logo
Three-drug treatment combo ‘holds back aggressive breast cancer for a year'

Three-drug treatment combo ‘holds back aggressive breast cancer for a year'

Scottish Sun01-06-2025

The treatment could benefit thousands of British women
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
A NEW triple threat drug combination could hold aggressive breast cancer at bay for an extra year, a trial found.
Adding the medicine inavolisib to an already used pair of drugs delayed the need for chemotherapy by almost two years.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
1
Breast cancer gets harder to treat as cells become resistant to drugs (stock image)
Credit: Getty
It prevented tumours from growing for an average of 17 months, compared to seven months in patients using the standard drug pairing palbociclib and fulvestrant.
An estimated 1,000 British women per year could benefit.
The combo works for women with a specific breast cancer type called HR+ HER2- with a PIK3CA mutation, which accounts for about three in 10 cases.
Professor Kristian Helin, chief of The Institute of Cancer Research in London, said: 'We need to tackle treatment resistance head-on to continue improving survival rates.
'This triple combination approach effectively shuts down cancer's escape routes, giving people with metastatic breast cancer the opportunity to live well for longer.'
The trial included 325 patients with aggressive and advanced breast cancer from 28 countries.
Cancers shrank in two thirds of people receiving the triple drug combination, compared to 28 per cent of those on standard treatment.
New go-to option for docs
Study author Professor Nicholas Turner, of the Royal Marsden NHS hospital in London, said: 'This therapy not only helped patients live longer but it more than doubled the time before their cancer progressed or worsened.
'It also gave them more time before needing chemotherapy which is something that patients really fear and want to delay for as long as possible.'
'These results give us confidence that this treatment could become the new go-to option.'
The study was presented at the conference of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Breast cancer symptoms you should NEVER ignore, with Dr Philippa Kaye

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How do we make the London Stock Exchange great again?
How do we make the London Stock Exchange great again?

Evening Standard

time3 hours ago

  • Evening Standard

How do we make the London Stock Exchange great again?

The unfortunate timing highlights a very British weakness. The UK does not have a problem 'making' innovation. The problem is what happens after that. After all, the very term 'artificial intelligence' was coined in Britain. Visionaries, such as Alan Turing, were working on the foundations of the field as long ago as the 1950s, and the global race to develop artificial intelligence arguably began with DeepMind, a London-based start-up founded in 2010.

Energy sector set to discuss how National Grid can meet AI demand
Energy sector set to discuss how National Grid can meet AI demand

North Wales Chronicle

time7 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Energy sector set to discuss how National Grid can meet AI demand

The AI Energy Council are set to discuss how much power will be needed to cover the increase in computer capacity that is expected in the next five years, as the AI sector grows. The group is made up of energy providers, tech companies, energy regulator Ofgem and will be chaired by Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and Tech Secretary Peter Kyle. It is thought that sectors that are looking to adopt AI and the impacts those changes could have on the energy demand will also be up for discussion, to try and prepare the energy system for the future. Tech secretary Mr Kyle said that ministers are putting 'British expertise at the heart of the AI breakthroughs which will improve our lives'. He added: 'We are clear-eyed though on the need to make sure we can power this golden era for British AI through responsible, sustainable energy sources. Today's talks will help us drive forward that mission, delivering AI infrastructure which will benefit communities up and down the country for generations to come without ever compromising on our clean energy superpower ambitions.' Earlier this month Sir Keir Starmer said that the UK must persuade a 'sceptical' public that AI can improve lives and transform the way politics and businesses work. In a speech in London, the Prime Minister acknowledged people's concern about the rapid rise of AI technology and the risk to their jobs but stressed the benefits it would have on the delivery of public services, automating bureaucracy and allowing staff such as social workers and nurses to be 'more human'.

Energy sector set to discuss how National Grid can meet AI demand
Energy sector set to discuss how National Grid can meet AI demand

South Wales Guardian

time7 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Energy sector set to discuss how National Grid can meet AI demand

The AI Energy Council are set to discuss how much power will be needed to cover the increase in computer capacity that is expected in the next five years, as the AI sector grows. The group is made up of energy providers, tech companies, energy regulator Ofgem and will be chaired by Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and Tech Secretary Peter Kyle. It is thought that sectors that are looking to adopt AI and the impacts those changes could have on the energy demand will also be up for discussion, to try and prepare the energy system for the future. Tech secretary Mr Kyle said that ministers are putting 'British expertise at the heart of the AI breakthroughs which will improve our lives'. He added: 'We are clear-eyed though on the need to make sure we can power this golden era for British AI through responsible, sustainable energy sources. Today's talks will help us drive forward that mission, delivering AI infrastructure which will benefit communities up and down the country for generations to come without ever compromising on our clean energy superpower ambitions.' Earlier this month Sir Keir Starmer said that the UK must persuade a 'sceptical' public that AI can improve lives and transform the way politics and businesses work. In a speech in London, the Prime Minister acknowledged people's concern about the rapid rise of AI technology and the risk to their jobs but stressed the benefits it would have on the delivery of public services, automating bureaucracy and allowing staff such as social workers and nurses to be 'more human'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store