The world's first precision medicine for prostate cancer

The world's first precision medicine for prostate cancer

For too long, men with prostate cancer have been treated with a 'one size fits all' approach, even though no two prostate cancers are the same, and can have very different responses to the same treatment. This means that most treatments only benefit some men.

With the help of supporters like you, we funded research that catalogued these differences, and found a group of men that might benefit from a new drug, called olaparib, that was originally developed for women with ovarian and breast cancer.

This research led to olaparib becoming the world’s first precision medicine for prostate cancer. For the first time, men across the UK can now receive targeted treatment, based on the genetic make-up of their cancer.

Joaquin Mateo Headshot
Dr Joaquin Mateo
Prostate Cancer UK’s funding was critical to allow us to start selecting patients who would benefit from treatment. That was huge.
Dr Joaquin Mateo

From research idea to access for all

Impact Idea

Idea

Precision medicine aims to treat each man based on characteristics or mutations specific to his prostate cancer. Mutations in genes involved in a process called DNA damage repair, which includes the BRCA genes, were a great place to start.

Impact Research

Lab research

We funded a number of projects investigating how the DNA damage repair process can go wrong in prostate cancer cells and how a treatment called PARP inhibition can be used to treat prostate cancers with these mutations.

We also funded researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research to develop a test to select the best treatment, including PARP inhibition, based on a man's individual cancer and genetics.

Impact Trials

Clinical trials

Work we funded with Movember and the Medical Research Council provided crucial evidence to launch a large clinical trial into the use of PARP inhibition for men with prostate cancer. The TOPARP trial showed that men with mutations in their DNA damage repair pathways responded to treatment with the PARP inhibitor olaparib.

We then funded the team at The Institute of Cancer Research, London to further investigate samples donated by men on the trial, to understand which mutations can be used to identify men who respond well to PARP inhibition.

Impact Approved

Approved for use

Tests are now available to identify men who have cancers with the relevant mutations.

Impact Access

Access for all

Thanks to our funded research and to our campaigning, olaparib is now available for men in the UK with advanced prostate cancer who have known BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations and have stopped responding to hormone treatment.

What's next?

Thanks to your continued support, even more men could benefit from targeted treatment in the future. The team at The Institute of Cancer Research have discovered that men whose prostate cancer has another genetic change may also respond to treatment with olaparib.

We've also funded a number of projects into understanding the biology of prostate cancer to enable more precision medicines to be developed.

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Your support helps us fund pioneering research, so we can work towards a future where men's lives aren't limited by prostate cancer.

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