Posts Tagged All Cancers

Food Matters More Than You Think

food_glance

So we have all heard the quote “you are what you eat”, well along those lines I have had the opportunity to work with researchers pushing the envelope on what food and nutrition really means to our bodies.  Today I can confidently say that we have less nutrition in our foods than we have ever had and that number is continuing to decrease.

The attack on our food supply is not simple, easy to identify or overt.  In terms of where the attack began I would say it is one of those changes that over time make inroads to our society then when no one screams it becomes a norm.  The attack came in the form of mass farming for profit at the expense of the quality of the food delivered to the consumer as well as time to market issues allowing our food to be harvested before it is ready and allowing it to become ripe off the vine.  These changes along with issues with soil quality and trace minerals have led to extreme changes in the nutrition we derive from our consumption.

Where does this leave us?

Well in the long run it has provided a steady stream of patients with degenerative conditions – cancer and diabetes being the most evident.

The good news is that with drastic changes an individual can turn things around.

- you can garden and tend to your families needs directly.

- you can make every effort to buy from farmers markets and speed the time from the vine to the table.

- you can look for those foods higher in nutritional content and become healthier simply by eating more quality foods.

Should your situation be more critical there are physicians working with patients to deliver the highest quality nutrition in a more clinical form to provide a more massive amount to your system quickly.

A great resource – Food Matters DVD

Food Matters for Cancer – Click Here

Food Matters for Diabetes – Click Here

A few suggested resources -

Dr. Dan Rogers http://www.gersonplus.com

Dr. Ralph Moss http://www.cancerdecisions.com

Tags: , ,

Why some doctors have a problem with Complementary Medicine

Originally published in January 2003 icon

Pride & Prejudice

Dr. Graham Henderson

Why some doctors have a problem with Complementary Medicine (and the patients who ask about it).

Graham Henderson is a public health doctor working for the NHS in Surrey. He trained at the Royal London Hospital and worked in children’s and adult medicine, and in general practice in Australia, before specialising in public health. He has been a consultant for ten years and is a former medical director of an NHS trust hospital.

By Dr. Graham Henderson

Medical Report

Taking the kids to school this morning came the inevitable comments from the back seat; “Dad, you’re going too fast; Dad, you forgot to signal at that junction”.

How many of us love back-seat driving, even when we love the people who’re doing it more than life itself? It’s even worse, especially if you’re having a bad day, if the back-seat driver is right, and you know that you did in fact make a tiny little error of judgement on that last roundabout!

Open quotesIt’s in all the training – give the patient
confidenceClose quotes

When we’re ill we feel insecure, dis-empowered, unable to assert ourselves. We see our advisors, our doctors, as wise, all-knowing, confidence-inspiring. At least, that’s how we want them to be. They know that. It’s in all the training – “give the patient confidence”. But the doctor also knows that he’s human; he’s not all-knowing; sometimes he makes mistakes; sometimes he can’t deal with the emotional stress of the consultation.

So what happens to the doctor when:

»

He (or she) hears you asking about vitamins, dietary approaches to cancer, or reflexology?

»

You arrive with a sheaf of printouts from the internet?

»

You want to know his views on a book by a cancer sufferer that he’s never read?

He gets scared, that’s what.

Because suddenly, he can’t do his job. The doctor’s professional respect, self-esteem, position in the community, everything, is tied up in his/her ability to give you the information, reassurance, treatement you need, or to send you to a man who does. You don’t say that someone “works” as a doctor; you say he or she “is” a doctor. So if he’s not a good enough doctor, he might feel he’s not good enough at anything at all! And most doctors don’t know much about dealing with illness other than with conventional (allopathic) medicine.

Open quotesYou don’t say that someone ‘works’ as a doctor; you say he or she ‘is’ a doctorClose quotes

Clearly, it’s not the same for all doctors. They come in different shapes and sizes, like everyone else. But there is a pattern, conditioned by medical training, of feeling threatened by the knowledgable, questioning patient.

Modern medical training has spotted it, and younger doctors have been shown ways of dealing with it. But we’ve all heard too many stories of patients who “couldn’t get the doctor to listen”, felt brushed off, or even, in the worst cases got laughed at, to believe that it isn’t a problem.

So, to go back to the surgery. We’ve got one sick person (you) who’s frightended because you’re ill. And on the other side we’ve got another person, the doctor, who’s frightened as well, because your efforts to help yourself, to get some control over your illness and what’s happening to you, have accidentally threatened the doctor’s very sense of self-worth.

Now we have to careful here. You, the patient, are frightened because you’re ill. Horrible things are happening to you. You’re in the middle of a disaster. You’re entitled to be scared. The doctor, on the other hand, is a professional who ought to be able to deal with this.

Open quotesWhat both doctor and patient need is to get into a constructive
conversationClose quotes

His difficulty dealing with it is professional weakness; letting that develop into irritation or anger is professionally unethical. So let there be no confusion about who’s right and who’s wrong. The point of this article is not to dish out blame. What both doctor and patient need is to get into a constructive conversation.

In my experience there’s three groups of doctors when it comes to complementary medicine – apart from the rare enthusiasts who actually know something about it. If you can spot which one you’ve got, then you can try and make the relationship work for you.

1:

The first, and easiest to deal with, are the ones who accept that they ought to know about complementary therapies, but have never quite got round to finding out. These are the best ones to deal with, because you can challenge them to find out about it; perhaps even work with them to explore the subject together. You might want to offer them some info (gently!), but you should probably let them go off and do some research on their own before coming back to the discussion later. That way you can have a proper conversation; otherwise it’s just you giving them a lecture. Ideally, the conversation ends with “I’ve always wanted to find out about this, but never got round to it. Now you’ve given me a reason. Come and see me later in the week and we’ll go into it together”.

2:

The second group are the doctors who really don’t think it’s anything to do with them, and are fundamentally unpersuadable. They’ve either looked into it and decided its a load of old codswallop (of which more below) or, even worse, have not really thought about it but have decided the same thing anyway! Quite frankly, there’s not a lot of point pushing your ideas in this situation. You probably know more about it than the doctor, you’re very unlikely to bring them round to your point of view, and you’ll just be wasting your time. Take what they’re offering in the way of allopathic medicine and look for complementary help elsewhere. Or, if you need your doctor to understand complementary medicine, change your doctor.

3:

Finally, and perhaps the hardest to decide about, are the doctors who know very little about complementary medicine but could be persuaded if you (and they) had enough time. Here is your opportunity to lead them into the subject gently. Not intimidating them and making them feel stupid with your superior knowledge, but leading them gently to the point where they actually want to spend the next few evenings reading the book you’ve suggested, researching the internet, or going to the library.

When I worked in a factory before becoming a doctor, the woman in the packing department gave me a piece of advice I’ve never forgotten. “If you want someone to do something for you” she said, “make sure they think it was their idea in the first place”. I’ve since found out that you can earn a fortune as a “change management consultant” for telling people things like that. It was good advice then, and it’s where you’re trying to get to with your doctor. You want to leave him with the sense that he’s missing something really useful and interesting. Something that he really can’t afford not to know about.

Open quotesIf you want someone to do something for you, make sure they think it was their idea in the first
placeClose quotes

The other thing I ought to mention, in a piece that’s trying to tell you how to understand your doctor, is why conscientious, caring doctors sometimes reject the complementary approach. Doctors today are trained in the scientific approach, although the best doctors combine this with the “art” of medicine, which accepts that science can’t explain everything about people. The scientific side of medicine asks that everything, all medicines, all operations, all treatments, be subjected to rigorous testing and “proof”. So when a new drug is invented, or a new operation suggested, it has to be put to the test. Compared with the existing treatment, under controlled conditions, preferably in a “blind” trial where neither the doctor nor the patient knows whether they’re taking the old or the new treatment.

This means that all bias is put aside, and only rigorous objective measurements show whether the new treatment is as good as, better, or worse than the old. And as patients, we want nothing less. We want to know that we’re being offered the best treatment, not just the latest fad from a “modern” doctor, or the stuff they’ve always used from a traditionalist.

But a lot of complementary treatments haven’t been tested through this sort of process. Partly, this is because the process takes a long time, and is expensive, so it can only be done if you can get the money back from drug sales when the tests are complete. Or because many complementary approaches tailor treatments precisely for individual patients, making it very hard to test a “standard” treatment.

But perhaps most often complementary approaches are hard to test objectively because they rely heavily on drawing out the patient’s inner resources to fight the illness. This is often in combination with a very strong relationship between therapist and patient, and these factors are just not amenable to standardisation and reproduction so they can easily be measured.

Open quotesRemember, in the end, it’s your lifeClose quotes

So, sometimes, even the very best and most caring doctors find themselves unable to accept that complementary approaches may be the right thing for you; they may honestly believe that, in recommending you explore alternatives to their allopathic approach, they may be doing you harm. I know this article appears to ask a lot of you, the patient. It asks you to try and understand your doctor when he doesn’t understand you. It asks you to consider his vulnerability at a time when he really ought to be considering yours. But the ICON approach is about helping YOU to take control of YOUR illness.

Use your doctors for what they can give you. Help them to a greater understanding if you can. Listen to their advice, and understand their perspective. But remember, in the end, it’s your life.

The final decisions are your yours to make.


Tags: , , , , ,

Probiotics and Defense against Cancer

The Whole Truth about your defense against cancer

Many orthodox medical ‘experts’ claim there is no research evidence behind Complementary and Alternative Therapies. Yet when there is evidence – consistent evidence – it often gets ignored. When it comes to Beneficial Bacteria, perhaps the experts have not had time to read and digest the research results? Perhaps they are not aware of it? After all there is so much of it – and all very recent. Or could it be that the research poses some nasty questions about the direct conflict with current orthodox treatment methods? Judge for yourself.

Cfold11 Over 80 clinical trials and more than 4,000 research studies have been conducted in the last 4/5 years on the essential role of Beneficial Bacteria in your good health.

2 Scientists believe over 800 strains of bacteria inhabit your gut – they have already identified over 400 strains.

3 Thirteen strains have been studied most frequently. All offer significant benefits to your health and well-being. They are Lactobacillus Bulgaris, Acidophilus, Shirota, Caseii, Lactis, Rhamnosus, Plantarum; Bifidobacterium bifidum, langum; Streptococcus thermophilus; Saccharomyces boulardi.

4 A fundamental finding running throughout the research is that many of key beneficial bacteria strengthen your immune system, particularly stimulating the production of immunoglobulins, cytokines and Natural Killer cells.

Cfold25 Kids growing up on farms and those with pets in the home have stronger immune systems – you need to eat a bit of dirt. You need more bacteria to build your defences.

6 Natural birth babies have stronger immune systems. Mothers give their children some good bacteria as baby passes down the birth canal. Breast milk contains important prebiotics – the perfect food for beneficial bacteria – these stimulate the growth of important good bacteria. (So much for ‘caesarians’)

7 Our strong immune systems keep invading viruses, bacteria and cancer cells in check. Without the beneficial bacteria – our defences are greatly weakened, allowing disease to take hold more easily.

8 One hundred years ago, we ate beneficial bacteria all the time – but pasteurisation, sterilisation and irradiation of food have ended much of that.

9 Worse – our modern world kills the good guys, and alters the balance nature intended in our gut. Chlorinated water, stress, alcohol, too much salt, antibiotics in our chickens etc all reduce the levels of good guys within us.

10 Worse still, the drugs your doctor prescribes actually kill off even more; for example, antibiotics, chemotherapy, even certain statins and mercury in vaccines. Most drugs actually weaken your defences.

11 But these good guys do even more than build your immune system: at night time when you sleep, they attack, neutralise and ingest the invading microbes and yeasts you consumed during the day. Without the good guys your enemies can take control.

12Yeast and fungal infections are now commonplace among  adults – yellow toe nails, thrush, cystitis, bloating, wind, allergies are all signs.

13 Now, fungal infections in the body are increasingly being linked to serious diseases like diabetes, MS, and cancer.

14 Beneficial bacteria are essential to the processes that release vitamins from your food. Their action increases blood levels of anti-cancer vitamins like B vitamins folic acid and B-12, and vitamin K.Cfold3

15 Some beneficial bacteria have been proven to make short chain esters from your food – these pass across the gut wall and reduce bad cholesterol levels.

16 Some beneficial bacteria have been shown to neutralise excess toxins, biding to nitrosamine and oestrogenic products and to heavy metals, helping the body to eliminate these dangers.

17 Some beneficial bacteria destroy the Helicobacter pylori bacterium known to play a part in stomach cancer; they may even neutralise a microbe US researchers believe is linked to colon cancer.

18 Some beneficial bacteria can even rebuild and repair the gut lining, damaged in diseases like IBS and Krohn’s.

19 It’s not mumbo jumbo – you can increase your beneficial bacteria by supplementing with probiotics – a probiotic cannot be called a probiotic unless clinical trials have proved it delivers a real benefit in the gut!

20 Every day you need as many beneficial bacteria strains as you can ingest – and you need to feed them their favourite whole foods. Rare ones you ate as a child may never be replaced if you destroy them. Without them all, can you really hope to beat cancer?

Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics, 100 vegetarian capsules Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics, 100 vegetarian capsules

Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics 100 vegetarian capsules Item Catalog Number: 01273 The aging process and certain health issues cause a reduction in the body’s enzyme production. One effect of this reduction is a bloated feeling soon after eating a


Tags: , , , , ,

Cancer Clinical Trials May Be Biased

The simple truth is that our system is for sale.  There you have it, researchers are capitalists too.  Yes this is first hand knowledge, research is done because someone with an agenda is willing to pay to have a point of view propagated – further they are willing to do so at any level and at almost any cost.  It is absolutely no surprise to me that cancer research has gone no where in the last thirty years.  Think about it what happens to the American Cancer Society if cancer gets cured, what does your friendly radiologist do for a living if a new cancer vaccine is discovered that can cure most cancers with a couple of shots.   Why is it that apricot seeds are not sold in stores like sunflower seeds? 

Some answers are hard to swallow this article for me is not supprising just simply disappointing.

A new analysis finds that a considerable number of clinical cancer studies published in respected medical journals have financial connections to pharmaceutical companies. Published in the June 15, 2009 issue of CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the study indicates that conflicts of interest may cause some researchers to report biased results that are favorable to companies. Ties between clinical researchers and companies that make medical devices and drugs have become increasingly complex and controversial, particularly as more researchers compete for scarce federal research funds. In addition to using industry money to support their research, some investigators receive consulting fees, own stock and hold positions within companies that profit from selling the very products they are investigating. These conflicts of interest have raised concerns that studies with ties to industry are biased and are not designed to provide a true test of medical therapies. Many medical journals now require researchers to disclose potential conflicts of interest in the articles they submit for publication.

To get sense of the frequency and impact of conflicts of interest in clinical cancer research, Dr. Reshma Jagsi of the University of Michigan and colleagues reviewed cancer studies appearing in eight highly regarded journals in 2006. These journals included the New England Journal of Medicine; JAMA; the Lancet; the Journal of Clinical Oncology; the Journal of the National Cancer Institute; Lancet Oncology; Clinical Cancer Research; and CANCER.

Of the 1,534 cancer studies identified in these journals, 29 percent had conflicts of interest that were apparent from review of published author declarations and authorship lists (including industry funding, consulting fees to authors, co-authorship by industry employees, etc.), and 17 percent declared industry funding. Conflicts of interest were most often found in articles with primary authors from departments in medical oncology (45 percent), those from North America (33 percent), and those with male first and senior authors (37 percent).

According to the authors, randomized clinical trials that assessed patient survival were more likely to report a survival advantage associated with the intervention when a conflict of interest was present. These trials are the foundation by which drugs, technologies, diagnostic tests, etc. get approved for use in the clinic and therefore shape the way oncologists practice medicine.

