No decision has yet been made over whether or not Dr Ali Shokouh-Amiri can continue to practise medicine.
The General Medical Counsel appealed the decision by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service earlier this year that found his fitness to practice was not impaired after he had admitted and been found guilty of a number of failings.
The appeal hearing before the UK’s High Court (Administrative Court) started in October and resumed and concluded on Monday.
Express has been told that a decision over whether the Doctor can or cannot continue to practise will be announced at a future date.

Dr Shokouh-Amiri was a given the formal warning by the MPTS earlier this year after he admitted and was found guilty of a number of serious failings – including removing the ovaries of two women without their consent, carrying out intimate examinations without a chaperone on multiple women, and failing to arrange treatment for another patient.
The incidents all occurred when Dr Shokouh-Amiri was a consultant at the Medical Specialist Group in Guernsey – with six of his patients making more than 100 complaints between them about his work and behaviour.
But the tribunal found that that the doctor’s “fitness to practise” was “not impaired”, and he was allowed to continue working.
The General Medical Council decided to appeal that decision, telling Express at the time that it had “decided to exercise its powers to issue an appeal in the case of Dr Ali Shokouh-Amiri on grounds including that the tribunal erred in a number of their factual findings, and the tribunal was wrong to conclude that the doctor’s fitness to practise was not impaired”.
The obstetrician and gynaecologist was recently working as a consultant at Southend University Hospital in Essex, but if the appeal is successful he could be struck off.