Daily Mail

Two-in-one prostate drug ‘halves risk’ of cancer spread

- By Xantha Leatham Deputy Science Editor

A TREATMENT described as groundbrea­king could benefit hundreds of men with advanced prostate cancer if approved in the UK.

Trials have shown a combinatio­n of two drugs – enzalutami­de and talazopari­b – can halve the risk of prostate cancer progressin­g.

The treatment is part of a class of new precision medication­s which allow tumours to be targeted more accurately.

And, while the combinatio­n has recently been given the green light by regulators in the US, a UK decision is expected later this year. Last precision treatments for prostate cancer called PARP inhibitors, which work by blocking a protein which repairs cancer cells. Enzalutami­de is a type of hormone therapy for men whose prostate cancer has spread to other parts of the body.

The combinatio­n is currently scheduled to be reviewed by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) – the UK regulator – in September.

And if given the go-ahead it could benefit ‘several hundred men per year’ with advanced prostate cancer, according to experts.

However, key questions remain – including whether the current benefit in slowing the rate at which cancer progresses can translate to a meaningful extension of life.

And if life expectancy is extended, experts say it’s important to find out whether this will only benefit men who have prostate cancers driven by a particular genetic mutation.

The Mail has relaunched our End Needless Prostate Deaths campaign in a bid to improve diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer.

The Mail has fought for nearly 25 years to raise the profile of the cancer, which claims a man’s life every 45 minutes in Britain. More than 50,000 men are diagnosed with it a year, making it the most common cancer in men and second overall.

Dr Matthew Hobbs, of Prostate Cancer UK, said: ‘Treatments which target specific genetic changes in prostate cancers are really exciting.

‘However, targeted treatments won’t work for every man, and we need to tread carefully to make sure they’re given only to those who actually benefit, so those who don’t can move on to other treatments and avoid unnecessar­y side effects.’

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