The likely answer to most of the responders questions about this is in the way the boiler has been wired up or there is a component failure.
What is happening is that the boiler is wired such that as soon as the temperature in the sealed domestic hot water part of the system falls below the set temperature (typically 70 degrees C) of the boiler, the boiler fires up. This is correct if the domestic hot water is 'calling' for heat, but what is happening is that the boiler should be wired so that this doesn't happen if the domestic hot water part is NOT calling for heat. Otherwise all that is happening is the boiler is 'cycling' - which means it is heating the water in the sealed part of the system heats up to 70, the boiler turns off, the water cools down to say 60 and the boiler starts again to repeats the cycle without any useful heat ever having been taken out.
This is the technical explanation of what is happening - perhaps others can comment on which component in a combi goes kapput for this to occur.
In a non-combi system it is usually a logic wiring fault that causes this.
Definitely worth sorting out - it will cost you a bomb.