news

Immunotherapy treatment fast-tracked under UK’s access to medicines scheme

2
SHARES

Posted: 2 February 2017 | | No comments yet

From today, UK patients with an incurable form of bladder cancer can access the new immunotherapy, atezolizumab, following a positive Scientific Opinion…

bladder cancer

From today, UK patients with an incurable form of bladder cancer can access the new immunotherapy, atezolizumab. 

 

Reserve your FREE place

 


Address the time-to-result challenge posed by short shelf-life radiopharmaceuticals.

20 November 2025 | 3:00 PM GMT | FREE Virtual Panel Discussion

This webinar showcases the Growth Direct System; an RMM (Rapid Microbial Method) that improves on traditional membrane filtration, delivering increased accuracy, a faster time to result, enhanced data integrity compliance, and more control over the manufacturing process.

Key learning points:

  • Understand the benefits of full workflow microbiology quality control testing automation in radiopharmaceutical production
  • Learn about ITM’s implementation journey and considerations when evaluating the technology
  • Find out how the advanced optics and microcolony detection capabilities of Growth Direct® technology impact time to result (TTR).

Don’t miss your chance to learn from experts in the industry – Register for FREE

 

This is following a positive Scientific Opinion by the UK’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), under the Early Access to Medicines Scheme (EAMS), that allows patient and doctors access to innovative treatments for serious medical conditions where there is a clear current unmet medical need, whilst they are being fully assessed for Marketing Authorisation.

Urothelial carcinoma, a bladder cancer that develops from the cells of the bladder lining, accounts for more than 90% of bladder cancers in the UK.  Atezolizumab has been fast-tracked for patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma, after disease progression following one prior platinum-containing chemotherapy regimen regardless of its setting (neoadjuvant, adjuvant, or metastatic).

Richard Erwin, General Manager, Roche UK said: “We are delighted that we are able to make atezolizumab available to patients with advanced bladder cancer in the UK via EAMS.

This is an area that has seen little advance and here we have a new treatment that has the potential to make a significant difference to the lives of patients. This decision is truly a best practice example of how we can work together with healthcare bodies to make a drug currently going through marketing authorisation available to a much needed patient population.”

Share via
Share via