All 2 Debates between Nicholas Dakin and Eric Ollerenshaw

Cancer Treatment and Prevention

Debate between Nicholas Dakin and Eric Ollerenshaw
Tuesday 11th March 2014

(10 years, 9 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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Eric Ollerenshaw Portrait Eric Ollerenshaw (Lancaster and Fleetwood) (Con)
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I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Mid Derbyshire (Pauline Latham) on securing this debate.

I apologise in advance because there will be some repetition as I had an Adjournment debate last week on pancreatic cancer and a new drug, which is fundamentally what I will speak about this morning. I think hon. Members will understand that there is a need for repetition, because we are right in the middle of the Cancer Drugs Fund’s making a decision about this drug, so anything extra we can add is useful. I am sure the Minister has heard this before, because she attended that Adjournment debate on Tuesday 4 March.

The Cancer Drugs Fund met on Thursday 6 March and I understand that the process is that it will take a week to consider, then it will inform the applicants and then, in two weeks’ time, its decision about Abraxane will be made public and we will know. Abraxane has been licensed for use in patients in the UK and Ireland with metastatic pancreatic cancer; it has been described as the biggest advance in pancreatic cancer treatment in almost two decades, for a disease where survival rates have barely changed in 40 years.

As Abraxane has not been approved by NICE, it is not yet available on the NHS as a standard treatment. Pancreatic Cancer UK, the biggest charity in this field, together with Pancreatic Cancer Action are both keen to ensure that patients are able to access Abraxane through the Cancer Drugs Fund. We should like to see the drug approved by the CDF then eventually by NICE, so that access to it is more readily available. We know that Abraxane is due to be reviewed by NICE soon, but this process takes a great deal of time, and time is something that most pancreatic cancer patients do not always have.

My comments relate to the treatment of cancer. As I have said, I hope that hon. Members will put up with some repetition, given the importance of these few weeks to the sufferers, survivors and friends and relatives connected to this cancer, because it is a highly charged moment.

Nicholas Dakin Portrait Nic Dakin (Scunthorpe) (Lab)
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I congratulate the hon. Member for Mid Derbyshire (Pauline Latham) on securing this debate. Does the hon. Gentleman agree with her that the key is early intervention and effective treatment? That is the key to getting it right with regard to melanoma, bowel cancer, pancreatic cancer and ovarian cancer, for example. The hon. Gentleman is making powerful points in this respect.

Eric Ollerenshaw Portrait Eric Ollerenshaw
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As per usual, I agree with the hon. Member for Scunthorpe (Nic Dakin). I pay tribute to his work on the all-party group on pancreatic cancer. He and my hon. Friend the Member for Mid Derbyshire hit the nail on the head. At the moment I am just talking about treatment, but early diagnosis is the key to all of this, particularly pancreatic cancer. More than 50% of people who are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer are diagnosed after emergency admission to hospital: it is that late and, too often, too late to be able to do much in terms of survival beyond a year. Only 4% of people diagnosed with pancreatic cancer survive for up to five years, so it is clear how dramatic an improvement in early diagnosis would be.

It is estimated, on average, that Abraxane will allow a further two months’ survival, which, in the great scheme of things, does not seem massive, but it could double the lifetime chances of the average pancreatic cancer sufferer. Pancreatic Cancer UK launched its campaign, “Two More Months”, to highlight that. I quoted examples in my other Adjournment debate, which hon. Members may read, of survivors describing what two more months could have done for them, in their situation. Survivors talk about the possibility of getting married, which was not available because the person died early. There are other heart-rending examples of what that time would have enabled them to do. To underline the point, in terms of pancreatic cancer, as I have said, two more months is a massive improvement on what is available, unfortunately, to far too many.

In my Adjournment debate, I expressed our fears—the all-party group’s, Pancreatic Cancer UK’s and Pancreatic Cancer Action’s—that the call for the drug to be made available would be dismissed by the Cancer Drugs Fund because it gives only two more months. It is interesting that there are no pancreatic specialists in the Cancer Drugs Fund. Our key concern last week was that the two months would not be considered sufficient, because in comparison with other cancers it does not seem a great deal of time. Yet more than 60 specialists treating patients with pancreatic cancer shared their names, via Dr Seb Cummins, supporting this submission and therefore hoping that they would be listened to.

