Western Mail

Treatment boost for prostate cancer

-

A TARGETED form of radiothera­py can cure prostate cancer in men whose disease was previously thought to be incurable, research suggests.

A pioneering study has found that using a specialise­d type of radiothera­py that is highly targeted can stop the disease in its tracks.

Researcher­s from the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) in London and the UK’s leading cancer hospital, the Royal Marsden, found that intensity modulated radiothera­py (IMRT) helped eradicate the disease when used on cancer cells that had spread from the original tumour to pelvic lymph nodes.

IMRT enables doctors to give a high dose of radiation directly to cancer cells while protecting the surroundin­g healthy tissue, thereby cutting down on sideeffect­s.

In the new study on 447 men, 71% of patients with prostate cancer were alive and also completely free from disease five years after treatment with IMRT.

When the trial began, many of the patients were considered incurable.

Experts have always thought that giving radiothera­py to the lymph nodes near a prostate tumour is too risky due to the damage that can be done to the bowel from the therapy.

But the new study showed that when using IMRT rather than convention­al radiothera­py, only 8% to 16% suffered issues with their bladder or bowel.

The trial found that IMRT could safely be given to the pelvis - a common site for prostate cancer cells to spread - to help stop the disease going further.

After an average of 8.5 years of follow-up, 87% of men were alive and the level of side-effects was manageable, according to the study, published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics.

IMRT is becoming the standard of care at major cancer centres in the UK, although it is not available everywhere.

Study leader David Dearnaley, professor of uro-oncology at the ICR and consultant clinical oncologist at the Royal Marsden, said: “Our trial was one of the first of this revolution­ary radiothera­py technique, which was pioneered by colleagues here at the ICR and The Royal Marsden.

“These long-term results demonstrat­e that using IMRT to target the pelvic lymph nodes is safe and effective for men with prostate cancer.

“This technique has already proven to be a game-changer for men with prostate cancer and the work done here has already been carried forward into later-stage phase II and phase III trials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom