NICE recommends olaparib for early breast cancer and metastatic prostate cancer
Deals for anti-cancer medicine olaparib have paved the way for hundreds to benefit as NICE recommends it for some types of early breast cancer and advanced prostate cancer.
The deals negotiated by NHS England and company AstraZeneca have enabled NICE to recommend olaparib as a clinically and cost-effective option:
for adults with HER2-negative, high-risk early breast cancer who have inherited faults in their BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes, after surgery and chemotherapy
and
for adults with previously treated hormone-relapsed metastatic prostate cancer who have the same BRCA mutations.
Breast cancer
Today’s decision reverses NICE’s earlier draft decision not to recommend olaparib for adults who have already had treatment with chemotherapy prior to or following surgery. It also means NICE has now made positive recommendations in all 19 of its appraisals of breast cancer treatments since 2016.
BRCA-positive HER2-negative high-risk early breast cancer is estimated to affect around 450 people in England, of whom approximately 300 will now be eligible for treatment with olaparib following today’s decision.
Prostate cancer
Today’s announcement also updates NICE’s recommendation for olaparib for people with prostate cancer that has BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations and that has spread after previous therapies.
It is estimated around 500 adults with this type of advanced prostate cancer will be eligible for treatment with olaparib.
Given as a tablet, olaparib is a type of targeted anti-cancer medicine called a poly adenosine diphosphate-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitor. PARP is an enzyme that helps cells repair damaged DNA. By blocking this enzyme, PARP inhibitors prevent the DNA of cancer cells being repaired, preventing them from growing and spreading while leaving healthy cells much less affected.
NICE expects to publish final guidance on olaparib for breast cancer and prostate cancer in May 2023.