MBChB Hons, MSc, B.Sc. Hons
Respiratory Doctor
29 years of experience
Bushey, WD23 1RD
14 connections in healthcare
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by Dr Rahul Mogal
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Dr Andrew Barlow is a full time NHS Consultant at West Hertfordshire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (WHTH) since 2005. He holds an honours degree in Medicine from Sheffield University (equivalent to a 1st) after completing a BSc Hons in Pharmacology at Manchester University. He also holds a Masters degree from Imperial College. Since 2005 he has held multiple senior management positions at WHTH including Clinical Director for Cancer and Divisional Director for Medicine-a board level appointment which he held for 7 years, stepping down in April 2024 to take up the clinical lead for lung cancer.
Notably, during that time he guided his Trust through the COVID-19 pandemic and conceived, designed and delivered the UK's first virtual ward for COVID in March 2020. He subsequently worked for NHS England at national and regional level advising on the roll out of virtual wards. He is also Chief Medical Officer for The Home Hospital Ltd, the UK's first private virtual hospital and long term condition management program.
As a well-rounded specialist Consultant in Respiratory Medicine who has worked full time for the NHS for 20 years, his clinical experience is wide-ranging and includes complex airway disease (difficult asthma, COPD, bronchiectasis) respiratory failure, respiratory infections (pneumonia, bronchitis), pleural diseases (empyema, pleural effusions), sleep medicine and respiratory allergies.
He has continued his life-long commitment for learning and is one of the UK's only consultants to hold an international qualification in thoracic imaging (European Respiratory Society Certificate in Thoracic Ultrasound). He is also trained in advanced respiratory physiology techniques including cardio-pulmonary exercise testing. He has sub-specialty expertise in interventional procedures. He was in the first wave of UK Consultants to offer EBUS (endobronchial ultrasound), set up the first EBUS service in the Mount Vernon Cancer Network at Harefield Hospital before moving this program to his base hospital, West Hertfordshire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust. He is also (uniquely) trained in EUS (oesophageal ultrasound procedures) which enables a wider variety of biopsy targets including para-oesophageal nodes, hepatic mets and left adrenal gland biopsy. He is an advanced practioner in pleural interventions including thoracocentesis, pleural ultraound-guided biopsy and the insertion of indwelling pleural catheters. These advanced techniques are crucial for the diagnosis of both benign and malignant diseases. He co-chairs the national EBUS training course run annually at WHTH and by invitation, has joined the faculty for the UCL EBUS Live course.
He has continued his commitment to research and development, presenting regularly at international meetings (e.g. ERS Milan 2024) as well as first and contributory authorship for multiple publications ranging from case reports, scientific papers linked with COVID, lung cancer screening, asthma and most recently a real world study demonstrating the benefits of virtual ward programs-in submission with BMJ Frontiers.
He strongly believes in a patient-centred approach, so treatment programs can be tailored to each individual for the best possible outcomes.
Diseases, Medical Tests and Treatments
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General Medical Council
No. 4307048
The University of Sheffield
Medicine
Graduated 1996
Imperial College London
Respiratory Medicine
Graduated 2005
University of Manchester
Pharmacology
Graduated 1988
Read publications and papers written by this specialist.
Return visit regarding my recurring respiratory infection. Dr Barlow was very thorough and reassuring. I find him very easy to talk to and find his explanations very clear and understandable
Honestly he is my life saver and he is the best specialist I know 😍😍😍🤩🤩
He is very thorough, listens and is prompt to order treatment.
Dr Barlow was extremely accommodating and ensured that all the analyses needed were conducted in a timely manner to give me a final opinion. Very thorough in his explanation and thoughtful in his assessment. He has helped me with advice and support beyond the remit of the consultation.
He was very clear with his explanations and took his time to explain what needs to be done after the session.
First came in August 2017 having been referred to Dr Barlow by Dr Katherine Fu. I was in a very desperate state and, I’m not being dramatic, but Dr Barlow saved my life. I now regularly see him here and my condition is being managed beyond all recognition. He built my confidence with his friendly, positive, professional approach. I cannot stress enough how fortunate I was to find him.
I have worked with Dr Barlow in both the NHS and Private sectors over 10 years. He is an excellent chest clinician with an extensive knowledge in Respiratory Medicine. He is an expert interventionalist.
02 Feb 2026Dr Rahul Mogal
Respiratory DoctorRead articles from Dr Andrew Barlow explaining process of procedures and other important things you should know before choosing your provider.
