Tony McHale standing in his garden, smiling.

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Tony McHale (pictured above) discovered he had an alteration in the BRCA2 gene at the age of 61, putting him at a much higher risk of developing prostate cancer. Shortly after, Tony joined the IMPACT study at the ICR, which investigated whether regular screening would lead to earlier diagnosis of aggressive forms of the disease. Around 18 months later, the screening revealed Tony had prostate cancer. 

"Being involved in the IMPACT study saved my life. If I hadn't taken part, I'd never have known I had prostate cancer. As far as I was aware, I didn't have any symptoms – and the sooner the disease is detected and treated, the better the chances are of survival." – Tony

Godfrey's prostate cancer story

 

DJ and music promoter, Godfrey Fletcher, found out he had prostate cancer in 2015 at the age of 47, shortly after his father had also been diagnosed.

"I was so lucky that my cancer was picked up at a very early stage. I was young and fit, with no symptoms. A year after my treatment finished, I was told it had been successful. My dad wasn't so fortunate. He was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer and passed away at 80. His experience, and mine, showed me the importance of early diagnosis."

Why we need more research into prostate cancer

We're proud of the research advances we've made over the last 20 years. Our scientists discovered the drug abiraterone; identified genetic variants that influence risk of developing the disease; and pioneered new, more precise forms of radiotherapy. But despite our research advances, some prostate cancers remain difficult to treat. This includes those diagnosed at a later stage and those more aggressive tumours, which can spread quickly and evolve to resist treatment.

That's why we urgently need better ways to detect prostate cancer earlier, predict drug resistance, and develop smarter, more personalised treatments. Your gift will help our world-leading researchers unravel the complexity of prostate cancer, to give men precise and personalised care with the right treatments at the right time, to live longer and healthier lives.

Professor Eeles's goal is to develop new tests that could be used in prostate cancer screening, helping to identify men at a higher risk. Her team showed that a simple saliva test, carried out at home, was more accurate at identifying future risk of prostate cancer for some men than the current standard blood test. 

Building on this success, they recently launched a major new study to find out whether an improved version of this test – now suitable for more diverse groups, including Black men and younger men – can help detect more cancers earlier in men at higher risk. 

Tackling drug resistance

Our research underpinned the development of olaparib, a drug that revolutionised treatment for people with BRCA-related cancers. In a recent study, Professor Johann de Bono's team showed that changes which can be spotted with a simple blood test can reveal how long a prostate cancer patient will respond to olaparib. 

The ability to predict when – and how – patients will stop responding to olaparib could help doctors personalise treatment, and in the future, guide the development of new drugs to outsmart resistance – keeping us one step ahead of prostate cancer.

Professor Johann de Bono in the laboratory, smiling.

Creating smarter, kinder treatments for every man

Our scientists are at the forefront of precision cancer medicine – developing more effective treatments with fewer side effects.

Laboratory studies co-led by Dr Adam Sharp and Professor Johann de Bono showed that NXP800 – a new drug which targets a ‘master switch’ that cancer cells hijack to support their growth – slowed prostate cancer cell growth. This innovative drug could potentially also benefit men with advanced prostate cancer that has stopped responding to standard hormone therapy.

A study co-led by Professor Emma Hall has found that men with intermediate-risk, localised prostate cancer can be treated just as effectively with five sessions of higher-dose radiation therapy as with several weeks of standard treatment. Using stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), which targets tumours with pinpoint accuracy, patients can receive a highly effective treatment with far fewer hospital visits. 

A study co-led by Professor Nick James has shown that a new artificial intelligence (AI) test can select which men with high-risk prostate cancer that has not spread will require the life-extending drug abiraterone. In the STAMPEDE trial, the team found that three out of four men could be spared unnecessary treatment, making the drug – discovered by our scientists – more affordable for the NHS.

Your gift can help every man with prostate cancer live longer, healthier lives

Help someone's dad, grandad, brother, uncle, partner, or friend survive prostate cancer. Your support will help fund life-saving research – so that every man can spend more precious time with their loved ones.

