On Air Now Guernsey's Favourite Music Midnight - 6:00am
Now Playing Fun We Are Young

Lung cancer: 'Trailblazing' NHS scheme hailed as a 'glimpse of the future'

AI and robotics are to be used to help detect lung cancer in a "trailblazing" scheme that experts are calling "a glimpse of the future of cancer detection".

It comes alongside NHS plans to expand lung cancer screening, with all eligible people invited for their first check by 2030.

Alongside the expansion, AI software will be used to analyse patients' lung scans and flag suspicious spots, known as nodules.

A robotic catheter - a thin tube inserted into the patient via the throat - is used to take precise biopsies directly from the nodule, which are then checked in a lab to diagnose or rule out cancer.

The robotic system can reach spots as small as six millimetres, which are often hidden deep in the lung and can be missed at screening.

It's harder for doctors to reach such nodules to take biopsies, meaning patients must wait for further scans to see if they grow.

Specialists at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust have already used robotic biopsies on 300 patients, with some 215 of them going on to have cancer treatment.

The new pilot will involve a further 250 patients, and it's hoped other trusts will start performing the procedure.

Read more from Sky News:
King's 'good news' on cancer

Lung cancer is the third most common cancer in the UK, with more than 49,000 new diagnoses and around 33,000 deaths every year.

Since 2019, more than 1.5 million people in England between the ages of 55 and 74 who have ever smoked have been invited to have their lung health checked, NHS England said, and a further 1.4 million people will be contacted next year alone.

Professor Peter Johnson, NHS England's national clinical director for cancer, said screening means more cases are being picked up at an early stage than ever, and the new pilot will support even "faster, more accurate biopsies".

"This is a glimpse of the future of cancer detection," he said.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting underwent robotic surgery when being treated for kidney cancer and said the NHS treatment "saved my life".

He said the pilot will help catch the illness earlier, "replacing weeks of invasive testing with a single targeted procedure".

Sky News

(c) Sky News 2026: Lung cancer: 'Trailblazing' NHS scheme hailed as a 'glimpse of the future'

More from National

Island FM VIP

Get more with the Island FM VIP!

Just Played Songs