Oman Daily Observer

Laser cure for prostate cancer

- KATE KELLAND

Anon-surgical treatment for low-risk prostate cancer in which doctors inject a light-sensitive drug derived from deep-sea bacteria into a patient’s bloodstrea­m was shown in a trial to kill cancer cells without destroying healthy tissue. Results of a trial in 413 patients showed that the drug, which is activated with a laser to destroy tumour tissue in the prostate, was so effective that half the patients went into remission, compared with 13.5 per cent in a control group.

“These results are excellent news for men with early localised prostate cancer, offering a treatment that can kill cancer without removing or destroying the prostate,” said Mark Emberton, a University College London consultant urologist who led the trial. “This is truly a huge leap forward.”

The treatment, called vascular-targeted photodynam­ic therapy or VTP, was developed by scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel in collaborat­ion with the privately-owned STEBA Biotech.

The light-sensitive drug used, called WST11, is derived from bacteria found at the bottom of the ocean. To survive with very little sunlight, they have evolved to convert light into energy with incredible efficiency, Emberton’s team said in a study published in the journal Lancet Oncology.

The Weizmann scientists exploited this feature to develop WST11, a compound that releases free radicals to kill surroundin­g cells when activated by laser light.

Men with low-risk prostate cancer are currently put under active surveillan­ce, where the disease is monitored and only treated when it becomes more severe. Radical therapy, which involves surgically removing or irradiatin­g the whole prostate, has significan­t long-term side effects so is only used to treat high-risk cancers.

While radical therapy causes lifelong erectile problems and incontinen­ce, VTP only caused short-term urinary and erectile problems which resolved within three months, the researcher­s said. No significan­t side-effects remained after two years.

In the trial, only 6 per cent of patients treated with VTP needed radical therapy compared with 30 per cent of patients in the control arm who were under active surveillan­ce.

The trial involved 47 treatment sites in 10 European countries, most of which were performing VTP for the first time. “The fact that the treatment was performed so successful­ly by non-specialist centres in various health systems is really remarkable,” Emberton said.

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