
Ovarian cancer drug approved for NHS use will prolong lives
Autoria de Professor Steve ConlanPublicado originalmente 11 Jun 2026
Atende aos diretrizes editoriais
- BaixarBaixar
- Compartilhar
- Language
- Discussão
- Versão em Áudio
- Adicionar às fontes preferidas no Google
A drug that can treat chemotherapy-resistant ovarian cancer has just been approved for use on the NHS in England. Mirvetuximab soravtansine (also known as Elahere) is the first new drug to be approved for hard-to-treat ovarian cancer in over 20 years.
Neste artigo:
Seleção de vídeos
In the UK, over 7,500 women are diagnosed with câncer de ovário every year. By 2040, it’s predicted this number will rise to 9,400.
For more than 30 years, platinum-based chemotherapy has been the standard of care for ovarian cancer. But while patients generally respond well to this treatment initially, in around 70% of patients cancer recurs and they develop a resistance to treatment.
Continue lendo abaixo
Why treatment-resistant ovarian cancer is difficult to treat
Once resistance has emerged, patient outcomes are poor – with a five-year survival rate of approximately 50%.
The approval of Elahere will help hundreds of women living in England who have treatment-resistant cancer by delaying cancer progression and prolonging life.
What is Elahere?
Voltar ao conteúdoElahere is an antibody drug conjugate (ADC). ADCs are a relatively new class of cancer treatment that have been developed to deliver highly potent chemotherapy specifically to cancer cells. This advance is an essential move away from typical chemotherapy, which can cause damage to both cancer cells and healthy cells and tissues when administered.
Continue lendo abaixo
How does Elahere work?
Voltar ao conteúdoADCs use antibodies, which are a type of immune protein. Antibodies are able to recognise cancer cells because of a protein found on their surface that is present at very high levels. This same protein is typically not found on healthy cells.
A quimioterapia agent is hidden within these antibodies so that the antibody doesn’t cause any damage to healthy cells when in circulation and only attacks the cancer cells. This chemotherapy agent is even more potent than those used in standard treatment.
The antibody and drug are tethered to one another by a chemical bridge known as a linker which only releases the drug from the antibody after it has entered into the cancer cells. The antibody binds to a cancer cell, hijacking a normal biological process called endocytosis which pulls the antibody into the cell.
Once the ADC is inside the cell, the linker will be cut by enzymes that are present inside it. This allows the antibody to release the chemotherapy, killing the cancer cell.
What is folate receptor-alpha (FR-alpha)?
Voltar ao conteúdoElahere specifically targets the protein folate receptor-alpha (FR-alpha). The FR-alpha protein is found at high levels on many ovarian cancer tumours and includes those that have undergone metastasis (cancer which has spread from the site of the primary tumour).
About 35% of patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer are eligible for treatment with Elahere, which is a significant proportion. Tumour biopsies will need to be tested for the level of FR-alpha to confirm a patient’s eligibility.
Continue lendo abaixo
What the clinical trials show
Voltar ao conteúdoIn clinical trials, patients with high FR-alpha were selected for treatment with Elahere when they had become resistant to platinum-based chemotherapy treatments. Resistance was classified as those who had received one to three rounds of first-line chemo, but their cancer had still progressed within six months of the last round of treatment. These patients had limited further treatment options and high mortality rates.
The clinical research showed that Elahere was able to delay cancer progression. Patients treated with Elahere also lived longer on average than patients who continued to be treated with other chemotherapies.
Patients who had been treated with Elahere survived for around 17 months after treatment, while those who had received other types of chemotherapy only survived around 13 months.
What does Elahere mean for ovarian cancer patients?
Voltar ao conteúdoA new treatment option for women with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer
Elahere will be offered to patients with specific types of ovarian cancer – called high-grade serous epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer. They must also have developed resistance to traditional chemotherapy after receiving one to three rounds of this class of therapy.
Ovarian cancer is a devastating disease. It’s very hard to diagnose until it reaches an advanced metastatic stage and the survival outcomes of the disease are low.
Elahere treatment outcomes are comparably very effective, and it appears to be associated with fewer side-effects compared to chemotherapy.
Elahere’s approval is a breakthrough treatment. It’s use results in increased life expectancy and quality of life for patients treated with it.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Escolhas do paciente

Notícias de saúde
Flu season starts early: UKHSA urges eligible groups to get vaccinated
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is urging everyone eligible for a free flu vaccination to book their appointment as soon as possible, as flu activity continues to rise across England. The latest surveillance data show that this year’s flu season has started earlier than usual, with a sharp increase in cases among children and signs of growing spread in the wider community.
por Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Notícias de saúde
Hormônio do sono oculto em gummies provoca aviso urgente
Parents and caregivers have been advised by the UK’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) to stop giving children Nutrition Ignition Kids Magnesium Glycinate Gummies. Read here to find out why the warning has been issued and what you need to do about it.
por Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS
Continue lendo abaixo
Sobre o autorVer biografia completa

Professor Steve Conlan
Professor and Head of the School of Life Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University
Professor Conlan joined Anglia Ruskin University in April 2026 as Head of the School of Life Sciences. He moved to ARU from Swansea University, where he held senior academic leadership positions within the Medical School and played a key role in the NHS Wales Precision Medicine Programme. A molecular biologist by training he has worked across interdisciplinary boundaries linking molecular biology and nanotechnology, and leading MSc and PhD educational programmes in nanomedicine.
Histórico do artigo
As informações nesta página são revisadas por pares por clínicos qualificados.
11 Jun 2026 | Publicado originalmente
Escrito por:
Professor Steve Conlan

Pergunte, compartilhe, conecte-se.
Navegue por discussões, faça perguntas e compartilhe experiências em centenas de tópicos de saúde.

Sentindo-se mal?
Avalie seus sintomas online gratuitamente
Inscreva-se no boletim informativo do Patient
Sua dose semanal de conselhos de saúde claros e confiáveis - escritos para ajudá-lo a se sentir informado, confiante e no controle.
Ao se inscrever, você aceita nossos Política de Privacidade. Você pode cancelar a inscrição a qualquer momento. Nunca vendemos seus dados.