Remembering Prof Stephan Perren

 

Prof Stephan M Perren

AO founding father and senior scientific advisor Prof Stephan M Perren, 87, died Thursday, November 21, 2019, in Davos, Switzerland.

Globally renowned for his strain theory explaining tissue deformation as a critical mechanical factor that controls bone healing, Perren was director of the AO Research Institute Davos (ARI) from 1967–1996. Recognized as an icon and a visionary, he is equally revered for his commitment to mentoring young researchers. He had a profound and lasting impact on all those who worked with him, on the broader AO community, and on the AO's reputation for excellence in education, innovation, and research.

Perren, who is survived by his wife, Alice, and their four children, Dominic, Nicolas, Andreas and Peter, was born and raised in Zermatt, Switzerland. He attended high school in Schwyz before studying medicine at the University of Zurich, where he earned his diploma in 1960. He completed his thesis in 1965 at the University of Bern and, in 1987, received an honorary Doctor of Science degree from the University of Guelph in Canada.

He held honorary professorships at the University of Bern, Universidad de Montevideo in Uruguay, and the University of Wales Aberystwyth. Over the course of his long career, Perren was a lecturer at the University of Basel, ETH-Zurich, the University of Bern, and Hong Kong University, and was an esteemed faculty member for AO courses in both Davos and abroad.

In 1965 Perren took the leadership reins at the Laboratory for Experimental Surgery, today known as ARI, serving as director until 1996. During that time, he moved ARI’s research emphasis toward the mechanobiology of tissue repair, with a focus on the interaction of mechanical and biological influences on bone formation, remodeling, and healing. Under his leadership, important strides were made in internal fracture fixation, including the development of plates with limited and no contact with the underlying bone avoiding contact necrosis and tissue-friendly surgical procedures. After leaving ARI, he continued serving as a senior scientific advisor and active in research at ARI as recently as this week.

“Stephan was a distinguished scientist whose work on bone mechanics and healing is world renowned,” said ARI Director Prof Geoff Richards. “He was the scientific fundament of the AO Foundation's education which has influenced so many surgeons and his science also influenced many scientists in the musculoskeletal field and societies within this broad field. He was a very strong advocate of freedom to explore in research to allow discovery of real novelties that then could be developed and translated.”

On a personal note, Richards called Perren “a true mentor, lifelong scientist, and friend.” 

In addition to his early role as director of AO, Perren was chair of the AO Technical Commission and Development Steering Committee for 16 years.

Under Stephan’s leadership, the scientific discoveries developed in the ARI were matched by the arrival of new implants. First came the justification for compression plating, followed by the Dynamic Compression Plate (DCP), then the Limited Contact Dynamic Compression Plate (LC-DCP), then the Point Contact Fixator (PC-Fix), and finally the limited invasive stabilization system (LISS). Stephan understood research and researchers; he created an environment which attracted creative minds and allowed them to flourish.

Additionally, Perren founded several well-known international societies, including the European Society of Biomechanics (ESB), where the AO Foundation has sponsored the ESB S.M. Perren Research Award since 2002, and the International Society for Fracture Repair.  He was the recipient of a number of prestigious awards, including the AO Prize (1968), the 1983 Danis Prize presented by the Société International de Chirurgie, the 1993 Johann Friedrich Dieffenbach bust from the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Unfallchirurgie (German Society for Trauma Surgery), the Association Internationale pour l'Ostéosynthèse Dynamique Award 2000 for the 100th birthday of Gerhard Küntscher, the 2001 Orthopedic Research Society Arthur Steindler, MD Award, and—in 2004—the AO Prize for lifetime achievements.

Furthermore, the Stephan Perren AO Trauma Research Traveling Fellowship was established in his honor, providing young and enthusiastic researchers with a special interest in trauma care the opportunity to visit ARI and the Julius Wolff Institute for Biomechanics and Musculoskeletal Regeneration in Berlin, Germany, for two weeks each. The fellowship drives forward Perren’s legacy as both a researcher and a mentor to young researchers.
 

‘An enormous loss’

AO founding member Thomas P Rüedi knew Perren since 1965 when they both served on Allgöwer’s team at Kantonsspital Chur. Perren was a senior resident and Rüedi had just joined as a surgical trainee. Eight years later, after Perren had become head of the Laboratory for Experimental Surgery (now ARI), he was Rüedi’s PhD mentor and coach for six months, providing unlimited enthusiasm and support as Rüedi wrote his thesis. In 1982, Perren, Peter Matter, and Rüedi were privileged to join the AO fathers—as a second generation—in the creation of the AO Foundation.

