Daily Express

Joy at drug breakthrou­gh for ovarian cancer victims

- By Hanna Geissler Health Reporter

THOUSANDS of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer will benefit from an innovative drug after the biggest breakthrou­gh in 30 years.

Niraparib, which stops cancer cells repairing themselves, was previously only available on the NHS to a small group of patients whose cancer relapsed after treatment.

But following new guidance from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, it will be offered to women in England with stage three and four cancer from their first round of chemothera­py.

Niraparib, sold as Zejula, will be the first maintenanc­e therapy available to that group of patients, following an initial round of treatment and aims to prevent or delay the cancer’s return.

In trials it delayed the return of cancer for up to a year. The change is expected to benefit about 3,000 women annually.

Annwen Jones, chief

executive of Target Ovarian Cancer, said it was the biggest leap forward in treatment since the 1990s.

She added: “It is a major milestone in the fight against ovarian cancer, bringing hope during a pandemic where we have serious concerns about how many women are being diagnosed late. It’s the first time thousands of women will

benefit from this innovative drug from the very beginning of treatment.

“We haven’t had such a breakthrou­gh drug available to so many since the introducti­on of chemothera­py drug paclitaxel in the 1990s.”

There are about 7,500 new ovarian cancer cases in the UK every year, of which nearly 60 per cent are

diagnosed a late stage. Jonathan Ledermann, director of the Cancer Research UK and UCL Cancer Trials Centre, said: “The decision marks a turning point in advanced ovarian cancer treatment.

“This could significan­tly increase the likelihood that we can delay a woman’s cancer from progressin­g for

at

months, perhaps even years, longer.” Victoria Clare, of charity Ovacome, added: “It is vital that women are given every opportunit­y to live as full a life as possible, for as long as possible.”

Wales and Northern Ireland will also make Niraparib available immediatel­y.

A decision is expected Scotland later this year. in

 ??  ?? Praise for drug...Lyndsey Hadden, 64
Praise for drug...Lyndsey Hadden, 64

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom