Dr. Donald Gleason, of Edina, a retired professor of the University of Minnesota School of Medicine, led research at the VA Medical Center in Minneapolis and devised the grading system that doctors around the world use today to determine the proper treatment of prostate cancer.
Gleason, whose system and research underpins continuous research into prostate cancer, died of natural causes Dec. 28 in Edina.
The longtime Richfield resident was 88.
"Worldwide, his system is used annually at least 1 million times -- that's the number of people diagnosed with this cancer. In the United States alone, about 230,000 are diagnosed with prostate cancer annually," said Akhouri Sinha, a research scientist who worked with Gleason for 40 years.
Gleason "boiled down the complexities of prostate cancer" to devise his grading system, Sinha said.
"His work was comprehensive, yet simple so that the grading system can be used by pathologists, clinicians and scientists throughout the world," said Sinha, a medical school professor who works at the VA Medical Center.
"His achievement remains unparalleled thus far," Sinha said.
Dr. Bill Swaim, of Burnsville, a retired pathologist and internist, and a former resident of Gleason's, said he was an uncommonly good teacher.