In 2003 he was appointed professor of hepato-biliary surgery at Imperial College, London.[8] In June 2007 he was appointed pro-rector for Commercial Affairs at Imperial.[4]
Habib developed several radio-frequency (RF) based liver resection devices.[9][10] He devised the Habib RF device using the Habib needle, which has a modified version called the Habib 4X.[10] It removes tumour with minimal blood loss.[10] The procedure has come to be known as 'Habib's resection'.[11]
MiNA Therapeutics, a biotechnology company dealing in small activating RNA technology was co-founded by Habib and his son Robert.[12]
Awards and honours
He was awarded the Takreem award in December 2012, for his work in liver cancer and radio-frequency based liver resection.[4]
^Krestanova, Alice; Kracmar, Jan; Hlavackova, Milada; Kubicek, Jan; Vavra, Petr; Penhaker, Marek; Ihnat, Petr (2019). "Design and testing of radio frequency instrument RONLINE". In Pietka, Ewa; Badura, Pawel; Kawa, Jacek; Wieclawek, Wojciech (eds.). Information Technology in Biomedicine. Springer. p. 638. ISBN978-3-030-23761-5.
^Penhaker, Marek; Vavra, Petr; Hlavackova, Mlada; Kracmar, Jan; Sikora, Tadeusz; Prokop, Lucas (2012). "Linear surgical instrument for bipolar multi electrode radiofrquency ablation". In Madarász, Ladislav; Živčák, Jozef (eds.). Aspects of Computational Intelligence: Theory and Applications: Revised and Selected Papers of the 15th IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Engineering Systems 2011, INES 2011. Springer. p. 308. ISBN978-3-642-30668-6.