The Daily Telegraph

Prostate cancer should be treated ‘smarter not harder’

- HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT By Lizzie Roberts

PROSTATE cancer patients can be saved from undergoing chemothera­py after new research found a way to “treat smarter, not harder”.

Scientists at University College London (UCL) discovered chemothera­py is significan­tly more effective for some men with advanced prostate cancer than others. The treatment is usually offered to all men diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer, alongside hormone therapy.

Around 47,500 men are diagnosed with the cancer each year, with 6,000 cases classed as advanced. But the new research, presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s Annual Conference in Chicago this month, found some men with advanced stage prostate cancer don’t benefit from chemothera­py at all.

Those who had a large number of metastases – secondary tumours – when they were diagnosed, and those who had larger tumours, experience­d greater benefits from chemothera­py than those on hormone therapy alone.

After five years, 38 per cent of men who had a large number of metastases who received docetaxel – the most common form of chemothera­py for prostate cancer – were alive compared with 26 per cent who had hormone therapy alone. Among those who had larger tumours, 58 per cent survived for five years, compared to 19 per cent on hormone therapy alone – a 39 per cent increase.

But men with fewer metastases whose tumours had been diagnosed at an earlier stage did not benefit from chemothera­py at all.

During the pandemic, docetaxel was prescribed less frequently in favour of newer hormone therapies, due to the potential impact of chemothera­py on the immune system.

Data from the National Prostate Cancer Audit show a 74 per cent reduction in the number of men with hormonesen­sitive metastatic cancer receiving docetaxel between April and December 2020.

Dr Hayley Luxton, research impact manager at Prostate Cancer UK, said: “This is really exciting because it shows exactly how we can ‘treat smarter, not harder’ and get the most from existing prostate cancer treatments.”

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