
New ground-breaking brain cancer clinical trials designed to improve survival and quality of life, will be available in Yorkshire for people with glioblastoma, the most common type of brain cancer. Funded by Yorkshire Cancer Research, EPIC-GB, a £6.9 million programme of clinical trials, led by experts at the University of Sheffield and the University of Glasgow, aim to transform how cancer drug treatments are tested for people with recurrent glioblastoma, so they can access new and potentially life-extending treatment options. Unfortunately, many cancer drugs are ineffective in treating people with glioblastoma because they are unable to reach the tumour due to a protective layer around the brain called the blood-brain barrier.
This challenge has played a key role in the lack of significant breakthroughs for treating glioblastoma since 2007. Clinical trials involving people with glioblastoma are urgently needed to find out if different cancer drugs are likely to get into the brain and work. Concerning the development of the trials, patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) has been embedded in EPIC-GB from its earliest conception, not as a compliance exercise but as a defining element of how the trial has been shaped and will be delivered. Dr Helen Bulbeck, Director of Services & Policy at brainstrust, PPIE co-lead on EPIC-GB, has worked alongside the research team throughout the trial’s development to ensure that the perspectives and priorities of people living with glioblastoma are woven into its design, ensuring that EPIC-GB is a genuine exemplar of what meaningful patient partnership in early-phase trial development can look like.

The EPIC-GB trials will enable people to start trial treatments before surgery. Tumour tissue removed during the operation can then be studied, creating a valuable ‘window of opportunity’ to quickly understand which drugs reach the tumour and are likely to be effective.By identifying promising treatments as early as possible, people with recurrent glioblastoma can continue those treatments, or stop them early if they don’t get into the brain. Delivered through dedicated Centres of Excellence for brain cancer, the new trials, pioneered in Yorkshire, will be offered to people living with recurrent glioblastoma in Sheffield, Leeds and Hull, as well as Edinburgh, Manchester and Nottingham. These centres will bring together the NHS, researchers, pharmaceutical companies and people affected by cancer, enabling people to access new treatments closer to home that could give them more time with loved ones.

