Hopeful signs for a gentler fight against cancer
- Published
- Letters to the Editor

A reader reflects on Curium’s nuclear medicine breakthrough and calls for wider awareness and faster access to treatments
Sir,
I read your piece on Curium’s nuclear medicine work (Summer 2025 edition, cover story, p.16 and online here) with great interest. As someone who has seen close relatives go through the rigours of chemotherapy, I found it encouraging to hear about treatments that can target cancer so precisely while sparing healthy tissue. The idea that tumours can be attacked from the inside out, rather than blasting the whole body, feels like the step change oncology has been waiting for.
That said, I couldn’t help but notice how little most people outside specialist circles seem to know about radiopharmaceuticals. If Curium already helps more than 14 million patients each year, why is this field still so invisible in public discussion? Perhaps it is because the drugs often come under generic names, or because nuclear medicine doesn’t have the profile of more widely advertised therapies. Either way, greater awareness would surely help patients make more informed choices.
What also stood out to me was the company’s reinvestment of profits into research. In an era when “big pharma” is often accused of putting shareholders first, this struck me as a more patient-focused model. Whether others in the sector will follow suit remains to be seen.
The article left me hopeful, but also curious. If this approach really can be applied to a wide range of cancers, how quickly will patients in the UK actually get access? As with so many medical breakthroughs, the science seems ahead of the system.
Yours faithfully,
Michael Turner, Manchester, UK
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Lasers finally unlock mystery of Charles Darwin’s specimen jars -
Strong ESG records help firms take R&D global, study finds -
European Commission issues new cancer prevention guidance as EU records 2.7m cases in a year -
Artemis II set to carry astronauts around the Moon for first time in 50 years -
Meet the AI-powered robot that can sort, load and run your laundry on its own -
Wingsuit skydivers blast through world’s tallest hotel at 124mph in Dubai stunt -
Centrum Air to launch first European route with Tashkent–Frankfurt flights -
UK organisations still falling short on GDPR compliance, benchmark report finds -
Stanley Johnson appears on Ugandan national television during visit highlighting wildlife and conservation ties -
Anniversary marks first civilian voyage to Antarctica 60 years ago -
Etihad ranked world’s safest airline for 2026 -
Read it here: Asset Management Matters — new supplement out now -
Breakthroughs that change how we understand health, biology and risk: the new Science Matters supplement is out now -
The new Residence & Citizenship Planning supplement: out now -
Prague named Europe’s top student city in new comparative study -
BGG expands production footprint and backs microalgae as social media drives unprecedented boom in natural wellness -
The European Winter 2026 edition - out now -
Parliament invites cyber experts to give evidence on new UK cyber security bill -
EU sustainability rules drive digital compliance push in Uzbekistan ahead of export change -
AI boom triggers new wave of data-centre investment across Europe -
Lammy travels to Washington as UK joins America’s 250th anniversary programme -
China’s BYD overtakes Tesla as world’s largest electric car seller -
FTSE 100 posts strongest annual gain since 2009 as London market faces IPO test -
Five of the biggest New Year’s Eve fireworks happening tonight — and where to watch them -
UK education group signs agreement to operate UN training centre network hub

























