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Lawyers contact health secretary over Addenbrooke’s botched ops

November 19, 2025
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Nikki FoxEast of England health correspondent

ORTHOPAEDIC ACADEMY Kuldeep Stohr looks at the camera during an NHS video she is taking part in. She is wearing a black and white blouse and a black cardigan. She has black, plastic-framed glasses on and greying hair which is tied back. She is sitting in an office with folders packed onto shelves in the background and some papers pinned to a board.ORTHOPAEDIC ACADEMY

Surgeon Kuldeep Stohr had worked at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, since 2012

Lawyers representing more than 50 people treated by a surgeon being investigated over allegations of botched operations have written to Health Secretary Wes Streeting calling for a public inquiry.

The patients were children when they were operated on by Kuldeep Stohr, and theirs are among 800 cases being reviewed by Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) over concerns they fell “below expected standards”.

They include Amy, 16, who suffered “severe physical harm”. She said: “I feel like my youth has been taken, but not just my youth, my life.”

The Department of Health and Social Care (DoH) said a national review would look at how complex orthopaedic surgery was overseen.

JAMIE NIBLOCK/BBC Amy looks at the camera. She has thick dark brown hair which is parted in the middle and is wavy. Her eyes are green. She is wearing makeup with gloss lipstick on and eye liner with mascara and brown brow liner. The light is caught in the pupils of her eyes and she is in front of a dark background. You can see her face and neck.JAMIE NIBLOCK/BBC

Amy was nine years old when her leg was operated on at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridgeshire

The patients are demanding to know how the surgeon was able to practise unchecked, despite warnings almost a decade earlier.

Amy, from Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, was one of the first to receive the findings of an independent assessment into her treatment.

Conducted by a panel of external clinicians, chaired by Andrew Kennedy KC, it said the care “did not meet the standards they would expect”.

It raised concerns that surgeries were carried out on Amy’s knees when she was nine, and her legs were still growing.

JAMIE NIBLOCK/BBC Amy sits on her bed in front of a range of Billie Eilish posters on her bedroom wall. She is holding a wooden acoustic guitar and is looking at her fingers playing it. There is a green plant to the left of the photo and another guitar to the left foreground. To the right Amy sits. She is wearing blue jeans, a black and silver-coloured belt and a black top.JAMIE NIBLOCK/BBC

Amy’s youth was disrupted by four surgeries that left her with “permanent harm”, permanently changing the way her leg functions

Family photo Amy lies on a hospital bed at Addenbrooke's Hospital, aged nine. She has a white fluffy toy by her side. She is wearing a purple top and her left leg is bandaged heavily with a red cast. The bed rail is up at the side. A white fluffy blanket covers her waist and upper leg.Family photo

Reviewers said the “rationale” for conducting surgery on Amy at such a young age when her bones were not fully grown was “not explained”

She was born with Russell-Silver Syndrome, a rare growth disorder, and her left leg was 3cm (1.2in) longer than her right.

In 2018, Ms Stohr said surgery was necessary.

But the assessment said metal plates inserted into her longer leg to stop it growing were too big, causing pain and requiring replacement.

“I wouldn’t wish that pain on anyone. It was pretty traumatising,” said Amy.

“I was in a healing process, month after month, and my friends would say ‘Do you want to go out?’ and I would say ‘I can’t, I’m in pain’.

“I missed out on so many great opportunities because my physical health was down.”

Hudgell Solicitors with permission from Amy's family A black and white x-ray image that shows quad plates fixed above and below Amy's knee joint. The screws are long and overlap in the centre of the picture and the plates are fixed to the outside of the femur and the tibiaHudgell Solicitors with permission from Amy’s family

Reviewers said the plates used to prevent bone growth in Amy’s left knee were too big and not positioned correctly

Amy’s right leg was then allowed to grow too much and ended up 3cm longer than her left.

“I remember crying and breaking down in the back of the car, because I had so believed it was over,” said Amy,

The family was informed Amy required further leg-lengthening surgery or could develop spinal issues.

She was first operated on by Ms Stohr, two-and-a-half-years after a colleague first raised concerns about her practice in 2015.

JAMIE NIBLOCK/BBC Sharon, Amy's mother looks at the camera lens. She is framed slightly to the left of the picture and has light brown to dark blonde, long, straight hair. She has chrome-framed rounded glasses on and is wearing light make-up. She has a light grey wool jumper on and the very top of her shoulders are in the frame.JAMIE NIBLOCK/BBC

Amy’s mother Sharon said she felt guilty for agreeing to the first surgery, thinking it would make Amy’s condition better

“It’s the fact Addenbrooke’s had opportunities to address concerns by colleagues, but nothing ever came of it, and children, including Amy, may not have suffered” said Amy’s mother, Sharon.

“Eight years and four procedures later, Amy can walk, but she suffers from pain, and because of the leg length discrepancy, she places extra pressure on her hip.

“Sadly, she has suffered physically and psychologically. She has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.”

Amy said: “My main question is ‘Why me?’.

“I feel like my youth has been taken, but not just my youth, my life. There’s been a lot of times where I’ve had to cut things short or go home because I’m in pain.”

Mr Sinker is dressed in a dark suit jacket with a white shirt and a deep red tie. He is indoors in front of a blue wall. Behind him, there is a large framed abstract artwork. A tall green plant and a black floor lamp are visible to the left. His head is tilted slightly as he looks directly at the camera, not smiling, as he speaks to the BBC interviewer, who is out of shot.

Roland Sinker became chief executive of Cambridge University Hospitals in 2015, when concerns were first raised about Kuldeep Stohr

Roland Sinker, chief executive of CUH, said he was “deeply sorry for the harm” Amy had experienced and the impact “on her and her family”.

He added: “I am saddened that this happened while Amy was under our care. It should not have happened, and we are working to implement improvements to ensure something like this cannot happen again.”

An independent report into opportunities missed to identify harm caused to Ms Stohr’s patients was published last month by investigations company Verita and found an external review in 2016 was not acted upon.

The author of that earlier review, Robert Hill, a senior paediatric orthopaedic surgeon, said the trust demonstrated “little, if any, insight into the issues confronting them”.

Ms Stohr operated on hundreds more patients, until she was suspended in February 2025.

Mr Sinker said: “Last month we published an action plan to address the findings of the independent investigation into the missed opportunities to have identified and addressed concerns sooner.

“In this plan we detail how we are improving clinical governance, better managing and supporting doctors, and encouraging a more open culture where concerns are raised and escalated sooner.”

‘Deeply distressing’

Maria Repanos of Hudgell Solicitors, representing Amy and her mother, said: “The findings of the review into Amy’s case are deeply concerning and highlight extremely serious shortcomings.

“A wide-scale public health matter of such gravity requires the full public scrutiny at a statutory inquiry.”

A DOH spokesperson said: “Our sympathies are with Amy and all families affected by this deeply distressing situation”

They said the Verita report had already made “several recommendations”, adding: “We expect the trust to deliver every recommendation and provide strong support for families. Independent bodies will oversee this to ensure lessons are learned and that this can never happen again.”

The DOH said a further independent clinical review should report next year and that NHS England was reviewing governance around high-complexity, low-volume orthopaedic and spinal surgery services.

Ms Stohr, through her lawyers, did not respond to the BBC’s questions about Amy’s case, but had previously said: “I always strive to provide the highest standards of care to all my patients.

“I am cooperating fully with the trust investigation, and it would not be appropriate to comment further at this time.”

CUH said patients and families concerned about their care could call a freephone helpline on 0808 175 6331.



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