlands, supporting development of the ACHD service and broadening of structural/ adult congenital intervention. Great to hear and meet at conferences where he was always keen to hear what former trainees and colleagues were up to. Will be missed by many.

– Dr Simon MacDonald


Tribute to a Great Friend and Mentor, Professor Tony Gershlick

It’s a very sad day!! I went to work today and had a telephone call, a dreaded call……. My mind couldn’t function for a while. I felt stunned and devastated. It was a call from Glenfield Hospital Leicester breaking the news that my mentor Professor Tony Gershlick was no more with us. He had been ill in ITU after contracting COVID-19 a few days ago. Unfortunately he could not make it and lost his battle against the disease.

He was a father like figure to many of us including my five other cardiologist colleagues at Royal Derby Hospital. In particular, he was the one who transformed my career in cardiology. I worked with him as a Specialist Cardiology Registrar at Glenfield Hospital. This was the best time in my training. He played a pivotal role in teaching clinical and non clinical skills in cardiology, most importantly “How to do coronary angioplasty and stenting” procedure. I represented him in multple national and international cardiology meetings and conferences. I was also fortunate to assist him in a PCI procedure shown in “Tomorrows World,” a TV program telecast on BBC in 2002. In this procedure we pioneered the world’s first implantation of the drug eluting stent in man at Glenfield Hospital Leicester. Later, I had the privilege to do complex cases with him that were telecast live nationally.

This year (January 2020), Derby was selected as the centre to do complex Left Main Stem PCI with rotablation using new technology and stent dedicated for left main coronary artery disease. I did the procedure as a leading operator. Professor Tony Gershlick was the moderator for this case. His moderation and commentary was instrumental and increased the educational quality of the presentation.

His support of the Derby cardiology department has been phenomenal. He was here with us when I did the first rotablation in Derby in 2009. His contribution to research in the field of cardiology has been revolutionary. He was the Princiapl Investigator of ELUTES trial which was one of the first two trials on drug eluting stents. After this trial, it became possible to do the PCI in very complex coronary artery disease, making PCI a preferred and clinically better treatment compared to the coronary artery bypass surgery. This has lead to save thousands of lives all over the world. He has been the architect of many more pivotal clinical trials in the field of cardiovascular medicine. He was a renowned speaker in National and international cardiology conferences and meetings.

He has been the mentor of many of my colleagues in cardiology. He has supervised hundreds of cardiology trainees in completing their MDs and PHDs who are now serving in this field both nationally and internationally.

He was a thorough gentleman with ingenious professional skills and an exceptional personality

Indeed, I am short of words to explain the great loss of a very caring friend who was also my mentor.

He shall be greatly missed by all. He has left a big vacuum, which will be difficult to fill……………

May his soul rest in peace!

Professor Tony Gershlick at Royal Derby Hospital 24 January 2020

– Dr Tariq Azeem 


This is a silly thing probably. However…. A couple of years ago at one of Tony’s excellent Leicester CTO courses, he was working the room in his own inimitable style as we looked at some terrible case or other. I was relatively near the back (probably late) and the front benches were occupied by some younger and more attractive cardiologists. Tony caught my attention by saying something like: “Well, we have some senior and very experienced interventionists in the room. Andrew – what do you think?”. I was knocking 50 at the time, but I felt a distinct thrill that Tony G considered me a senior and experienced interventionist, so much so I probably said something totally inane!

– Dr Andrew Sutton


He was an interventionist cut from different cloth. There was no aggression or one-upmanship from Prof. On the CCU and in the cath lab he was a kind educator. He made time.

– Dr Gareth Squire


Tony Gershlick was an amazing person, seasoned cardiologist and a kind supervisor. My last meeting with him was on 31/10/2020 and his last reply to my email was on 12/11/2020.  I worked with him in cat lab at Glenfield H for an year as interventional fellow. After having few sessions in cash lab  with him early this year he shared the attached photo on his twitter account  after asking me to do so. On quite few stressful occasions in cash lab I found him to be a smile spreader on gloomy and stressed faces. He was readily available. He was a huge figure in interventional cardiology but was down to earth. I found him supportive and encouraging. He was funny. May his soul rest in peace.

