On 15, October, 2020, Dr. Paul M. Weinberg (Fig 1), a true giant in the field of paediatric cardiology, succumbed to a prolonged illness. Dr. Weinberg had a 43-year career and was described as a pillar of The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the spirit of the Division of Cardiology, a cherished and beloved teacher, and an outstanding clinician. His impact on the field and on the careers of his students will be remembered for generations to come.
Dr. Weinberg grew up in Levittown, Pennsylvania, the oldest of three children. There is a wonderful series of photographs of him as a 3 year old examining his own mother with a stethoscope, auscultating diligently, and measuring her blood pressure and pulse (Fig 2). His family knew early that medicine was going to be his career path. He attended the combined Penn State/Jefferson Medical College 5-year programme, where in the first week he met the love of his life, Linda Levin Weinberg, who was also enrolled in that programme and to whom he was married for 53 years (Fig 3). After graduation, they moved to Philadelphia, where Dr. Weinberg completed his paediatric residency and paediatric cardiology fellowship at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. For the next 2 years, he served as a lieutenant commander in the Navy in San Diego as a paediatric cardiologist, before returning to the Northeast. He developed a passion for cardiac morphology and pathology from several mentors during his cardiology training, and he completed an additional fellowship in cardiac morphology with Drs. Richard Van Praagh and Stella Van Praagh at Boston Children’s Hospital (Fig 4) before returning to The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia in 1977 for a faculty position in the Division of Cardiology. He became Full Professor of Pediatrics and Pathology in 2001, and he became Emeritus Professor in 2016.
In his long career at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Dr. Weinberg was an esteemed clinician with expertise in general cardiology, cardiac morphology, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. He pioneered the cardiac magnetic resonance imaging programme, which is presently one of the largest in the country, leading the nation in the techniques of three-dimensional reconstruction. He also organised and directed the Cardiac Registry at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, which houses over 3000 cardiac specimens, with a spectrum of congenital and acquired cardiac disease. In his role as cardiac pathologist, Dr. Weinberg oversaw the preservation of specimens and personally performed the dissections on all new cardiac specimens. His opinion to review and dissect cardiac specimens was sought from all over the United States of America. On a weekly basis, Dr. Weinberg meticulously and methodically performed dissection conferences that were attended by cardiology and pathology trainees, visiting residents, and medical students. In these conferences, Dr. Weinberg reviewed the patient’s history and images, demonstrated their anatomy, and often helped clarify their cause of death.
One of his greatest contributions to the Division of Cardiology was his role as Fellowship Programme Director for 24 years. Over that time, he trained over 145 cardiology fellows, many of whom went on to become leaders of our field in education, research, innovation, and clinical expertise. He also directed the paediatric cardiology curriculum for Penn medical students, where he engaged cardiology fellows as teachers in small group learning. His leadership in medical education went beyond The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He held leadership roles in the Society of Paediatric Cardiology Training Programme Directors, including the position of President, and spearheaded the Task Force on Clinical Competence for Paediatric Cardiology Training Guidelines, including in non-invasive cardiac imaging; these seminal documents were published in Circulation and the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.Reference Sanders, Colan and Cordes1–Reference Srivastava, Printz and Geva5 He worked tirelessly on the fellowship curriculum, making it the much sought after programme that it is today.
Dr. Weinberg also made significant research contributions, including over 140 peer-reviewed publications and book chapters. His early work focused on descriptions of tricuspid atresia,Reference Weinberg6–Reference Juaneda, Rychik and Fuller10 vascular rings,Reference Fleenor, Weinberg, Kramer and Fogel11,Reference Savla and Weinberg12 and one of the first reports of anomalies of the coronary arteries in hypoplastic left heart syndrome.Reference Baffa, Chen, Guttenberg, Norwood and Weinberg13 Later work described cardiac magnetic resonance imagingReference Fogel, Weinberg, Fellows and Hoffman14 of the pulmonary arteries in stages of functionally univentricular palliation,Reference Fogel, Donofrio, Ramaciotti, Hubbard and Weinberg15 airway obstruction from vascular abnormalities,Reference Mahboubi, Meyer, Hubbard, Harty and Weinberg16 and atrial switch pathways in transposition of the great arteries.Reference Fogel, Hubbard and Weinberg17
In January 2003, Dr. Weinberg became one of the original twelve members (Table 1) of the “Nomenclature Working Group” (NWG), a committee which eventually formed The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease (ISNPCHD) [www.ipccc.net].Reference Béland, Franklin and Jacobs18–Reference Lopez, Houyel and Colan33 Paul joined the Nomenclature Working Group at its second meeting in Montreal in January 2003 (Fig 5) and enthusiastically participated in multiple meetings of The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease around the world (Figs 5–10).
