Tag Archives: cancer research uk

Prostate cancer to be treated with alpha radiation

A trial of a new cancer drug, which accurately targets tumours, has been so successful it has been stopped early.

Doctors at London’s Royal Marsden Hospital gave prostate cancer patients a powerful alpha radiation drug and found that they lived longer, and experienced less pain and side effects.

The medics then stopped the trial of 922 people, saying it was unethical not to offer all of them the treatment.

Lead researcher Dr Chris Parker said it was “a significant step forward”.

Cancer Research UK said it was a very important and promising discovery.

Radiation has been used to treat tumours for more than a century. It damages the genetic code inside cancerous cells.

Alpha particles are the big, bulky, bruisers of the radiation world. It is a barrage of helium nuclei, which are far bigger than beta radiation, a stream of electrons, or gamma waves.

Dr Parker told the BBC: “It’s more damaging. It takes one, two, three hits to kill a cancer cell compared with thousands of hits for beta particles.”

Alpha particles also do less damage to surrounding tissue. He added: “They have such a tiny range, a few millionths of a metre. So we can be sure that the damage is being done where it should be.”

Prostate cancer

Prostate cancer

In 90% of patients with advanced prostate cancer, the tumour will have spread to the bone. At this stage there are no treatments which affect survival.

The study looked at patients with these secondary cancers, as the source of radiation – radium-223 chloride – acts like calcium and sticks to bone.

Half were given the radium-223 chloride drug alongside traditional chemotherapy, while the other patients received chemotherapy and a dummy pill.

The death rate was 30% lower in the group taking radium-223. Those patients survived for 14 months on average compared to 11 months in the dummy group.


The trial was abandoned as “it would have been unethical not to offer the active treatment to those taking placebo”, said Dr Parker.

He added: “I think it will be a significant step forward for cancer patients”.

Researchers also said the treatment was safe. Curiously there were fewer side-effects in the group taking the treatment than those taking the dummy medicine.

The findings are being presented at the European Multidisciplinary Cancer Congress but they have not yet been peer-reviewed by other academics.

Prof Gillies McKenna, Cancer Research UK’s radiotherapy expert and director of the Gray Institute for Radiation Oncology and Biology, said: “This appears to be an important study using a highly targeted form of radiation to treat prostate cancer that has spread to the bones.

“This research looks very promising and could be an important addition to approaches available to treat secondary tumours – and should be investigated further.”

Pancreatic cancer treatment in the UK is poor

The UK ranks as one of the worst countries in the world in terms of survival for patients with pancreatic cancer, largely because of inadequate care, say experts.

A review suggests that although a fifth of patients with this deadly cancer could receive potentially life-saving surgery, only 10% do.

And many with symptoms see a doctor up to five times to get a diagnosis.

In Canada and Australia survival rates are twice that of the UK.

Pancreatic cancer has the poorest five-year survival rate of any cancer in Britain, with just 3% of people alive five years after diagnosis.

Most people die within six months of discovering they have the cancer, and only 16% are alive at one year, says the charity Pancreatic Cancer UK, which carried out the review.

Pancreatic cancer

Pancreatic cancer

England’s cancer tsar Professor Sir Mike Richards said the review findings show that “We clearly have a long way to go before we can say with confidence that everyone diagnosed with pancreatic cancer has access to the best possible treatment and care available.”

He added: “Pancreatic cancer is a challenging cancer – but we need to take this information and the opportunity it presents to improve survival and quality of life for everyone.

“Pancreatic cancer must not be written off as a hopeless cause.”

Henry Scowcroft, of Cancer Research UK, said that this type of cancer was difficult to treat, but that was “no excuse” for patients in the UK faring worse than those in other countries.


“We urgently need to improve the way we manage the disease in this country,” he said.

Pancreatic Cancer UK’s study sought the views and experiences of 1,000 stakeholders affected by pancreatic cancer, including patients and their carers, GPs, nurses, pancreatic cancer specialists and researchers.

Pancreatic cancer kills about 7,600 Britons a year.

It is a difficult cancer to diagnose because many patients will not experience symptoms until the cancer has spread to other organs. Also, the symptoms can mimic other diseases.

The most common signs of the disease are pain in the abdomen which may spread to the back, jaundice, and unexplained weight loss.