“Under his leadership, ARI evolved to one of the world’s best-known facilities in its field, attracting fellows from all continents,” Rüedi said. “Until his very last days Stephan was still full of ideas in the search for new facts and explanations of the biological and biomechanical secrets of bone healing. Besides his research, he was a great teacher and mentor, an exceptional personality and a wonderful friend. His passing away is an enormous loss for research, the AO community and, of course, for his family and many close friends.”


‘Impossible to measure his influence’

AO Past President (2000–2002) Prof Peter Matter and Perren trained together as surgeons under Allgöwer at Chirurgie Kantonsspital Chur, where Matter—as chief resident—was Perren’s mentor. After Perren became director of the Laboratory for Experimental Surgery in Davos, those roles were reversed: Perren became the mentor from 1966–1967 while Matter did his University of Basel internship there.

“One of the very special adventures I had with Stephan was doing the very first classical sheep experiments to prove that fracture fragments put under pressure and fixed by a plate would not resorb bone,” Matter said. He explained that the experiment used a strain gauge-mounted plate allowing continuous measurement of the pressure between bone fragments along the life of the sheep. “It proved our hypothesis: We had direct bone healing.”

Like so many others in the AO universe, Matter pointed out Perren’s immeasurable contributions to the advancement of patient care.

“Stephan Perren was a mentor to so many scientists from all over the world that it would be impossible to measure his influence,” Matter said, adding that his friend’s scientific prowess, kind spirit and commitment to mentorship made him a true champion.

 
‘An extraordinary man’


Prof Pietro Regazzoni, an honorary AO Trustee since 1990, described his close friend and colleague Perren as “a pillar of the AO…but above all an extraordinary man.”

“He has been and remains extraordinary, not only because the results of his research are now integral part of the manuals of musculoskeletal surgery,” Regazzoni said. “Founder and research mastermind of our still unique AO Foundation, he is outstanding because of the spectrum of his personality. For a majority of his collaborators, he was not only the director but a kind of paternal figure. His generosity and empathic leadership style were important ingredients. For an impressive number of surgeons, the rigor of scientific thinking was, is and will remain linked to the person of Stephan.

 
‘An inspiring teacher and mentor’

“"With Stephan's death, AO lost its scientific backbone and founder,” said AO Past President Chris van der Werken (2006–2008) from the Netherlands, who described Perren as “an inspiring teacher and mentor but above all a warm personal friend…we will all miss him.”

“We were so lucky to have such a great mentor with Stephan," said inventor and former ARI Research Associate (1983–1996) Slobodan Tepic.

“Stephan was a pioneer and a visionary man,” added AO Trauma Europe and Southern Africa Board member Pol M Rommens, who initiated the Stephan Perren AO Trauma Research Traveling Fellowship. “He especially was a worldwide recognized and respected trauma researcher. I am happy and proud that I could start with the AO Trauma research fellowship, which bears his name. This and other initiatives will keep his achievements alive within the AO Trauma world.”

AO Past President (1998–2000) Joseph Schatzker, an honorary AO member, recounted Perren’s contribution in detail:

“With the death of Stephan Perren, we have lost one of the great pioneers of the AO. Stephan took over the leadership of the ARI in the late 1960s.

Almost from day he took over, he began to advance our knowledge about the relationship between bone healing and bone surgery,” Schatzker said. “Stephan’s brilliant scientific research explained, step by step, all the mysteries surrounding the surgical manipulation of bone and its biological consequences. Without his research, the AO would not have had the solid scientific foundation that was necessary to refute its many opponents who ridiculed the idea that bone could heal under compression.”

He said each AO clinical advance was matched by an equally brilliant scientific explanation provided by Perren and his colleagues in the ARI working under his leadership.

“He was also a brilliant teacher. During AO courses, we saw him lugging fully stuffed briefcases as he rushed from one lecture theater to another,” said Schatzker. “His teaching was innovative; he enlivened his lectures with many simple teaching aids that he created to explain the concept he was attempting to demonstrate beyond any doubt. He had the gift to make the most complex biomechanical concept simple.” 

‘He will be very much missed’

Schatzker described Perren as one of the AO’s most distinguished members—and one who will be profoundly missed.

“Not only a dedicated physician and an enthusiastic researcher, who never retired from working on innovative projects, Stephan was also a courageous pilot with many exploits to his credit. He was devoted to his family and a great friend to many,” he said. “The AO community has lost one of its most distinguished members. He will be very much missed. I have lost a close friend and colleague, whom I admired for the past fifty years.”