The findings also show that studies with industry funding were more likely to focus on treatment than studies without industry funding (62 percent vs. 36 percent). They were less likely than studies not declaring industry funding to focus on epidemiology, prevention, risk factors, screening or diagnostic methods (20 percent vs. 47 percent).

This analysis revealed that conflicts of interest exist in a considerable number of clinical cancer research articles published in important journals. The authors noted that “attempts to disentangle the cancer research effort from industry merit further attention, and journals should embrace both rigorous standards of disclosure and heightened scrutiny when conflicts exist.”

Tags: ,

Nutrition Plays a Critical Role in Cancer

Chris Woollams presents an argument against chemotherapy. The reply, by the medical profession, can be found here.

Hospital Pass

Open quotesAll the patients in the ward are dying of cancerClose quotes

I’m sitting in a room in a Hospice. My daughter is asleep with her brain tumour. But in the last few days I have had several interesting conversations.

All the patients in the ward are dying of cancer. In Catherine’s case her oncologist has said that there is nothing more he can do and so he has passed her on to palliative care and the Hospice. I suppose I should accept that, at this stage, all bets are off, but it’s not in my nature to sit back idly and no longer try. I even turned the radio on yesterday and the first words I heard were ‘never give up, never give up’ in a pop song. Spooky.

But Catherine drinks her Ribena, has a breakfast of Rice Crispies or Bran Flakes with milk and eats the excellent fish in cream sauce, and ice cream, all provided by the NHS.

Junk food

A sense of ‘deja vu’ passes over me. Earlier in the year two readers sent in a booklet from The Royal Marsden which provided information on what patients should eat whilst having chemotherapy. So alarmed were we by the recommendations featuring cancer-fuelling high levels of fat, sugar and salt – the booklet even showed pictures of milk shakes, cheeseburgers and doughnuts – we asked ten different cancer centres to give us their views. In the Royal Marsden’s defence we discovered that their dieticians were so overworked they only had time for about 7-10 per cent of all patients; always those who were losing weight fast and thus their diet recommendations were specifically designed to tackle these extreme cases. However, the booklet still went out toall chemo patients.

But I do wonder, and worry. When Catherine ‘came-to’ after a brain tumour operation in February, her hospital diet again was dairy and sugar-based.

Let’s get it straight. As any half decent biochemist will tell you

  • Glucose is the favourite food of a cancer cell. Ribena has four times the sugar of coca cola. Glucose fuels cancer and we’ve known this since 1931. Worse, new research has shown that within 15 minutes of eating sugar certain areas of the immune system can be depleted by up to 90 per cent!
  • Dairy contains IGF1 and this has been known to help propagate cancers since 1992.
  • Salt (sodium) helps imbalance your cellular power stations by displacing potassium. It powers them down and encourages a state favoured by cancer cells.

Why don’t hospital cooks know this?

Myth and Reality

Open quotesGlucose fuels cancer and we’ve known this since 1931Close quotes

Certainly the nurses did not know, but they were very keen to learn. All unanimously praised icon for its information and its breadth – they like the fact that it covers diet and chemotherapy, supplements and radiotherapy equally and open-mindedly.

As the discussions developed, we got on to subjects like B-17. As readers know, I am neither ‘for’ B-17 nor ‘against’ it. I am completely open-minded and I believe it is time to research it properly in a fair and unbiased way. We all need to know the truth. The standard criticism of B-17 is that ‘it contains cyanide’. But then so does vitamin B-12 and no one in their right mind is suggesting we ban vitamin B-12 in the UK. It is essential to over 300 biochemical pathways. In some quarters, ‘experts’ claim that there is no evidence that B-17 works to kill cancer cells. But, in fact there are 5 studies – on animals and humans – saying it does.

Some ‘experts’ say that this cyanide content of B-17 means it is dangerous and could kill people. So where is the factual evidence of B-17, when properly administered by qualified doctors, showing the side effects of killing people? What percentage does it kill? Again we’d simply like to pass this on to our readers.

