The UK boasts one of the worst records over access to new cancer drugs as a new report shows stark inequalities exist across the world,
Swedish researchers placed the UK in the bottom group for what it described as "slow and low" uptake of drugs after analysing the sales of 67 treatments in 25 countries, the US, Austria, France and Switzerland were the best..
The researchers from the Karolinska Institute and Stockholm School of Economics said getting new treatments to patients quickly and in large numbers was reflected in the survival rates.
France showed the highest five-year survival rate in Europe at 71% for women and 53% for men, compared with 53% and 43% in the UK respectively though the UK government said it had speeded up the drug approval process..
The greatest differences in uptake, measured by the proportion of patients given the drugs and how quickly they came on to the individual markets after being produced, was seen in bowel and lung cancer drugs, with the uptake of bowel cancer treatment bevacizumab in the US being 10 times the European average, the researchers found.
In Europe the likes of France and German had higher than average use, compared with "very low" in Italy and the UK.
For lung cancer, uptake of erlotinib was 10 times higher than the European avearge in the US and three times higher in Germany. Uptake in Australia, the UK, Norway and Poland was slow.
In contrast in the UK, the first sale of breast cancer drug trastuzumab was in autumn 2000, nearly two years after it hit the market in the US and a full 12 months after it was given in Switzerland and France.
Along with the UK, New Zealand, Poland, Czech Republic and South Africa were ranked at the bottom of the overall league.
Lead researcher Dr Bengt Jonsson said: "It is our hope that this report will inspire policy-makers and decision-makers to take action to address these imbalances so that access to new innovative cancer drugs does not become dependent on the patient's couintry of residence.
"Cancer research continues to grow, with many new drugs and treatments expected to be introduced in the coming years.
"Countries need to address urgently how they are going to accommodate newer drugs into health care systems and pay for them."
In the NHS, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has responsibility for recommending if new drug treatments should be provided by the health service.
The system has been heavily criticised because of a backlog in assessing treatments and for restricting access to them, but defending the agency a Department of Health spokesman said NICE was essential in ensuring that the NHS used the most effective treatments, and added measures had been taken to speed up the approval process for key drugs. Citing the example of draft guidance being made available within two weeks of Herceptin for early breast cancer being licensed."
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