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Impact: UoE-developed techniques to determine liver volume and define, pre-operation, the minimum liver remnant required have transformed the viability and success of liver surgery and stimulated commercial development of imaging software/hardware.
Significance: Precise functional liver volume measurement prior to surgery is now the standard of care and, for example, renders 85% of patients previously deemed irresectable to be resectable with a perioperative mortality of 2-4%.
Beneficiaries: Patients with liver cancer; the NHS and healthcare delivery organisations; imaging software/hardware companies.
Attribution: Pivotal studies were led by Wigmore and Garden at UoE.
Reach: Worldwide; technique recommended in guidelines in Europe, N America, Asia, Australasia; deployed in the management of 3600 patients per annum in the UK alone; the use of open-source software increases accessibility in developing world.
The Cancer Research UK Formulation Unit at the University of Strathclyde performed the pharmaceutical research and development of new chemotherapy treatments for malignant brain and prostate cancer (temozolomide and abiraterone acetate). These two drugs are now marketed globally, with FDA approval for the US market in 1999 and 2011 respectively, and have directly improved the quality of life and increased survival rates during treatment for over a quarter of a million cancer patients annually since 2008. Temozolomide achieved $1 billion sales per annum in 2008, and Abiraterone global sales reached $1.45 billion by 2013. Both drugs have produced economic benefit to the charity Cancer Research UK through royalty payments.
University of Glasgow research has led to the adoption of first-line chemotherapy for ovarian cancer, which has improved patient survival by 11% and has been used to treat 66% of women with ovarian cancer since January 2011 in the West of Scotland Cancer Care Network alone. These therapies are recommended by guidelines for ovarian cancer treatment in the USA, Europe and the UK. The USA guidelines are disseminated to 4.3 million people worldwide and the European guidelines reach 15,000 health professionals. The UK guidelines are used to identify those drugs that are funded by the NHS and used in NHS hospitals.
Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a treatable but incurable cancer that originates in the cells lining the lungs. Over 14,000 people worldwide are diagnosed annually with MPM. Antifolates are often used in cancer therapy, but side effects are a major issue. A retrospective analysis of cancer trials and phase 1 trial of MPM patients, carried out by Newcastle in collaboration with Eli Lilly Pharmaceuticals, determined that plasma homocysteine levels were a good predictor of drug toxicity in cancer patients treated with the antifolate pemetrexed, and that this drug was well tolerated by patients with low homocysteine levels. It was also determined that pemetrexed treatment should be supplemented with vitamin B12 as well as folic acid, to reduce drug toxicity. Ultimately, this permitted the continued development of pemetrexed, which otherwise would have been too toxic for clinical use. It is now the only licensed drug for MPM treatment in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy.
Research conducted by a multidisciplinary team of oncologists and scientists at the University of Southampton has driven major advances in lymphoma care, leading to the development and standardisation of effective new antibody treatments and optimal drug regimens. Through their direction of international clinical trials, they have influenced care for Hodgkin and Burkitt lymphoma in the UK and internationally, affecting all stages of patient-experience from diagnosis to treatment. Their findings underpin significant improvements in survival and quality of life for the 14,000 people affected by lymphoma in the UK each year.
Bowel cancer is the third most frequently diagnosed cancer worldwide. University of Glasgow researchers have established Xeloda (an oral 5-fluorouracil precursor) and XELOX (a chemotherapeutic regimen combining Xeloda with oxaliplatin) as highly effective, targeted therapies for patients with bowel cancer. Since 2008, European regulatory approval of these therapies has been incorporated into major international clinical guidelines. The research has transformed patient care by improving the treatment experience, with more convenient dosing schedules and fewer side effects compared with previous chemotherapy procedures. Xeloda and XELOX have transformed chemotherapy for bowel cancer and decreased therapeutic costs, potentially saving around £4,762 (Xeloda) and £947 (XELOX) per patient for the NHS.
Dr Dickinson (Bioengineering) collaborated with Professor Habib (Surgery) to develop novel methods for removing or starving tumours. Resection (removing part of an organ) is theoretically an ideal method for treating liver cancer as the liver can regenerate, but it causes extensive blood loss. The Bioengineering team developed a bipolar electrode system that employs RF current to coagulate a track in the liver; the track can then be cut without bleeding. Prototypes were successfully tested in pre-clinical and clinical trials. 20,000 single-use devices (value: US$40M) have been sold under licence by AngioDynamics, with an estimated saving of >800 lives. Complications, intensive care, blood transfusions, and hospital stay have also been dramatically reduced. Dickinson developed further bipolar devices for maintaining the patency of ducts during pancreatic and biliary cancers, for ablating liver tumours and for blocking tumour blood supply. Sold by Imperial spin-out Emcision, these are also in current clinical use.
Temozolomide is a major UK anti-cancer drug development success story. Following chemical synthesis at Aston University, early clinical evaluation of temozolomide carried out at Imperial College optimised how temozolomide was scheduled and delivered to patients to ensure maximum efficacy balanced acceptable side effects. Imperial's early trials demonstrated how the drug could be used effectively to treat patients with a type of brain cancer, glioma, and was pivotal to its subsequent market licensing. ESMO and NICE guidelines recommend temozolomide for use in patients with recurrent glioma and for patients with newly diagnosed Grade IV glioma. Glioma is a relatively rare cancer yet annual sales of temozolomide have been in excess of £900 million per year since 2009. Temozolomide given during and following radiotherapy is now standard of care for glioma and has improved survival compared to previous treatments or radiotherapy alone.