Open quotesWe all need to know the truthClose quotes

The same scenario goes for The Gerson TherapyMistletoe,Hydrazine Sulphate etc. etc. etc. (Mistletoe has thorough clinical trials in Germany, Hydrazine Sulphate in Russia yet these seem generally ignored in the USA and UK).

So increasingly in the UK – in the absence of any full and proper data on such alternative or complementary therapies – we are herded down a tunnel labelled “Surgery,Radiotherapy and Chemotherapy“.

And here’s the rub. Catherine’s five nurses had a number of views on chemotherapy. Broadly they were in three areas.

  • There are a number of new drugs which are supposed to be wonderful (they couldn’t name any)
  • The drugs they use now have some terrible side effects
  • Doctors don’t really know about this because they don’t come often enough to the coalface!

Side Effects

Cod live oil

Recently there have been a number of press reports about the use ofComplementary Alternative Medicines, such as fish oils and herbs and how people taking these must be careful because of their side effects, especially where they might interact with prescribed drugs. Some people are even proposing restrictions, prescriptions and warning labels.

But when the nurse gives Catherine her eleven pills with her breakfast, are any similar warnings given to Catherine on side effects? What is known about the interaction of the four or five different types of drug? Have there been trials conducted on this concoction? Of course not; just on the individual elements.

As an ex-advertising man you would expect me to want drugs to be advertised on TV. But, in fact, a US TV ad for a drug makes the side effect point better than I can ever do. The first 10-12 seconds of the ad tells you what the drug can do for you; the next 15-18 seconds lists the side effects. It’s the law.

Every drug you put in your mouth has a side effect. Fact. And most usually the doctor will try to control that side effect with another drug. That is why some patients take three or four types of drug and why there is no such thing as a poor pharmaceutical company.

Open quotesEvery drug you put in your mouth has a side effectClose quotes

Three and a half years ago, my daughter was ‘given’ six months to live by her oncologist. She had a grade 4 tumour then and he told me a life expectancy of six months was his considered view. The maximum anyone had survived was 18 months. As readers may know, after 12 months her scans kept showing “all clears” and two doctors encouraged me to write the book, Everything you need to know to help you beat cancer.

I was approached for information by someone about her cousin, who also had a brain tumour. By coincidence he was under the same oncologist as Catherine. However he, being rich and ex-city, had sought a second opinion in Dukes Cancer Center in the USA. They told him that the drug doses provided in the UK were too low and he should virtually double them. So he did.

Interestingly in my conversations with him, he told me that every time he went on holiday to the sun (South Africa, Barbados) his tumour stopped growing. Was that rest, relaxation, the effects ofVitamin D? Did anybody look into why this might be so? No.

Open quotesEvery time he went on holiday to the sun his tumour stopped
growingClose quotes

I saw him last at the National Brain Tumour Conference, where I was giving a speech. He was ashen-faced with scabs on his lips. Clearly the chemotherapy was taking a toll on his immune system. However, he said he felt fine and was very positive. He left the conference on the Tuesday, went to watch a golf match with his father on the Thursday, collapsed, and died on the Saturday. His death is recorded as cancer and a brain tumour. He actually died because the drugs caused a haemorrhage in a blood vessel in his brain.

The Urban Myth

Now back in July when some of the medical profession were seeking to rubbish Prince Charles for his comments on The Gerson Therapy, Professor Michael Baum made a number of points (see iconSeptember/October 2004) -

  • That there will always be people who live longer than expected; he called this the Urban Myth.
  • That unless Complementary Therapies (such as Gerson) subjected themselves to the same rigorous standards as drugs have to pass, they would be forever condemned to the peripheries of medicine.

Professor Baum, unfortunately in my opinion, makes it all sound like a special club with clear rules for membership.

Let me make it clear. I am completely behind proper, definitive research, on which to base judgements. My problems are threefold -

  1. That there have been incidences of ‘clinical trials’ on drugs being less than vigorous, side effects hidden, judgements on their conclusions treated over-enthusiastically, but that ‘once approved (for example by the FDA in America), these drugs are accepted, full stop’.
  2. That too often research on complementary and alternative therapies is non-existent, or trivial, or conflicting, (for example – see Cancer Watch on gastro intestinal cancers this month), and this makes it easily criticised.
  3. That the majority of the medical profession thus places its trust in the former and simply dismisses the latter resulting in this vision of drugs as our salvation.
Open quotesSo where has this obedience to chemotherapy and the clinical trial taken us to date?Close quotes

So where has this obedience to chemotherapy and the clinical trial taken us to date?

Complacency Rules

Let me quote you some figures.

1) The National Audit Office has stated in 2004 that over the last 30 years, 5-year survival rates for cancer patients have improved by 12 per cent. What? Only 12 per cent, despite all the money being spent on drugs and treatments?

Certain cancers, for example child leukaemias and testicular, are very treatable by chemotherapy agents. Skin cancers, which have roared into the ‘charts’ in the UK in second place are also very treatable. Where does that leave the rest of the cancers?

Well I’m glad I asked.

2) Accordingly to the National Audit Office, 5-year survival rates vary greatly by cancer type, but we are now in line with Europe. Not true.

Take Breast Cancer, for example:

Checking the breast

In Eurocare-3, the best country was Sweden with about 83 per cent survival, then France and Germany with over 81. Where was the UK? Answer; Around 73 per cent. Below the average for Europe; but reassuringly above the likes of Poland and Latvia.

Try Prostate Cancer; if you dare. Top, Austria at 83 per cent. The UK?Below the average for Europe, at 53 per cent.

In fact, if you want to feel discouraged let’s look at the overall figures:

All men’s cancers (%)

  • Europe Average (40.5)
  • England (37.1)

All women’s cancers (%)

  • Europe Average (53.6)
  • England (50.8)

This is the URBAN MYTH, Professor Baum. That radiotherapy and chemotherapy ‘CURE’ cancer. They don’t.

Open quotesStill we seem destined to merely ape the USAClose quotes

But still we seem destined to merely ape the USA, with more “wonder drugs” and “breakthroughs” almost a weekly occurrence.

Yet the US has 5-year survival rates of only 51 per cent for whites and 48 per cent for blacks.

And the prestigious MD Anderson Cancer Center in Texas is stating quite clearly that, ‘all the exciting developments in cancer are coming in areas other than chemotherapy.’

The Austrians use a number of herbal remedies. In Germany top oncologists are often trainedhomeopaths. They may test their patients with Vega machines to look for allergies, toxins and the like. Which doctors in the UK have even seen a Vega machine? In Germany, if the first treatment doesn’t work, the oncologist has to give you an alternative by law. My local GP in France is also a qualified homeopath and claims he has never given anyone an antibiotic. And France has the best healthcare service in the world according to the WHO (World Health Organisation). When will we open our eyes?

Chemotherapy

The fact is that historically chemotherapy drugs were like dropping a nuclear bomb on Watford because there was a known terrorist cell there. Even then this was no guarantee that one would not have gone to London for the day.

Open quotesPlease don’t get me wrong – I am not anti-chemotherapyClose quotes

Please don’t get me wrong. I am not anti-chemotherapy. If I had testicular cancer, or child leukaemia I would probably have the drugs. If I had pancreatic cancer or a brain tumour I certainly would not. I am simply ‘anti’ the blind faith of the medical profession; the back slapping, pseudo-euphoria that meets a new drug launch; that espouses that somehow drugs cure cancer.

Now there is no doubt that scientists are trying to develop the smart bomb for cancer: The missile that goes down streets, round corners and only hits the house with the terrorists in it. And I’m very happy about this.

Unfortunately while we wait, more innocent victims are suffering, because the majority of the drugs do not actually deliver a ‘cure’, but do deliver a host of debilitating side-effects.

Trials and Tribulations

Hardly a day passes without more claims for yet another wonder drug. The pharmaceutical companies have excellent PR machines, aided and abetted by a few over-enthusiastic scientists and doctors.

