A revolutionary laser treatment could kill off breast cancer in 15 minutes -  and with no need for a mastectomy. No wonder doctors are excited
- Photodynamic therapy is approved to treat  four cancers, including skin, lung
 
- Scientists are testing its efficacy in  curing breast cancer
 
- A laser beam is directed into the tumour,  made light-sensitive by a drug, killing the cancer
 
- If successful, it works without affecting  the surrounding healthy tissue
 
- Some say, though, that the evidence PDT  works is 'patchy'
 
  

Pioneering patient: Fiona is taking part in a trial of  photodynamic therapy
 
Fiona Fisher was diagnosed with breast cancer  this summer and was astounded when her doctors suggested that their first move  should be to try to kill the tumour by blasting it with a laser for 15  minutes.
This involved injecting a drug into the  tumour to make it sensitive to light. Then, via a needle, they shone an  intensive laser beam into the cancer to kill it.
'The whole thing was less invasive than the  biopsy that I had to confirm the diagnosis of cancer,' says Fiona, 57, a  self-employed management consultant living in Primrose Hill, North  London.
While this may sound like the kind of story  that has cancer doctors in despair at the gullibility of patients who fall for  an expensive and unproven treatment, in fact Fiona is at the centre of one of  the most carefully considered and authoritative - as well as potentially  revolutionary - experiments in the field of breast cancer.
Just eight weeks ago, Fiona became concerned  when the top of her left breast felt thickened and granular. Within a fortnight,  she'd become one of the first four patients - there will be 30 in all - being  given photodynamic therapy (PDT) in the initial phase of a new trial at the  Royal Free Hospital in North London.
Photodynamic therapy was first pioneered as a  cancer therapy in the UK 25 years ago, and is now approved by the National  Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) as treatment of four cancers:  the skin (though not melanoma), early or late cancers of head and neck, lung and  oesophageal.
'It's an extraordinary treatment that cuts  the cost and time involved, and means patients don't have to undergo other  treatments that cause very unpleasant side-effects,' says David Longman, founder  of the charity Killing Cancer.
 
 
'It's also quick; patients and their families  know within a short period of time whether the cancer has been destroyed.' Until  recently, the treatment had a major drawback: it stayed in the body for weeks,  causing patients to be ultra-sensitive to ordinary light, and be unable to leave  the house for weeks after treatment.
What's made the current breast cancer trial  possible is the introduction of new drugs that leave the body within 48 hours. 
As with all the trial participants, Fiona  spent 48 hours after her treatment in a darkened room in a private ward of the  Royal Free Hospital. 'It was a wonderful and quite luxurious rest,' she  recalls.
Experts predict that photodynamic therapy  could eventually make the non-invasive treatment the norm for some types of  breast cancer. In other words, a cure without the need for  surgery.
 

Light show: After a drug is injected into the tumour to  make it sensitive to light, an intensive laser is beamed into the cancer to kill  it
 
'The beauty of this technology is that, if  successful, it works without affecting the surrounding healthy tissue, leaving  the breasts completely intact,' says Professor Mohammed Keshtgar, a breast  cancer surgeon at the Royal Free who is leading the new research.
This trial of photodynamic therapy is the  first to test it for primary (newly diagnosed) breast cancer.
The initial stage of the trial is 'a  dose-escalating study' to discover the most effective combination dose of drugs  and light, with the patients receiving an MRI scan before and after the  treatment to gauge its impact on the tumour.
As the treatment is unproven, the women in  the trial have had to agree to undergo a full mastectomy afterwards: the trial  cannot put the participants at any risk of their cancer returning. But the  tissue removed during mastectomies will be analysed to check the effects of the  photodynamic therapy.
Which is why, just a couple of days after  emerging from the Royal Free's private wing, Fiona returned to the NHS operating  theatre at the hospital to have a full mastectomy, as well as a reconstruction  of her left breast. And next week she will embark on chemotherapy and  radiotherapy, followed by a course of hormone tablets.
 'The beauty of  this technology is that,  if successful, it works without affecting the  surrounding healthy  tissue, leaving the breasts completely intact.'
'I may be getting no benefit myself, but to  know my contribution might change the experience of breast cancer for women in  the future makes it worthwhile,' she says.
The Royal Free team is determined to discover  the truth about photodynamic therapy in cancer treatment. While other centres,  including University College London, have studied PDT, there's been a lack of  properly funded, authoritative research. And Cancer Research UK also insists  that the evidence is 'too patchy'. 
What's more, NICE's approval of photodynamic  therapy for skin and oesophageal cancer comes with warnings that the evidence in  favour of it is 'of poor quality', and that hospitals should consider this when  deciding whether to use it.
It's hoped the new trial will convince more  people in the field to try PDT.
'Surgeons are largely comfortable with PDT  because they are used to using equipment such as lasers,' says Dr Mahendra  Deonarain, honorary reader in antibody technology and therapeutics at Imperial  College London, and chief science officer at Photobiotics, a company pioneering  more targeted ways of delivering the treatment.  
'But cancer treatment today is decided by a  multi-disciplinary team. It's difficult for these different specialties to  communicate the benefits well enough to bring about a dramatic change in  treatment.' 
The first phase of the three-stage Royal Free  study is recruiting patients, but this should be completed within two years. 
The next phase will involve recruiting a  larger group of women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer but refuse a  mastectomy for personal reasons, or are unfit for surgery.

Foregoing mastectomy: Fiona Fisher had a full mastectomy  after taking part in the trial, but if it's proven to be effective, those  undergoing photodynamic therapy will not need surgery 
 
'We will be asking them to undergo PDT  without any further treatment - and then follow their progress over several  months to discover whether the age of the patient and the sort and grade of the  tumour affects the efficacy of the treatment - and compare the results with  women treated conventionally,' says Professor Keshtgar.  
'It's essential that we leave no room for  doubt about the outcome of this trial. 
'If it works, we want the treatment to be  fully approved by NICE and to be widely available for breast cancer  patients.'
Dr Keyvan Moghissi, clinical director of the  Yorkshire Laser Centre in Goole, East Yorkshire, says it's important that  patients' expectations of the therapy are realistic. 
'It's hugely effective for the right cancers,  but it doesn't work for every patient,' says Dr Moghissi, who, as editor of the  journal Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy, has overseen the publication of  scores of papers on the treatment. 
More importantly, at the centre in East  Yorkshire, he has been using PDT as a cancer treatment for over 20 years, but  says he usually recommends the treatment for only around one in ten of  patients.
'It doesn't work for many cancers such as  leukaemia, and it's only successful when the tumour is very localised,' he says.  'What's more, often the best results are achieved when PDT is used alongside the  conventional therapies: surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy.'
Yet such a view may change with the new  study. So far, four women have received photodynamic therapy and MRI - and in at  least some of these it seems the cancer has cleared completely.
While Professor Keshtgar gives little away,  he admits 'the whole team is feeling very encouraged' and that, aged 50, he  hopes to see the introduction of photodynamic therapy for newly diagnosed breast  cancer 'within my career lifetime'. But there is a long journey  ahead.
'The purpose of the research at the moment is  to get the dose right, not treat the tumour. But we are noting whether the  tumour is visible in the second, post-treatment MRI scan and in the mastectomy  tissue under the microscope. And there are hopeful signs.'