New £2 Billion National Cancer Plan Aims to Save 320,000 Lives by 2035 in England

February 4, 2026
New £2 Billion National Cancer Plan Aims to Save 320,000 Lives by 2035 in England
  • A new National Cancer Plan, announced by Health Secretary and cancer survivor, aims to raise England’s cancer survival rates and save an estimated 320,000 lives by 2035.

  • The plan positions cancer care as part of NHS modernization, targeting reduced delays and the use of medical advances to improve life chances for patients.

  • A £2 billion package underpins the strategy to transform services and lift the five-year survival rate toward 75% by 2035, up from roughly 60% today.

  • A key challenge cited is the need to improve coordination and timely sharing of imaging and pathology results, with critics urging that this be addressed alongside large-scale AI initiatives to hit 2029 targets.

  • The plan foresees a dramatic rise in robot-assisted procedures, from about 70,000 to 500,000 a year by 2035, with benefits including smaller incisions and shorter hospital stays.

  • Experts such as Professor Peter Johnson, Sarah Scobie, and Michelle Mitchell comment on the plan’s ambitions and the reforms needed to realise its impact.

  • Context highlights rising cancer incidence and concerns that many NHS trusts are missing targets, underscoring the urgency of reform.

  • £2.3 billion is earmarked to deliver 9.5 million extra cancer tests by 2029, funding more scanners, automated testing, and longer hours at community diagnostic centres.

  • An additional £2.3 billion will fund genomic testing for all patients who may benefit, guiding more personalized treatment decisions.

  • The plan targets meeting all waiting-time standards by 2029, including 85% of patients starting treatment within 62 days of referral, with current performance around 70% in November.

  • Reactions were mixed: Cancer Research UK welcomed the ambition but urged timely treatment, while health thinktanks warned that basic cancer care must improve alongside new technologies.

  • Overall aims include earlier diagnosis, faster treatment, expanded testing capacity, and greater use of technology with more scanners, digital tools, automated testing, extended-hours community centres, and expanded robot-assisted surgery.

Summary based on 2 sources


Get a daily email with more World News stories

More Stories