Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

PROSTATE CANCER CURED IN ONE WEEK

Radiothera­py breakthrou­gh as trials show high dosage clears tumours in days

- BY MARTIN BAGOT Health & Science Editor

PROSTATE cancer patients could be cured in as little as a week with new high-dose targeted radiothera­py.

In trials, tumours were wiped out within days with treatment times slashed from the standard one to two months.

The breakthrou­gh could save the NHS millions. It comes after Sir Rod Stewart revealed he has beaten the disease.

One patient who took part in trials said: “It was a breeze – not something I’d

81-year-old, a retired care home worker who has five grandchild­ren and eight great-grandchild­ren, was the second woman in the family to get the shock news after going to her GP in July 2003 suffering with breast pain.

She said: “I had my op on the August 19, 2003, and had lymph nodes removed and a lumpectomy.

“This was followed by a full course of radiothera­py, which still burns me all these years later. But I’m a survivor.”

Barbara’s niece Trudie Smart, 47, was diagnosed in April 2008. The teaching assistant, from Boston, had eight cycles of chemo before a mastectomy in November that year, followed by three weeks of radiothera­py.

She said: “My breast cancer was ER+, which meant I produced too much oestrogen, so I opted to have my ovaries removed.”

The next relative diagnosed was her mum Shirley Limb, of Kirton, in September 2008. The 72-year-old, who has six grandchild­ren and two greatgrand­kids,

stereotact­ic body radiothera­py (SBRT) beamed with sub-millimetre precision at tumours, cutting the risk of damaging healthy surroundin­g tissue which can lead to side effects.

Their tumours were wiped out in one to two weeks, compared with up to two months for standard radiothera­py.

The study split 850 patients into three groups given different radiothera­py doses. BREAKTHOUG­H Dr van As got the news after a routine mammogram. An ultrasound and biopsy confirmed breast cancer and she had a lumpectomy and her lymph nodes removed just before Christmas.

She then had radiothera­py every day for three weeks and was told she was in remission in summer 2009.

Vanessa’s brother’s partner Lorraine Hill, 61, was diagnosed after finding a large lump in her breast in 2005.

The barmaid and mum-of-one, from Horncastle, had chemo to shrink

Three months after treatment, side effects for those on SBRT were no worse than for standard treatment. They will be monitored for several years to find if they are truly cured. If continuing trials show humans can tolerate such high doses of radiation then SBRT could be offered on the NHS. Co-author Dr Douglas Brand of the Institute of Cancer Research said: “It could be practice-changing.” Dr the tumour before a partial mastectomy. And sister-in-law Hazel Holland, 53, was struck down in February 2015.

The mum of two, a breakfast club supervisor, had a lump and lymph nodes removed, then chemo and radiothera­py. She said: “I just took it all in my stride and got on with life.”

Three years earlier, in 2012, Hazel’s mum Mary Limb, 74, was told she had breast cancer after doctors found a lump. She was in hospital four days after her operation to remove the

Nicholas van As of the Royal Marsden said: “Patients could be spared numerous visits to hospital, allowing them to get back to their lives sooner.”

Prostate cancer affects around one in eight men. Around 50,000 new cases are diagnosed each year, with 11,600 men dying from it annually.

Sir Rod urged men to get checked after revealing his three-year fight.

The study will be unveiled at a meeting of the American Society for Radiation Oncology in Chicago today. lump and her lymph nodes, before radiothera­py. Two years later, in August 2017, Mary’s sister-in-law Margaret Bedford, 74, was diagnosed.

The mum-of-three had a lumpectomy the next month and, following four weeks of gruelling radiothera­py, was declared cancer-free.

Then a month later, in October 2017, son David’s partner Jane Reeson, 54, got her diagnosis. The mum of two, a delivery driver, had a mastectomy on her left side that November.

She has been told to take oestrogen blocker Tamoxifen for five years and so far all tests have come back clear.

She said: “I couldn’t feel a lump, so if it hadn’t been for the mammogram it could have been a different story.

“Knowing what the family had gone through meant I was conscious of the importance of getting check-ups.”

The family’s calendar is out next month with all proceeds going to the charity Breast Cancer Care.

 ??  ?? HOPE New treatment revealed after Rod, left, said he has beat disease
HOPE New treatment revealed after Rod, left, said he has beat disease
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AGE: 74 DIAGNOSED: 2017 AGE: 72 DIAGNOSED: 2008 AGE: 53 DIAGNOSED: 2015 AGE: 74 DIAGNOSED: 2012 AGE: 81 DIAGNOSED: 2003 AGE: 55 DIAGNOSED: 2015
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