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 Related news and blogs

28/01/26

As we enter 2026, scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, share the developments expected this year that could soon change how cancer is treated – from technologies designed to deliver drugs directly into tumours, to new ways to harness the immune system. Some are approaching regulatory approval, others are entering clinical trials, but all point to a future of smarter, kinder, cancer treatment.

Harnessing the immune system

Immunotherapy has transformed outcomes in several cancers, but prostate cancer has remained an exception. Traditional immune-based approaches have shown limited benefit, in part because prostate tumours are adept at evading immune detection – they are ‘immune-cold’.

T-cell engagers (TCEs) are a form of antibody designed to link the body’s cancer-killing immune T cells to tumour cells – one half is engineered to latch onto antigens found on the surface of cancer cells, while the other half binds to T cells. By bringing T cells directly to the tumour, TCEs help the immune system to attack the cancer more effectively.

In advanced prostate cancer, TCEs have shown promise in early-stage clinical trials, suggesting these therapies could offer a new treatment option where few exist. ICR researchers are now trialling newer versions of these TCEs, which it is hoped will reduce the need for frequent treatments and hospital visits.

Professor Johann de Bono, Professor of Experimental Cancer Medicine at the ICR, said:

“The future of T-cell engagers in prostate cancer treatment is really exciting, with much expected in the next year or two. As we see research progress, these therapies could move into earlier stages of prostate cancer, potentially increasing cure rates and transforming the way prostate cancer is treated.”

From inhibition to elimination and permanent inactivation

Historically, most drugs to treat cancer have focussed on blocking the activity of a specific, cancer-causing protein. A key issue with this approach is that drug resistance can occur, through a number of mechanisms, as the problematic protein is still present.

New approaches take drug development a step further. They aim to either eliminate the protein entirely, or to exploit it to kill the cancer cell. One of these methods, RIPTACs (Regulated Induced Proximity TArgeting Chimeras), has trial results expected this year.

Dr Adam Sharp Leader of the Translational Therapeutics Group at the ICR, said:

“There’s a novel approach, called RIPTACs, which sticks together two proteins within a cancer cell. One protein is specific to the cancer cell, meaning that only the cancer cell and not normal cells are affected by the drug, and the second protein is one that is essential for the cancer cell to survive. By inactivating this protein, the RIPTAC forces the cell to die – and specifically only the cancer cell. These are being explored in early phase clinical trials at the ICR, for the treatment of lethal prostate cancer currently.”

Targeted protein degradation (TPD) is another technique to destroy a problematic protein. It harnesses the cell’s own waste disposal system – binding the target protein with one which will mark it for destruction.

The first drug derived from this approach, vepdegestrant, is currently under active review and is widely expected to be approved by FDA for the treatment of patients with advanced breast cancer soon.

The ICR has been one of the pioneers and world-leading academic centres in this field, and the early discoveries in the Centre for Cancer Drug Discovery at the ICR led to the creation of a spinout in 2018, Monte Rosa Therapeutics.

Professor Zoran Rankovic, Director of the Centre for Protein Degradation at the ICR, said:

“Targeted protein degradation is highly innovative and one of the most promising new approaches to emerge in drug discovery research in the past decade, and it is poised to reach a major milestone in 2026, with the expected FDA approval of vepdegestrant. 

“One of the programmes developed at the ICR’s Centre for Protein Degradation combines TPD with personalised immunotherapy – another highly innovative drug approach that uses the body’s own immune system to fight cancer. This programme is expected to advance in 2026 into clinical trials for the treatment of paediatric brain tumours or paediatric solid body tumours. This is one of the first clinical examples of TPD application in childhood cancers – another major TPD milestone this year.”

Redefining radiation

Radiopharmaceuticals are an emerging class of targeted cancer treatments that combine a molecule capable of homing in on cancer cells with a radioactive agent, delivering lethal radiation precisely to tumours while sparing surrounding healthy tissue.

Recent advances have accelerated progress in this field. New radioisotopes are available, particularly highly potent alpha-emitters such as actinium-225 (Ac-225), which release large amounts of energy over very short distances. This makes them especially powerful at killing cancer cells while minimising collateral damage. At the same time, the targeting molecules used to guide these treatments to tumours have become increasingly sophisticated, improving accuracy and effectiveness.

