'Revolutionary' new class of cancer drugs approved
A "revolutionary" new class of cancer drug that can treat a wide range of tumours has been approved for use in Europe for the first time.
Tumour-agnostic drugs do not care where the cancer is growing in the body as long as it has a specific genetic abnormality inside.
UK doctors testing the drugs said they were "a really exciting thing".
They said the approach had the potential to cure more patients and cut side-effects.
The drug that has been approved is called larotrectinib.
Charlotte Stevenson, a two-year-old from Belfast, was one of the first patients to benefit.
She was diagnosed with infantile fibrosarcoma, a cancer of the body's connective tissue.
She has been treated with larotrectinib as part of a clinical trial at the Royal Marsden Sutton, in London, for the past year.
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