La clinique
23, rue Georges Bizet
75116 Paris
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Numéro de téléphone du service d’hospitalisation : 01 40 69 35 37 ou 01 40 69 35 33 Numéro de téléphone du service ambulatoire : 01 40 69 35 91…
La Clinique Bizet est habilitée par l’Agence Régionale de Santé (ARS) pour la prise en charge chirurgicale de différents types de cancers : cancers mammaires, digestifs et viscéraux, urologiques et thyroïdiens. Notre service d’oncologie médicale, ainsi…
A la clinique Bizet vous pouvez avoir accès à différent type de soins au tour de la gastroentérologie. L’endoscopie digestive, consiste à observer l’œsophage, l’estomac et le duodénum, grâce à un tube souple muni d’une petite caméra et à pratiquer des…
L’orthopédie et la chirurgie réparatrice du membre supérieur a beaucoup évoluée ces trente dernières années grâce au développement de l’imagerie (IRM, Scanner 3D), de l’amélioration du matériel (arthroscopes, arthroplastie sur mesure), des progrès de l…

Dotée d’un plateau technique moderne et performant et de praticiens de haut niveau, elle se distingue pour sa prise en charge d’excellence dans de nombreuses spécialités.
Grâce à la collaboration du Pr Richard Douard (chirurgien digestif) et du Pr Gabriel Rahmi (endoscopiste interventionnel), un jeune patient a pu bénéficier de l’ablation mini-invasive endoscopico-chirurgicale d’une volumineuse tumeur du rectum. La tume…
Nous avons l’immense joie d’accueillir, au sein de notre établissement, une Maison : un lieu chaleureux et réconfortant, imaginé pour les patientes en oncologie. Cet espace de répit, créé en collaboration avec nos médecins, permet aux femmes touchées p…
Nous sommes fiers de vous annoncer que la Clinique Bizet a été certifiée par la Haute Autorité de Santé (HAS) avec un score de conformité de 99,55 %, et a obtenu la mention « Haute Qualité des Soins ». Cette distinction reflète notre engagement et celui…
Spécialités :
Chirurgie du sein, Chirurgie gynécologique et sénologique, Institut du sein
Spécialités :
Chirurgie institut de la main, Chirurgie orthopédique des membres supérieurs
Spécialités :
Chirurgie institut parisien de l’épaule, Chirurgie orthopédique des membres supérieurs
I continue to see the Paris Breast Centre as a place that was advancing the field and setting the trend. And I think that really spoke to me as a great opportunity to learn some of these techniques and take them back to Canada. There’s a level of expertise in France, in Europe specifically at the Paris Breast Centre that I don’t think you can obtain in Canada the United States. Their unique model, their unique approach to breast cancer was something that I wanted to take back and pursue.
The concept of oncoplastic surgery started in Europe and I think the team at the Paris Breast Center were paramount in developing these techniques. I think that these techniques are slowly getting integrated in the United States and Canada. But we have not made the jump to these techniques at this point. The best opportunity for me was to come to Paris and to learn from the group at the Paris Breast Centre who are truly the world leaders when it comes to oncoplastic breast surgery incorporating plastic surgery techniques into breast oncology. It’s an idea that was started by Dr. CLOUGH and his team in Paris.
My time in France I do not consider it as a sacrifice at all. I have thoroughly enjoyed working with the team at the Paris Breast Centre. I think I’m learning new things every day whether it be surgical techniques or patient management decisions or wound care tricks or how to set up an office, how to run an integrated Breast Centre. So to me I’m not sacrificing anything. I think it’s a great opportunity. I’m very honored to be given the opportunity.
I think the instruction is great. Dr. CLOUGH and Dr. SARFATI are excellent teachers in the operating room, always explaining what they’re doing. I truly believe this is training that I wouldn’t have obtained in Canada or the United States.
I am an associate professor of surgery and I’m the chief of the breast service at Yale in New Haven.
So I came to work and study at the Paris Breast Center and clinic Bizet for a period of three months. And the reason I wanted to come was to learn more about oncoplastic surgery.
In the United States, our training is a little bit different and we don’t have as much training in plastic surgery as many of our European colleagues. So I wanted to come and work with Krishna Clough because he’s one of the pioneers of oncoplastic surgery.
And I wanted to spend some time in Paris getting to know him and working with him and getting some firsthand experience in oncoplastics. Ideally, the reason I wanted to come is to benefit my patients to give them better cosmetic outcomes after their lumpectomies and to be able to do more breast conserving surgery.
I think the two most useful techniques that I learned here was something called an advancement flap, where I learned how to undermine the skin and free the breast gland from the muscle to fill in a lumpectomy defect and really reshape the breast after lumpectomy. So there’s no deformity.
And the other technique that I learned about was something called a rotational glandular flap, where we recruit a little bit of breast tissue from a different place after a lumpectomy and use that to fill in a cavity or a hole to get the best cosmetic outcome.
I work at Fiona Stanley Hospital, which is a tertiary hospital in Perth in Western Australia. I am an Oncoplastic breast surgeon, so I do breast cancer surgery and level one and two oncoplasty.
I’m also a general surgeon as well.
So I first met Dr Clough and Dr Isabelle Sarfati in 2013.
I attended one of the master classes about oncoplastic surgery, and this is when I first started doing this technique.
Since then, I attended different conferences, especially the one that Dr Clough had attended and presented at, because that had… That did have a big influence on improving my oncoplastic techniques.
Both Dr Clough and Dr Isabelle Sarfati have an international reputation about oncoplastic surgery. The reason that made me come to France and to the Paris breast clinic is because of the high quality teaching and the variety of cases that a surgeon will be exposed to.
One of my colleagues, actually from Fiona Stanley Hospital in Perth, he was here about a few months ago and he spoke very highly about the quality of teaching here, and that’s made me come all the way to attend different types of surgery at the Paris Breast Clinic with both Dr Clough and Dr Sarfati.
I stayed for two weeks and that was actually very useful for me. I tried to balance work and pleasure as well. Paris is a great city. There are lots of things to see here.
But during these two weeks, we did see a variety of cases and I did have the opportunity to work with both Dr Clough and Dr Sarfati. And I found that was very useful to improve
my techniques and for my profession as well