Although I did not attend the meeting, apparently the panel did not acknowledge the unmet need in this disease area and did not allocate points to represent this, given its criteria. Individual panel members did not appear to accept, as we feared, the benefits of an additional two months, although I am told that there was some acceptance that, yes, the drug did prolong life. Obviously, the panel has to take into account—I am not a specialist in medicine, Mr Gray, as you well know—the quality of life in those two months.

I understand that the decision will have been made, but it will not be public until two weeks’ time. So where do we go from here? I have already expressed concern about the Cancer Drugs Fund, because, to my knowledge, last year not one new cancer drug was agreed, plus none, if I understand the system correctly—I admit that my understanding of it is a bit basic—has been passed down to standard NHS clinical use. Nothing has left its funding stream. I am told that it has overspent a certain amount of money, but again I do not know whether it is anecdotal or exactly correct; I hope that the Minister comments on that.

The Cancer Drugs Fund process has had enormous success, which I acknowledge. Thousands of people have benefited from this innovation. There is anecdotal evidence that, because this does not exist in Wales, people there are moving across into England to take advantage of it, and why would they not, if they or somebody in their family is in this situation? The hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon), who is present, has commented previously on the situation in Northern Ireland. However, although I acknowledge its massive success, it seems to me, from the outside, that somehow we are stuck in respect of where we go with the Cancer Drugs Fund and its funding in future.

It almost appears as though the Cancer Drugs Fund has become a victim of its own success. We must not let that success become failure now, simply because we are going to get a blockage of applications for new drugs; I thought that dealing with those was the whole purpose of the Cancer Drugs Fund in the long run.

In terms of pancreatic cancer, too many hopes have been raised too many times and for too long it has remained the poor relation in all this. So when hope, such as this new drug, comes along, we want that hope tested, not against other cancers but against a past history of neglect. Pancreatic cancer already has the lowest survival rate of the 21 most common cancers. As I mentioned, five-year survival rates are less than 4%. This figure has barely changed in nearly 40 years. Pancreatic cancer five-year survival rates lag behind many other European Union countries and are almost half of what they are in the United States, Canada and Australia.

Hon. Members might now understand why we want the hope given by this new drug extended to the 7,900 of the soon-to-be diagnosed 8,500 patients this year, because these 7,900 will be diagnosed with cancer too late and will die within the year. They deserve that extra time that so many others were denied in the past because there was nothing like Abraxane available. They deserve some extra consideration, given our past neglect of this, the fifth biggest cancer killer in our country.

Pancreatic Cancer

Debate between Nicholas Dakin and Eric Ollerenshaw
Wednesday 23rd May 2012

(12 years, 7 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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Westminster Hall is an alternative Chamber for MPs to hold debates, named after the adjoining Westminster Hall.

Each debate is chaired by an MP from the Panel of Chairs, rather than the Speaker or Deputy Speaker. A Government Minister will give the final speech, and no votes may be called on the debate topic.

This information is provided by Parallel Parliament and does not comprise part of the offical record

Eric Ollerenshaw Portrait Eric Ollerenshaw
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My hon. Friend represents Pudsey, a Yorkshire constituency, so he says it like it is. I will go on to say something about hospices; what he said about them is true. In a sense, for a lot of families cancer is almost like the end. With pancreatic cancer, proper treatment is vital and nobody should underestimate the work of the hospice movement. As I say, I will go on to say a couple of things about hospices.

Nicholas Dakin Portrait Nic Dakin (Scunthorpe) (Lab)
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I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing this very important and timely debate. I also pay tribute to his passion for this issue and to the personal experience that he brings to this debate; he brings real understanding. In addition, I pay tribute to Pancreatic Cancer UK, which is doing excellent work, and to campaigners such as Maggie Watts, a campaigner in my constituency. She has direct experience of this issue and is driving an e-petition forward on it.

Does the hon. Gentleman not agree that we need more support from the Government in the area of research into cures? Only 1.6% of research funding is spent on pancreatic cancer, and the Government can move things forward here.