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Category:
Law suits
Region:
United Kingdom
PROTESTS FORCE REVIEW OF BAN ON CANCER DRUGS
Source: Times Online
Date: 30-Aug-2008
Author: Sarah-Kate Templeton
The National Health Service drugs rationing body has been forced to review its policy of banning life-prolonging cancer medicines that are available elsewhere in Europe.

At present it rejects drugs that cost more than about 30,000 pounds for a year of good-quality life - a limit that has not changed in four years.

The review by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice) emerged after 26 top cancer consultants wrote to The Sunday Times last week saying that the current system for assessing new drugs was not working.

This weekend Professor Karol Sikora, former head of the World Health Organisation cancer programme and one of the main signatories of the letter, welcomed the review, which is expected to report back later this autumn.

However, he said it was unlikely to solve the problem of withholding expensive drugs from NHS patients and predicted that political realities will force Alan Johnson, the health secretary, to intervene.

Nice provoked anger three weeks ago by ruling that the kidney cancer drugs Sutent, Nexavar, Torisel and Avastin should not be prescribed on the NHS. It brushed off the criticisms in Sikora's letter, saying any concession would be at the expense of other patients.

It did not mention that it had already embarked on a review, which it now says it commissioned between three and four years ago.

Johnson has already hinted that he is concerned about Nice's policy on kidney cancer. In a phone-in programme on BBC Radio 5 Live in June, he said that drugs were "too slow going through the system".

Writing in The Sunday Times today, Sikora says: "I suspect by Christmas the drugs will be approved. Otherwise this episode could lose too many votes."

Meanwhile, a one-year-old baby girl, Emma Rosser, is to take legal action against the NHS for denying her father, Jack, a cancer drug which could prolong his life. Lawyers are preparing to take a High Court action on behalf of the infant because they believe that an NHS trust is depriving her of a family life.
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