Yorkshire Post

‘Women dying for sake of a 43p drug’

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

THOUSANDS OF women with breast cancer are still being denied 43p-a-day drugs in many parts of the country, according to a new report.

Progress on tackling breast cancer is also stalling in other ways, with declining rates of women turning up for mammograms and longer waiting times for treatment, the study for Breast Cancer Now found.

The charity says there is still inadequate action on the number of women given cheap drugs to stop their cancer coming back – and has accused the NHS of a “derelictio­n of duty”.

Research shows that when post-menopausal women are given bisphospho­nates within six months of initial diagnosis, the risk of breast cancer spreading to their bones within 10 years falls by nearly a third (28 per cent) and there is an 18 per cent reduced risk of death.

Figures suggest the drugs could prevent more than 1,000 deaths a year from breast cancer – one in 10 of all breast cancer deaths – and potentiall­y help 35,700 women diagnosed with the disease each year.

Prescribin­g bisphospho­nates could also save the NHS £5m each year across the UK, the new report said. Breast Cancer Now used Freedom of Informatio­n (FOI) laws to ask Clinical Commission­ing Groups (CCGs) in England if they routinely funded bisphospho­nates. Only a fifth did so (42 out of 208 CCGs), while a further six per cent said they had agreed to fund them and were currently implementi­ng the decision.

The picture was better in Scotland and Wales, with two out of three cancer networks offering them.

Baroness Delyth Morgan, chief executive of Breast Cancer Now, said: “In bisphospho­nates, we have a simple and cost-effective chance to cut 10 per cent of all UK breast cancer deaths, using drugs already at the NHS’ disposal.

“That this is not being taken is nothing short of a derelictio­n of duty. “We now call on NHS England to take immediate action to ensure all CCGs are able to prescribe bisphospho­nates to all eligible patients.”

Rob Coleman, professor of medical oncology at the University of Sheffield, said: “That over 1,000 women a year are being allowed to die unnecessar­ily from breast cancer is a shameful irresponsi­bility – particular­ly when the solution is a safe and inexpensiv­e treatment that within five years would not only save lives but save the NHS precious funds to invest elsewhere.”

 ??  ?? Yorkshire vets Peter Wright andJulian Norton at the Great Yorkshire Showground, with showjumper Lilly Aspell, aged 10, from Richmond. The vets will be the star attraction­s of Yorkshire Vet at Countrysid­e Live on October 21 and October 22.
Yorkshire vets Peter Wright andJulian Norton at the Great Yorkshire Showground, with showjumper Lilly Aspell, aged 10, from Richmond. The vets will be the star attraction­s of Yorkshire Vet at Countrysid­e Live on October 21 and October 22.

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