Cardiology in the Young is the official journal of The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease, and Dr. Weinberg was a member of both the Editorial Board of Cardiology in the Young as well as the Board of Directors of The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease. Dr. Weinberg was also a member of the Editorial Board of The World Journal for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery. One of his important roles in The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease was to help develop consensus between the Van Praaghian/Weinberg approach and the Andersonian approach to congenital cardiac nomenclature. The mapping of these complementary approaches forms the foundation of The International Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Code [www.ipccc.net],Reference Franklin, Béland and Colan32 an achievement that would not have been possible without him.
Dr. Weinberg provided important leadership and devoted hundreds of hours to the research of “The Nomenclature Working Group” (NWG), and The International Society for Nomenclature of Paediatric and Congenital Heart Disease (ISNPCHD). Meetings of the NWG and ISNPCHD were typically held in a dark room, where members spent hours debating the nomenclature and classification of congenital heart disease. Dr. Weinberg often travelled to these meetings accompanied by his wife Linda. Paul and Linda were loved by all members of ISNPCHD, and their participation in the full spectrum of international social activities of ISNPCHD was substantial and notable. All members of ISNPCHD are deeply indebted to Paul for his vast contributions to its projects over these past 18 years.Reference Béland, Franklin and Jacobs18–Reference Lopez, Houyel and Colan33 We will always remember his gentle and humble demeanour and his superlative teaching abilities. An ever-smiling friend, mentor and scholar, he will be dearly missed.
Of all of Dr. Weinberg’s extraordinary achievements, his contributions to medical education were the most impactful. His weekly pathology conferences were legendary. Over 90 minutes, he would review a cardiac lesion in detail in a slide presentation that often included remarkable figures and movies depicting embryology and how cardiac defects develop. No one who attended these conferences will ever forget his “donut analogy” in reference to conal anatomy to determine which great artery sits in the more anterior position! After the didactic lecture, he would famously strap on his headlamp and review the variations of that lesion using pathologic cardiac specimens from the Cardiac Registry. He knew all the specimens by heart and often told the medical history of the child that was so pertinent to our understanding of the disease. He had tremendous patience with his learners. He was never tired of answering our questions about anatomy, and you could always see a gleam in his eye when doing so. His dedication to the weekly pathology conference was so profound that even when he was critically ill in the hospital for 10 weeks, he insisted on giving his Thursday pathology lectures, including his final lecture on hypoplastic left heart syndrome, given in late September 2020. In his hospital room, he put on his street clothes and gave his final talk to a group of devout and enthusiastic learners hanging on to his every word. He never mentioned that he was in the hospital or that he was so ill.
Dr. Weinberg was more than just an outstanding cardiac morphologist; he was also a master clinician. For over 50 years, he cared for patients with complex structural cardiac disease, and many of us had the opportunity to work with him on the wards and in the clinics. His experience as a clinician truly set him apart from other morphologists. He was a humble and kind physician, and the patients and their families adored him. He rarely ordered echocardiograms, because he could collect all of the information required with his eyes, hands, and stethoscope. For the first part of his career, he performed diagnostic cardiac catheterisations. The story is told of how he performed a catheterisation on a baby with a complex ventricular septal defect, whom he preferred to keep unsedated. After arranging the cameras in position, he gently calmed the baby with a toy and took the angiogram, which perfectly profiled the ventricular septal defect in the first shot. He achieved this precision because he understood the anatomy like no other. His experience in the clinics, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, and the catheterisation laboratory beautifully synthesised with his work in cardiac morphology.
In a group of vociferous, often opinionated cardiologists and cardiac surgeons, the room would quiet when Dr. Weinberg chose to speak in surgical conference. You always knew you were going down the wrong path in the description of an echocardiogram, catheterisation, or magnetic resonance imaging if you saw him shaking his head in the front row. Then, he would calmly but compellingly correct your mistake and help you understand the reasoning. There is mantra that a single paediatric cardiologist could not have seen every single lesion; however, Dr. Weinberg came as close as anyone. His expertise in anatomy and morphology impacted the way we cared for patients and the surgical and interventional strategies we chose. He was a generous man, who was always willing to share his wealth of knowledge. He always did this with kindness and patience, no matter how basic the question may have been.
For those outside The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia community, Dr. Weinberg organised an annual 5-day course on Advanced Cardiac Morphology for 7 years. Attendees came from far and wide to attend this course, which included hands-on manipulation of cardiac specimens. His understanding of cardiac morphology and recognition of his extraordinary teaching style culminated in over 220 invited lectures around the world (Fig 11) including The World Congress of Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery, the annual The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Cardiology Update conference, and The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, as well as multiple visiting professorships. In recent years, with the Weinberg’s move to Baltimore to be closer to family, he was a monthly lecturer at Johns Hopkins Division of Cardiology. He gave the honoured Ann Newman lecture at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia several years ago. Sadly, he had more to do. He had been invited to give the William Rashkind lecture this year at the upcoming The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Cardiology Update conference, and he was also completing a textbook on cardiac morphology at the time of his death.
Over his decades of service, Dr. Weinberg’s achievements in medical education were recognised with many honours (Fig 12), including the following awards:
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the Blockley-Osler Teaching Award (1998) from University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine,
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the Robert Dunning Dripps Memorial Award for Excellence in Graduate Medical Education from University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (2009),
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the Alumni Achievement Award (2004) from Jefferson Medical College,
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the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Cardiac Center at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (inaugural recipient, 2011),
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and the Distinguished Teaching Award (2013) from the American College of Cardiology.
In 2018, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Division of Cardiology named a teaching award in his honour. This award is given annually to a junior faculty member in The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Division of Cardiology who makes an outstanding contribution to medical education.
When word spread in our community about his death, many of the fellowship classes he taught got together virtually to reminisce about his impact on their development as paediatric cardiologists and the pride he took in their achievements. His Residents and Fellows will all remember the one-on-one time spent with Dr. Weinberg during their month on the pathology rotation, cherished time which was the framework of The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia paediatric cardiology fellowship, providing an understanding of congenital heart disease that could only be achieved by hands-on specimen review with The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s own world expert. We will remember:
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his soothing voice and calm demeanour,
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his patience when reviewing criss-cross atrioventricular valves and unusual ventricular looping,
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his totipotential arch figure that taught us how to understand vascular rings,
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his diagrams and catalogue of all the variations of congenital heart disease,
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his expertise in cardiac dissection,
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his profound love of teaching, and
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his thoughtful and pragmatic approach to patient care.
We will also remember his love of dancing and his ability to stay out partying later than the 30 year olds, the funny fact that Space Balls was his favourite movie, and that his favourite desserts always included chocolate. Most importantly, we will recall the love he felt for his wife Linda (Fig 13), son Joshua (predeceased 1986), daughter Sarah, and son-in law Ricky, and his three granddaughters, Julia (9), Rena (6), and Eve (3), as well as his lifelong friendships.
In 2019, Dr. Weinberg wrote for Jefferson Medical School’s 50th year reunion memory book: “In the true spirit of Hippocrates, I seek to mentor the next generation as I was mentored by the last, without expectation of reward. I am forever indebted to these educators for all the knowledge they imparted to me and for the wisdom that I acquired under their tutelage.” These words are a true reflection of his unassuming dedication to teaching the next generation of paediatric cardiologists. His legacy will continue to live on through these trainees (Fig 14) and impact the field for generations to come.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Jack Rome, Victoria Vetter, Mark Fogel, Chitra Ravishankar, Lindsay Rogers, Matthew Harris, Marie Béland, and Rodney Franklin, as well as Linda Weinberg, for their important contributions to this tribute to Paul Weinberg, MD.