At the ICR, researchers are exploring multiple radiopharmaceutical approaches across a range of cancers. One promising programme focuses on high-grade gliomas, including IDH-wildtype glioblastoma and paediatric-type diffuse high-grade gliomas, aggressive brain tumours with very limited treatment options. Preclinical studies of a novel targeted radiopharmaceutical, guided by immuno-PET imaging, have shown impressive results, raising hopes that this approach could soon progress into early-phase clinical trials.

Dr Gabriela Kramer-Marek, Leader of the Preclinical Molecular Imaging Group at the ICR, said:

“2026 is shaping up to be another big year for radiopharmaceuticals. There are several Ac-225-labelled molecules currently in development, with 13 already tested in humans, which gives a sense of how busy the pipeline has become. With several ICR-led programmes showing strong preclinical promise, we are hopeful that these approaches will move closer to the clinic and, ultimately, offer new options for patients with some of the hardest-to-treat cancers.”

An adaptive approach to accelerate brain cancer treatment

There have been over 1,000 brain cancer clinical trials over the past two decades, but there has been far less progress to treat the disease than in other cancers.

There are many hurdles to jump over when it comes to improving brain cancer treatments. The blood-brain barrier makes designing drugs that reach the brain difficult. Trialling drugs in these patients comes with many risks, as the brain is so fragile. And brain cancers are relatively rare, with small patient numbers meaning it takes many years to carry out clinical trials.

The 5G (next-Generation aGile Genomically Guided Glioma platform) study is a pioneering study aiming to drastically accelerate the process of finding new drugs for brain cancer. It is the world’s first adaptive clinical trial platform for patients with brain tumours. Patients will receive drugs based on the specific genetic makeup of their disease.

The first three arms of the trial are open, and it is in the process of being scaled up. Early results from the trial will be available at the end of the year.

Professor Juanita Lopez, Professor of Novel Cancer Therapeutic Trials at the ICR and Co-Lead of the 5G trial, said:

“We were told the problem was too difficult. But we’ve done the pioneering work to build the 5G platform, we’ve started the trial, and I’m hopeful that we can soon make a change for patients with this devastating disease. This is just the beginning – I’m looking forward to the trial being scaled up, and I’m so excited to see the results from the three arms of the trial open currently.”

Boosting drug delivery

A major challenge for chemotherapy treatment is balancing the ability of the drug to kill cancer cells, with the damage it can cause to normal, healthy cells. Acoustic cluster therapy is an innovative approach designed to overcome this problem by enhancing the delivery of chemotherapy directly into the tumour.

The technology uses microscopic clusters of bubbles and liquid droplets that are injected alongside standard chemotherapy. A conventional ultrasound scan then converts the clusters into an activated form which, with further gentle ultrasound directed at the tumour, helps to pump the drug into the tumour, greatly increasing the amount of drug which reaches the cancer cells. Crucially, this could be used to increase the effectiveness of chemotherapy without increasing the dose given to patients.

A world-first clinical trial, led by researchers at the ICR and The Royal Marsden, tested this approach in patients with liver tumours that have spread from the bowel. This early-stage trial showed that Acoustic Cluster Therapy is safe, did not worsen the side effects of the chemotherapy, and helped improve the response of tumours to chemotherapy. A large multi-centre trial, including the ICR and The Royal Marsden, has now been opened to determine how Acoustic Cluster Therapy can boost treatment for locally advanced pancreatic cancer.

Professor Jeff Bamber, Professor in Physics Applied to Medicine, who led the work to develop and evaluate the technology at the ICR, said:

“Our innovative Acoustic Cluster Therapy is designed to overcome barriers to drug delivery that tumours develop. By doing so, it has the potential to both improve how well treatments work against tumours, while also lowering the frequency and severity of side effects. It could also enhance newer treatment approaches, including immunotherapy.

“The collaborative development and assessment of this technology highlights the ICR’s strong partnerships with industry in the field of medical imaging, and the unique environment we have for translating scientific advances into clinical trials. The Acoustic Cluster Therapy trials are examples of the ICR’s strength in working with The Royal Marsden, involving oncologists, radiologists, physicists and nurses working together to take research from ‘bench to bedside’ while supporting the patient through the treatment.”