Daily Mail

Monitor spares cancer patients trips to hospital

- By Kate Pickles Health Editor

CANCER patients could soon be spared gruelling trips to hospital with a device to monitor treatment from home.

A trial is being carried out on the ‘ Liberty’ machine, which tests blood samples to see if patients are well enough to continue chemothera­py.

Results are sent to hospital clinicians who check blood counts and decide if they can carry on with the medication, which can often be taken orally at home.

Doctors say the device, which is smaller than a laptop, could transform how tens of thousands of people are treated, cutting appointmen­ts and saving hospitals time and money.

‘Means people can self-test at home’

Chemothera­py can cause myelosuppr­ession, or low blood counts, which can leave sufferers exhausted and at risk of lifethreat­ening infections.

It means patients must often attend weekly, fortnightl­y or monthly appointmen­ts to measure blood levels before continuing their treatment.

Patients at The Christie specialist centre in Manchester are testing Liberty and use a finger prick test to get a blood sample. They put it on a slide and feed it into the machine which then analyses red and white blood cells and platelet counts to check if a person is at risk of complicati­ons.

Dr Toby Basey-Fisher, chief executive of Liberty’s creators Entia, said it could help with chemothera­py outside a medical setting.

He added: ‘More and more cancer treatments are becoming oral therapies so for these patients, there’s a lot of value if the only reason you’re coming is for pre-treatment assessment­s or check-ups.

‘Since Covid, a lot of remote consultati­on happens, but one of the challenges is how do you get the blood tests completed.

‘This is a way that patients can self-test at home so decisions can be made without them having to be in hospital.

‘It’s such a challengin­g time, being dragged in and out of hospital is often the last thing people want to be doing.’

Dr Sacha Howell, a medical oncology consultant at The Christie, said: ‘This is an exciting developmen­t. Positive results could lead to us implementi­ng this device into our routine services to improve patients’ experience­s and treatment in the very near future.’

Researcher­s hope the machine will be approved by regulators later this year. It will help those simply needing blood tests but others would still need to visit hospital for other checks, such as for liver or kidney function.

Liberty could also be used in the NHS’s drive to set up ‘virtual wards’ for up to 50,000 elderly and vulnerable patients as it has the potential to monitor a range of conditions in future.

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