– Dr Zia Ullah Jan 


Recently we so tragically lost to COVID one of the true godfathers of cardiology and a genuinely wonderful person, Professor Tony Gershlick. I have attached just a few photos of the countless memories I have of him.

I was one of the huge number of fellows who had the privilege to be supervised by him during my research and to work with him on some of the countless clinical studies and training courses he organised.

This news has left so many of us completely devastated and it is no surprise that in addition to his family and friends, much of the international cardiology community is in mourning. He will be sorely missed by so many.

RIP Prof G…

– Dr Nikesh Malik

Tony Gershlick: A Personal Tribute by Nick Curzen, BCIS President

Tony Gershlick: A Personal Tribute by Nick Curzen, BCIS President

23rd November 2020

Dear BCIS member

We are planning to coordinate a tribute to Tony Gershlick that will include memories and anecdotes about him from members who knew him well.  We will issue details about this shortly. In the meantime, I have prepared this personal tribute to Tony.

Very best wishes

Nick

BCIS President


This photo of Tony always makes me smile.  It was taken at TCT a few years ago when we were picking up our registration badges… as well as the actual badge, if you were lucky enough to be on Faculty you got a red ribbon stuck at the bottom marked “Faculty”.  On this year, I was particularly proud to get a second ribbon because I had served on one of the committees. My pride was somewhat dented when I met Tony wearing his badge… with 5 ribbons at the bottom!  This is him striking what we agreed was a nonchalant pose that was also designed to highlight the achievement. A typically fun, tongue in cheek reaction by him, and a typically crap bit of photography by me! We laughed even harder at my inability to fit his head on the picture…

I have known Tony since the early 1990s. This was at the very start of my interventional cardiology training. His presence has therefore been a constant in my career in this amazing specialty, which explains the profound emptiness and loss that I have been feeling since I heard of his passing on Friday.  This constancy in his presence is no exaggeration: it is true to say that Tony has been part of my experience of every BCIS meeting, nearly every PCR, TCT, & most training courses to which I have been lucky enough to have contributed.  From the early days when I started giving talks, I have enjoyed in depth, powerpoint-nerdy, back-and-forth banter with Tony about my backgrounds, fonts and animations.  It has been a rare meeting that he hasn’t criticised what I had thought were novel & exciting features  of my presentations, whilst subtly trying to work out how an animation was contrived, or which new font featured.  It was not unusual for one of us to text or email the other asking if we could borrow their talk, partly to see how they had managed a particular effect!  His talks were always a treat:  colourful, meticulously laid out, visually confrontational, and presented with clarity, passion, and usually some degree of challenge.  Tony was a natural teacher and communicator.  He was an instinctive advocate of, and for, interventional cardiology. He took every course and conference as an opportunity to learn and to help others to learn with him.  His thirst for information and knowledge, and his love for interventional cardiology was plain for everyone to see and share.  His technical dexterity and decision-making skills in the catheter lab have not only allowed him to play a pioneering role in so many developments in our specialty (primary PCI, CTO PCI, left main PCI, new imaging, physiology to mention a few), but also to pass on this wealth of knowledge to scores of fortunate registrars and fellows.  There has been an avalanche of stories since Tony died from those in whom he invested time and support to help advance their careers. He took his role as a supervisor and mentor extremely seriously, and was rightfully proud of those he had helped.

