The Mail on Sunday

No- deal Brexit ‘will put cancer patients at risk’

Doctors warn border delays could ruin medicines

- By Stephen Adams and Brendan Carlin

LEADING doctors last night warned that the treatment of thousands of cancer patients could be dangerousl­y delayed in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

Critical supplies of radioactiv­e medicines used to treat a range of tumours are at risk of being held up if the UK crashes out of the European Union.

Some of the treatments only work for a matter of days after being created, meaning any delay in transporti­ng them can diminish their effectiven­ess.

Cancer specialist­s fear there will be hold-ups when the UK exits the Euratom agreement, which allows ‘medical isotopes’ to be whisked across borders.

The NHS sources most of the n u c l e a r me d i c i n e s from Europe a nd t hey benef i t around 10,000 cancer patients a year. Some would not survive without them.

Certain isotopes are also used in around 700,000 scans a year to help diagnose cancer as well as conditions including lung clots and osteoporos­is.

Dr Jeanette Dickson, vice president of clinical oncology at the Royal College of Radiologis­ts, said: ‘These medicines are like a burning fuse. They start off with a certain amount of radioactiv­ity and you have a set time to get them to hospital when they are still effective. If you delay them for a few hours, you begin to lose activity.’

Under Euratom, potentiall­y dangerous medical isotopes can cross EU borders ‘without prior warning or consent’. They are usually imported via the Channel Tunnel at night ‘without touching customs’, s ai d Dr Dickson, who warned leaving Euratom could add lengthy checks.

Dr John Buscombe, a consultant at Addenbrook­e’s Hospital in Cambridge, said not knowing when the medicines would arrive could jeopardise t reat- ments. He said: ‘Let’s say I’m using a medical isotope to help scan a child with a rare cancer who’s booked in for a particular day. If that medicine is delayed, the patient will miss their slot.’ Booking a new t i me mi g h t take ‘another week or two’, he said. ‘ And if we can’t get these scans done, these children can die.’ Doctors fear added bureaucrac­y may lead to manufactur­ers raising prices or r educing NHS supplies. The biggest impact could be from

Thousands of vital scans could also be hit

di s r upti on t o s upplies of Techneti um- 9 9 m, us e d in 80 per cent of nuclear medicine scans. Other treatments that could be affected are types of targeted radiothera­py for cervical and prostate cancer.

One, called brachyther­apy, is used as a knock-out blow for cervical cancer. Up to 1,500 women a year benefit from it.

The treatment helped cure Kerry Danns, 39, of cancer. The mother- of- t hree f rom Ruislip, West London, said: ‘ Without that, I don’t know what situation I’d now be in.’

The warnings come days after Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the NHS was looking to ‘stockpile’ medicines to prepare for a no-deal Brexit. Conservati­ve peer and former minister Ros Altmann said radioactiv­e isotopes could not be stockpiled and said the issue ‘could be life-threatenin­g’.

The Government confirmed in January that the UK would be leaving Euratom, which is closely tied to the EU. A Department of Health spokesman said: ‘The UK’s ability to import medical isotopes from Europe and the rest of the world will not be affected.’

 ??  ?? CURED: The cancer drugs helped to save Kerry Danns
CURED: The cancer drugs helped to save Kerry Danns

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