Glasgow scientists are set to lead a first-of-its-kind pancreatic cancer clinical trial to extend the lives of people with the disease.

The treatment is designed to make cancer cells more responsive to chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

The Cancer Research UK trial, which launches at The Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre in Glasgow and three other hospitals across the UK today, will treat pancreatic cancer patients whose cancer has grown too big to be removed by surgery but has not yet spread to other parts of the body.

The team will give patients on the trial a drug called olaparib, in addition to the standard treatment of chemotherapy and radiation known as chemoradiation.

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Cancer Research UK support helped to develop this drug.

Professor Jeff Evans, chief investigator at Glasgow University, said: “This is the first time we’re looking at ways to make pancreatic cancer cells more sensitive to radiotherapy.

"One way to make pancreatic cancer a more treatable disease is to shrink the tumour enough to make surgery a possibility and we hope to see that happen in this trial.”

In the first part of the trial, the doctors want to find the safest dose of olaparib to give with chemoradiation.

And in the second part of the trial, the doctors hope the combination will make the tumour small enough to be removed by surgery in these patients.

Radiotherapy, and some chemotherapy drugs, works by causing damage to DNA in cancer cells.

When cancer cells repair this damage, then the tumours become resistant to treatment.

Olaparib stops an enzyme in the body, called PARP-1, from working. Cells rely on PARP-1 to help repair their damaged DNA. So cancer cells are more likely to die due to radiotherapy when olaparib stops PARP-1 working.

Cancer survivor Noreen Leighton, 58, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in February 2011 after going to her doctor because she had been feeling unwell.

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She says that taking part in a Cancer Research UK trial during her treatment played a huge part in her survival.

She said: “When my doctor told me I had cancer I was in a state of disbelief. I was sure they had made a mistake.

"After I had an operation to remove the tumour, my doctor enrolled me on a clinical trial and that’s the reason I’m here and able to spend time with my two beautiful grandchildren.

“Research transformed my life and now I live in the moment of every day. Pancreatic patients urgently need new treatment options and the only way to find these is through research.”

In Scotland, pancreatic cancer incidence rates have increased by 12 per cent over the past 10 years.

Over this same period in Scotland, pancreatic cancer mortality rates have increased by 6 per cent.

Many people are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer at a stage when the tumour is too big to be removed by surgery and this treatment could bring tumours back to an easier-to-treat state.

Professor Peter Johnson, Cancer Research UK’s chief clinician, said: “Around 9,400 people are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer each year in the UK and it remains a very difficult disease to spot at an early stage, making it much harder to treat. Despite this we are making steady progress through research and trials like this one.

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“We still have a long way to go, but Cancer Research UK has made a big increase in the amount we’re investing into pancreatic cancer research, tripling our spend in this area, and we are just starting to see the results.”

The trial will be managed by the Cancer Research UK clinical trials unit in Glasgow and co-sponsored by Glasgow University and Greater Glasgow and Clyde NHS Board with some funding from the Experimental Cancers Medicine Centres.