This clinical excellence and leadership would, in itself, have made Tony an outstanding member of the UK interventional community. But it is in the field of original research that his achievements have attracted international recognition, for which we all owe him a debt of gratitude.  I have been very lucky to have been able to interact with Tony on countless occasions in relation to research projects… lucky because these experiences have offered me so many chances to learn, to joust and argue with his avid, restless, inquisitive, challenging intellect, and to derive fun and satisfaction in the process.   In my opinion, Tony has been the single most influential figure in interventional cardiology research in the UK.  Until he set up and delivered the REACT trial (looking at rescue PCI after failed thrombolysis), there had been no substantial UK randomised trials in our specialty. The fact that he showed that this was possible directly inspired a generation of academically-minded junior colleagues to pursue original research and randomised trials. REACT was, in my view, the principal catalyst for the ever-expanding production of quality original UK research in our field, of which we are now rightly collectively proud.  From that point, Tony tirelessly moved from one project to another, hungrily pursuing the answer to one clinically immediate question after another… from primary PCI, facilitated PCI, to complete revascularisation, left main PCI, and antiplatelet therapy to name just a few.  In the process, he built up a huge band of followers & collaborators who would contribute to his projects over and over again.  The sense of privilege of either planning a project with him, or analysing the results once the recruitment was over, is deeply held and ongoing for me. Being caught up in the whirlwind energy of a Gershlick idea or analysis was intoxicating, exciting and, occasionally, infuriating!

Tony was increasingly recognised over the years by the international community.  His network of collaborators across the globe rapidly extended, so that he became a go-to representative for UK intervention for both multicentre trials and as a keynote speaker.  The standards of excellence that he maintained in both fields is testament to his dedication and drive. He was our key ambassador in interventional cardiology and paved the way for many others.

I will miss Tony Gershlick for all these achievements and characteristics. But I will also miss him as a friend… some of the best times I have ever had at conferences or courses have been in his company. His obvious joy at being with people and interacting with them, his desire to be inclusive of strangers or colleagues new to the group, his innate ability to entertain was both inspirational and infectious to someone much less adept at these skills.  His engaging manner with others sprung from an obvious and genuine fascination with people:  for example, his in depth questioning about my various interests in HIIT, StreetFighting and beard growing yielding much hilarity, which I treasure now.  I will really miss his sense of humour, which could be razor sharp one moment and deeply generous the next… I can remember many evenings when we laughed for hours.  It was immensely rewarding to get Tony talking about his many interests, gradually unveiling his considerable abilities as a rugby player, jazz musician, furniture maker and painter.  As a man who achieved so much, he could be refreshingly self-deprecating, especially when, only hours earlier, he would have been such a powerful antagonist in a conference room.

Tony Gershlick was a pioneer in clinical care but also in advancing our understanding of interventional cardiology. His drive to pursue these goals never eroded:  only four weeks ago he spent a couple of hours excitedly talking over with me his next big idea for a randomised trial, knowing that we shared the niggling doubt that complete revascularisation for STEMI patients is unlikely to benefit all of them, but that we actually urgently need to identify which to apply it to and which not. If this trial had got off the ground, it would have finished recruitment when Tony was well into his seventies: this didn’t seem to have even occurred to him! He gave me no indication that he had considered retiring.

Rest in Peace, Tony. Your contribution to our specialty has been simply extraordinary. Your legacy will live on both in terms of the effect that your research has had on both patient care and on the younger colleagues who were inspired to believe they could indeed achieve academic success, and in terms of the passion and skill that are essential requirements for a top quality clinical interventionist which you have passed on to so many other doctors. I will miss you like mad… at the moment,  I just can’t contemplate a big conference without you giving talks, asking questions and taking the mick out of me! Thanks for everything. You were great, and I wish I had told you that.

Prof Tony Gershlick: Rest In Peace

Prof Tony Gershlick: Rest In Peace

20th November 2020

Dear Colleague,

We are very sad to inform you that Professor Tony Gershlick died last night as a result of COVID infection. Tony was a leading light of interventional cardiology for more than 35 years and a tireless advocate of the importance of trials to guide clinical practice. He was directly involved in every major advance in coronary intervention and his influence as a key opinion leader extended around the world. He remained extremely active in clinical and academic practice and was due next week to be Chairing an International Symposium on the Impact of the COVID pandemic on acute coronary syndromes.

We extend our sincere condolences to Tony’s family and colleagues.

Yours sincerely