Conceived & launched the 1st COVID-19 VIRTUAL HOSPITAL in the UK: WHHT was the first site in the UK to establish a formal Covid Virtual ward
03 June 2020
doi.org
WHHT was one of two sites in the UK to pilot the use of an ambulatory phone based app developed in collaboration with NHSX and Huma/Medopad
02 July 2020
thehtn.co.uk
Background Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) research for lung cancer detection has faced study design and analytical methodology challenges limiting translation into clinical practice. We evaluated the diagnostic value of breath biomarkers in patients under investigation for suspected lung cancer. Methods In a multi-centre prospective case-control study involving 1844 subjects under investigation, breath samples from subjects with a conclusive diagnosis were analysed using gas-chromatography mass-spectrometry. A staged approach was adopted: an Exploratory method for targeted analysis of 63 VOCs associated with lung cancer, followed by an Optimised method for biomarker discovery and finally, evaluation of the optimised panel in a separate validation cohort. Results were compared to the Liverpool Lung Project (LLP) risk model. Findings Using breath VOCs from 677 controls and 518 cases the Exploratory method showed only 2 literature-reported compounds differed significantly between cases and controls. The Optimised method detected 102 VOCs, with ten differing between cases and controls. However, in a validation cohort the 10-VOC panel differentiated cases from controls cohort with a modest AUC: 0.54±0.14 for early-stage disease, 0.58±0.16 for advanced stage disease and 0.58±0.11 for all cases, which did not differ significantly from the LLP model. Combining VOCs with the LLP model did not significantly improve diagnostic performance (AUC 0.64±0.11). Interpretation Although some potential biomarkers were identified, their diagnostic performance did not surpass an epidemiological risk model. The study highlights the importance of careful trial design to avoid false-positive findings and indicates a need for more targeted approaches to enhance signal-to-noise ratio in breath biomarker research. Highlights Largest, to date, multi-centre prospective case-control study evaluating volatile organic compounds (VOC) for intention-to-diagnose lung cancer. Gas chromatography mass spectrometry was used to compare VOCs in lung cancer cases with co-morbidity matched controls. Although some VOCs differentiated cases from controls, diagnostic performance did not surpass an epidemiological risk model. These data explain the challenge of previous studies to validate and translate into clinical practice. A more targeted approach to enhance signal-to-noise ratio is required. ### Competing Interest Statement Authors affiliated to Owlstone Medical were employees and hold options on the company. RCR reports conference funding support from Owlstone Medical. Owlstone Medical Ltd supported research nurse funding at Royal Papworth Hospital, Cambridge during this work. All remaining authors have declared no conflicts of interest with regard to this work. ### Clinical Trial NCT02612532 ### Funding Statement The study was funded by Owlstone Medical Ltd and a UKRI Small Business Research Initiative (SBRI) award. RCR was funded by the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR203312) and Cancer Research UK Cambridge Centre (CTRQQR-2021\100012). ### Author Declarations I confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained. Yes The details of the IRB/oversight body that provided approval or exemption for the research described are given below: The study received ethical approval from the National Research Ethics Service Committee East of England; Cambridge South in October 2015 (15/EE/0298). I confirm that all necessary patient/participant consent has been obtained and the appropriate institutional forms have been archived, and that any patient/participant/sample identifiers included were not known to anyone (e.g., hospital staff, patients or participants themselves) outside the research group so cannot be used to identify individuals. Yes I understand that all clinical trials and any other prospective interventional studies must be registered with an ICMJE-approved registry, such as [ClinicalTrials.gov][1]. I confirm that any such study reported in the manuscript has been registered and the trial registration ID is provided (note: if posting a prospective study registered retrospectively, please provide a statement in the trial ID field explaining why the study was not registered in advance). Yes I have followed all appropriate research reporting guidelines, such as any relevant EQUATOR Network research reporting checklist(s) and other pertinent material, if applicable. Yes Data are available through the corresponding author from the time of publication, following approval of a proposal with a signed data access agreement. [1]: https://ClinicalTrials.gov
29 June 2025
medrxiv.org
Work looking at how useful prediction scores were in assessing patients presetnign UK hospitals in the 1st COVID wave
30 November 2022
bmjopen.bmj.com
What are Dr Andrew Barlow's reviews like?
Dr Andrew Barlow's overall patient rating is 5 out of 5 stars on Doctify. This is based on 6 reviews.
What languages does Dr Andrew Barlow speak?
Dr Andrew Barlow speaks English
Where is Dr Andrew Barlow located?
Dr Andrew Barlow primarily practices at Spire Bushey Hospital, located at Heathbourne Road, Bushey, United Kingdom, WD23 1RD
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Dr Andrew Barlow generally accepts new patients.
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