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NHS hospitals to test AI tool that helps diagnose and treat prostate cancer

1 day ago
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A tool that uses artificial intelligence to help diagnose men with prostate cancer and guide decisions about treatment is to be tested in NHS hospitals, researchers have announced.The £1.9m Vanguard Path study, funded by Prostate Cancer UK and led by researchers at the University of Oxford, is expected to last three years and will test an AI tool called the ArteraAI Prostate Biopsy Assay.In total, biopsies from more than 4,000 men will be used.The tool, which analyses digitised biopsy images to produce a personalised risk score, has already been shown in clinical trials to identify which men with high-risk prostate cancer would be most likely to benefit from the drug abiraterone.

However, trials in the US have suggested it could also be used for less aggressive forms of prostate cancer to predict which men are most likely to benefit from having hormone therapy in addition to radiotherapy.In addition, studies have suggested the tool can help identify which patients can be monitored without the need for immediate treatment.Dr Matthew Hobbs, director of research at Prostate Cancer UK, said: “If and when this gets implemented, you could use one tool irrespective of where you are on the aggressiveness scale, to make a very clinically and life-enhancingly important decision for each of those men.”.He added that the tool was already being widely used in the US.

The new study will first use prostate biopsy samples from men who have already been diagnosed and treated for prostate cancer, and have suitable follow-up data, to explore whether the predictive prowess of the tool is seen when applied to UK patients.The tool will then be tested at three sites – North Bristol NHS trust, Oxford University hospitals NHS foundation trust, and NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde – as men undergo the normal pathway for prostate cancer diagnosis.“Biopsies will be analysed, the treatment choices will be made, and the man will start treatment.But at the same time, the NHS clinicians will be given a readout from this tool and asked: ‘If you had this, would you have recommended the same treatment or not?’” said Hobbs, adding that part of the trial would also explore to what extent the tool affected the time between diagnosis and treatment choice.Experts say the hope is that the tool will eventually help reduce under- and over-treatment.

“A good outcome from this is that this tool is implemented in the NHS,” said Hobbs,However, for that to happen, he said, it had to be shown to be scientifically valid, cost-effective, and making a difference to treatment decisions,Prof Gerhardt Attard, from University College London, who was involved in the study around abiraterone use but is not part of the trial, said the research was important as approaches often worked well in clinical trials,“When you take that to the real NHS world, there are a number of challenges and differences that would inevitably arise and that’s what this study will address,” he said,Ashley Dalton, the minister for public health and prevention, also welcomed the trial.

“This groundbreaking research could be a huge step forward, demonstrating the power of technology to potentially transform lives and improve cancer outcomes,” she said.“This is exactly why we’re investing in a digital NHS.By harnessing AI and moving beyond outdated systems, we can transform cancer care – diagnosing earlier, treating more effectively, and improving patient experience.” This article was amended on 3 November 2025.Ashley Dalton is a woman, not a man as suggested by our mistaken use of the pronoun “he” in an earlier version.

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NHS hospitals to test AI tool that helps diagnose and treat prostate cancer

A tool that uses artificial intelligence to help diagnose men with prostate cancer and guide decisions about treatment is to be tested in NHS hospitals, researchers have announced.The £1.9m Vanguard Path study, funded by Prostate Cancer UK and led by researchers at the University of Oxford, is expected to last three years and will test an AI tool called the ArteraAI Prostate Biopsy Assay. In total, biopsies from more than 4,000 men will be used.The tool, which analyses digitised biopsy images to produce a personalised risk score, has already been shown in clinical trials to identify which men with high-risk prostate cancer would be most likely to benefit from the drug abiraterone

1 day ago
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Why we must tackle the crisis in end-of-life care | Letters

Your editorial on hospices (29 October) was right to highlight the crisis in end-of-life care. As the National Audit Office’s report makes clear, unless urgent action is taken, the system will be overwhelmed. More than 5.75 million deaths are expected in the next decade, and over 5 million of those people will need palliative care. Too many face dying in avoidable pain, in poverty and alone

1 day ago
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Why Reeves should gamble on tax hikes | Brief letters

Betfred has said it would close all 1,287 of its high street betting shops if Rachel Reeves raises taxes on the industry (Betfred says gambling tax rise in budget will force it to shut all its UK shops, 19 October). What further encouragement can she need?John SaxbeeHaverfordwest, Pembrokeshire As great as Prunella Scales’s character was, I never really cared for Fawlty Towers (Obituary, 28 October). But I did care that she was at the launch of the Anti‑Nazi League back in the day, which helped to sweep the fascist National Front off our streets. Pete HendyHigh Wycombe, Buckinghamshire If Trump changes the constitution to allow him to run for a third term, wouldn’t that also open the door for Barack Obama to run again (The US politics sketch, 2 November)?Hilary BirdKilndown, Kent Re Melanie White’s letter about dogs on sofas (Letters, 30 October), try telling that to our snuggle‑loving whippet. She’ll be saying they shouldn’t be allowed on the bed next

1 day ago
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A fatal drop: what do we know about the drugs, 500 times stronger than heroin, taking Australian lives?

Only a few years after first being detected in Australia, nitazenes have been found in everything from vapes to fake heroin – and the death toll is risingFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastIn the middle of winter last year, in a unit in Melbourne’s northern suburbs, Carly Morse, Thomas Vale, Michael Hodgkinson and Abdul El Sayed used a rolled-up bank note to inhale cocaine. About 3am on 24 June 2024, all four likely became unresponsive.El Sayed’s uncle, Cory Lewis, became concerned late the following night when his nephew, who had been living with him, did not return home.He banged on the door of the unit but there was no answer. A reflective tint on a side window meant he could not see inside, so Lewis jumped a fence and went to the back of the unit

1 day ago
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Tired all the time? There may be a simple reason for that

Levels of fatigue among women in Britain are soaring, and this isn’t the kind that can be cured by a nap. What lies behind the exhaustion epidemic?Look around you and it isn’t hard to find an exhausted woman. There she is, standing behind you in the queue at the post office or delivering your Amazon package. Here she is at the school gates, puffing after running from the car, coffee in hand, apologising for forgetting to pack a PE kit. Or trying to stop a yawn escaping during a long work meeting

2 days ago
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How scientists are shining light on the biology behind seasonal affective disorder

Researchers tracking large cohorts are discovering the effects of sleep, light and therapy on people impacted by winter’s arrivalFor some, the darkening days of autumn bring more than the annual ritual of reviving woolly jumpers and turning on the central heating. As the evenings close in and the mornings grow murky, energy ebbs and a heavy sadness settles in.Although seasonal affective disorder (Sad) was only formally recognised by psychiatrists in the 1980s, the link between the seasons, mood and vitality has long been observed.The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Medicine – a Chinese text from roughly 300BC – described how the seasons affect all living things. It advised that in winter, one should “retire early and get up with the sunrise”, keeping “desires and mental activity quiet and subdued, as if keeping a happy secret”

2 days ago
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We need clarity on big pharma’s tax breaks | Letters

about 13 hours ago
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Time for Reeves to recognise reality: AstraZeneca has killed stamp duty on shares | Nils Pratley

about 13 hours ago
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Oakley Meta Vanguard review: fantastic AI running glasses linked to Garmin

about 24 hours ago
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‘History won’t forgive us’ if UK falls behind in quantum computing race, says Tony Blair

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WTA Finals: Rybakina downs Swiatek, Anisimova fights back to beat Keys – as it happened

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Steward injury could offer Smith the chance to start for England against Fiji

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