Prostate cancer breakthrough: Patients could be treated with drugs currently used for breast, ovarian and skin cancer, study reveals

Home / Clinical Practice / Prostate cancer breakthrough: Patients could be treated with drugs currently used for breast, ovarian and skin cancer, study reveals
  • Scientists have discovered 80 proteins which trigger prostate cancer 
  • Revelations mean drugs used on breast, ovarian and skin cancer could be used
  • Could be life-saving for one in seven men who die within a decade of diagnosis 

Thousands of men’s lives could be saved after a world first study found new ways to tackle prostate cancer.

Scientists have discovered 80 proteins which trigger prostate cancer and cause it to spread.

The revelation means drugs currently used to treat breast, ovarian and skin cancer could in future be given to prostate cancer patients.

They could be life-saving for the one in seven men who die within a decade of getting prostate cancer.

These men need further treatment beyond radiotherapy, hormone therapy and surgery to remove their prostate gland. Currently there are just seven drugs available to block two proteins which cause prostate cancer.

But the study led by the Institute of Cancer Research in London has now found another 80 proteins which could be stopped with a single daily pill.

Scientists have discovered 80 proteins which trigger prostate cancer and cause it to spread, which means drugs currently used to treat breast, ovarian and skin cancer could in future be given to prostate cancer patients (file photo)

Scientists have discovered 80 proteins which trigger prostate cancer and cause it to spread, which means drugs currently used to treat breast, ovarian and skin cancer could in future be given to prostate cancer patients (file photo)

For a quarter of these, drugs may already be available, having been licensed for other cancers or already in clinical trials.

New treatments for prostate cancer could be available in five to ten years, say the authors.

This would provide a new lifeline for more than 7,600 men a year in Britain who die within 10 years of diagnosis. The disease kills more than 11,800 men every year in Britain, and the Daily Mail has campaigned for better treatment since 1999.

An international team of scientists analysed the DNA of 930 men with prostate cancer, and examined the tumors of 112 British cancer patients. The proteins discovered are produced by 73 genetic mutations.