Daily Mail

Children will be first to have revolution­ary cancer therapy on NHS

- By Kate Pickles Health Reporter

A PERSONALIS­ED cancer therapy that has been hailed as a new era of treatment is being made available on the NHS in a Europe first.

Car-T therapy, which sees a patient’s blood extracted and re-engineered to fight tumour cells, was described as a game- changer in cancer treatment by NHS chief Simon Stevens.

The first to benefit will be children with leukaemia who have no treatment options left. Trials have shown up to 90 per cent of children with the aggressive blood cancer went into remission after they were given Car-T therapy as a last resort.

Health bosses hope the agreement between the NHS and Novartis, which produces the therapy under the name Kymriah, will pave the way for other Car-T treatments by encouragin­g drug companies to lower their costs. Mr Stevens, who is announcing the deal in Manchester today, said: ‘Car-T therapy is a true game- changer, and NHS cancer patients are now going to be amongst the first in the world to benefit. Today’s approval is proofposit­ive that, in our 70th year, the NHS is leading from the front on innovative new treatments.

‘ This constructi­ve fast- track negotiatio­n also shows how responsibl­e and flexible life sciences companies can succeed –in partnershi­p with the NHS – to make revolution­ary treatments available to patients.’

Car-T therapy, which is already available in the US, has been prohibitiv­ely expensive for the NHS until now. Last month the NHS watchdog Nice rejected another Car-T therapy called Yescarta made by drugs giant Gilead after it was not deemed cost-effective.

But Nice has now given the goahead for Kymriah, which was also approved by the European Medicines Agency just ten days ago.

Mr Stevens has previously described Car-T as one of the most innovative treatments ever seen. However, he cautioned companies to ‘set fair and affordable prices’. Insiders say the cost to the NHS will be far lower than the £280,000 price-tag set by manufactur­ers, although the exact price is being kept commercial­ly confidenti­al.

The treatment is set to be offered within weeks. Around 30 under-25s with B cell acute lymphoblas­tic leukaemia, where the body makes too many immature white blood cells, will benefit.

The therapy will only be offered to those who have failed to respond to other treatments such as bone marrow transplant­s. Unlike convention­al cancer drugs, which are given for years, the treatment needs to be given only once.

However, it is not without potentiall­y catastroph­ic side effects, with trials having shown some patients will not survive the treatment.

Health bosses hope it will be the first in a line of therapies designed to drive up cancer survival rates in the UK, which are some of the lowest in Europe.

Last night, charities welcomed the deal. Dr Alasdair Rankin, director of research at the blood cancer charity Bloodwise, said: ‘Car-T cell therapy is the most exciting advance in treatment for childhood leukaemia for decades. Intensive chemothera­py can now cure the vast majority of children but a significan­t number still tragically die... Car-T cell therapy offers the genuine chance of a long-term cure for children who otherwise would have no other hope.’

There has been a ‘worrying’ reduction in the number of people having bowel cancer screenings in the UK, a study says.

Between 2010 and 2015, the number of people aged 60 to 64 taking tests fell from 53 to 49 per cent. The findings, published in the European Journal of Cancer, prompted experts to warn that people are ‘putting their lives unnecessar­ily at risk’.

‘Genuine chance of a cure’

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