Prostate cancer test labelled hugely significant
LONDON: A genetic test could help doctors identify prostate cancer patients who may benefit from immunotherapy, researchers say.
Scientists found tumours in a small group of men with an advanced form of the disease had a distinctive pattern of genetic changes.
The biological features of these tumours could mean they are more likely to respond to immunotherapy drugs such as pembrolizumab, according to a study published in journal Cell.
In the future, a test could help pick out men with these genetic changes so they can be considered for the treatment, the authors said.
A major trial this month showed for the first time that immunotherapy could work in men with advanced prostate cancer.
About one in 10 of these patients did not see their cancer grow after a year on pembrolizumab, according to research presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Chicago.
The new study, by scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research in London and University of Michigan in the US, suggests a genetic test could flag those likely to respond to the treatment.
Howard Soule, chief science officer at the Prostate Cancer Foundation, which partfunded the study, said it was a ‘‘hugely significant finding’’. — BPA