A decade-long international clinical trial has produced what researchers are calling the biggest advance in cervical cancer treatment in 25 years. A new treatment regime — adding a short course of chemotherapy before the standard combination of chemotherapy and radiation — reduced the risk of dying from the disease by 40% and cut the risk of the cancer returning by 35%, according to results published in The Lancet.
At a glance
- Cervical cancer treatment: The Interlace trial enrolled 500 women across five countries — the U.K., Mexico, India, Italy, and Brazil — over a 10-year period, comparing the new regime against the current standard of care.
- Induction chemotherapy: Patients in the new-treatment group received six weeks of carboplatin and paclitaxel before undergoing standard chemoradiation; after five years, 80% were still alive, compared to 72% in the control group.
- Cancer survival rates: At the five-year mark, 72% of patients in the new-treatment group had seen no return or spread of their cancer, versus 64% in the group that received only the standard treatment.
Why this matters for millions of women
Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women worldwide. The World Health Organization estimates roughly 660,000 new cases and 350,000 deaths occur each year — a burden that falls disproportionately on women in lower-income countries where screening and treatment access remain limited.
Many of those diagnosed are in their 30s, often at the peak of their working and family lives. Even with existing treatments, the cancer returns in as many as 30% of cases. That persistence has made the search for better first-line options urgent for decades.
What makes the Interlace trial’s findings especially significant is that the improvement doesn’t rely on a new or experimental drug. Carboplatin and paclitaxel — the chemotherapy agents used in the induction phase — are already approved, widely available, and relatively inexpensive. The advance is in the sequencing: giving the body a head start against the tumor before hitting it with radiation.
A 25-year leap forward
The last major breakthrough in treating locally advanced cervical cancer came in 1999 C.E., when chemoradiation — combining chemotherapy and radiotherapy — became the standard of care. That standard has remained largely unchanged ever since.
Dr. Mary McCormack, the lead investigator at University College London and University College London Hospital, described the new findings plainly: “This is the biggest gain in survival since the adoption of chemoradiation in 1999.” The trial was funded by Cancer Research UK and conducted through the UCL Cancer Trials Centre.
“Every improvement in survival for a cancer patient is important,” McCormack said, “especially when the treatment is well-tolerated and given for a relatively short time, allowing women to get back to their normal lives relatively quickly.”
From trial participant to advocate
Abbie Halls was 27 when she was diagnosed with cervical cancer. She enrolled in the trial and received the new treatment regime. Now 37, she has been cancer-free for more than nine years.
“I’m happy that I could play a part in advancing the research, which I hope is going to save the lives of many more women in years to come,” she said.
Her story reflects what the trial’s designers were aiming for: not just longer survival on paper, but a treatment that is tolerable enough for patients to complete and move past.
What comes next
Researchers and clinicians are already calling for the regime to be adopted across the U.K. and internationally. Dr. Iain Foulkes, executive director of research and innovation at Cancer Research UK, said the results fit a growing pattern: “A growing body of evidence is showing that additional chemotherapy before other treatments, like surgery and radiotherapy, can improve the chances of successful treatment for patients.”
McCormack was direct about the path forward: “This approach is a straightforward way to make a positive difference, using existing drugs that are cheap and already approved for use in patients. It has already been adopted by some cancer centres and there’s no reason that this shouldn’t be offered to all patients undergoing chemoradiation for this cancer.”
The international composition of the trial — drawing patients from the U.K., Mexico, India, Italy, and Brazil — strengthens the case for broad applicability. Cervical cancer’s heaviest toll falls in regions with fewer resources, and the fact that this improvement uses affordable, existing drugs matters enormously for global implementation.
Still, translating trial results into standard practice takes time. Regulatory approvals, updated clinical guidelines, and training across health systems in multiple countries all stand between this discovery and the patients who need it most. The gap between what the science now shows is possible and what women in under-resourced settings can actually access remains a real and pressing challenge.
For now, the results published in The Lancet represent something concrete: a treatment that already exists, already works, and could be saving more lives within years — not decades — if health systems move quickly to adopt it.
Read more
For more on this story, see: The Guardian
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- U.K. cancer death rates fall to their lowest level on record
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- The Good News for Humankind archive on global health
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