Take Professor Alex Markham, chief executive of Cancer Research UK. In an interview in The Times on 20th September 2004 he was positively ecstatic. “It is an extraordinary fact. In 2004 we will put almost 30,000 patients into (drug) trials, while the US does about 25,000. We have never done so well. Survival rates for adult cancers have increased by 1 per cent a year over the last decade (Note: this disagrees with the National Audit figure of 12 per cent in 30 years). We cure 43 per cent of people who develop cancer in this country.”

Open quotesWe cure 43 per cent of people who develop cancer in this countryClose quotes

Oh, heaven and euphoria.

He is worried about three cancers: lungpancreas and oesophagealbut does not mention the rising tide of brain tumours or oestrogen-driven cancers. In the young (where child leukaemia does have effective drugs) he claims we have “gone from 70 per cent dying to 70 per cent surviving”.

“Cure”. “Surviving”. The words just roll off his tongue without hint of their true meaning or the asterisk in the research report that says “for 5 years”. Indeed in children, brain tumours are clearly growing behind leukaemia with no “cure” in sight and little research being done.

Now, it is true that some drugs are accepted as merely life-extenders, for 4 months or 4 years, and no one can dismiss this benefit providing it is not gained at too great a cost.

A further cautionary note was sounded at the European Breast Cancer Conference in 2004 by several scientists who warned that drugs were being rushed onto the market before trials were even finished, whilst “success” claims were being made even earlier.

In breast cancer the “gold standard” is Tamoxifen. It acts to block oestrogen receptor sites. It is known to have serious side effects, so much so that the World Health Organisation has dubbed it a class A carcinogen itself! In California where a fair amount of Tamoxifen is made, what did they do about this? Well, of course they tried to have the WHO banned!

Open quotesThe very original trial and application for Tamoxifen was turned down by the FDA because of the side effectsClose quotes

If you read the work of Phillip Day and Steve Ransom you will be told that the very original trial and application for Tamoxifen was turned down by the FDA because of the side effects. A while later the same trial was re-presented, and again turned down. Undeterred, and knowing the FDA needed something (anything?) that might help in the fight with breast cancer, the same original trial was re-presented a third time, and gained approval. Is this what Professor Baum regards as the rigorous system to which the likes of Gerson should aspire, one wonders?

Tamoxifen is largely given to women after breast cancer has appeared and to prevent a reoccurrence. However, it is also used as a preventative drug in cases where women are at high risk. As you will see in this issue’s Cancer Watch, new research says that its benefits in these cases are doubtful, whilst its side effects are definitely dangerous. Where were the rigorous clinical trials on Tamoxifen as a preventative agent, for women as yet untouched by cancer? None exists.

In September 2004, the Daily Mail carried a story about Femara (Letrozole), an oestrogen inhibitor, which has just been approved by UK authorities. “Doctors have hailed the drug as a landmark in the treatment of the disease. Until now the “gold standard” has been Tamoxifen. But it can be taken for only five years, after which it becomes less effective and has serious side effects, ” says the article.

The article continues by saying that a third of women with breast cancer have a relapse and more than half of them occur after Tamoxifen has ceased.

Again excuse me for arguing fact here but in 2001 Government figures show that there were 39,000 or so cases of breast cancer and ‘mortality’ was approximately 13,500, which is a bit more than a ‘relapse’.

And whilst I don’t doubt for a minute that these oestrogen-reducing drugs are a major new force in treating breast cancer, I wonder if this indicates just how confused the medical profession as a whole is becoming.

Open quotesWell which one is it? Too little oestrogen, or too much?Close quotes

Hasn’t the same profession been telling women for ten or more years that on reaching menopause it would be a good idea to take more oestrogen because they didn’t have enough. Hasn’t this view spawned enormous income for the pharmaceutical companies in HRT.

Well which one is it? Too little oestrogen, or too much? Either way the pharmaceutical industry has it covered.

(Interestingly the same newspaper, same edition, carried a report from the USA saying that Prozac, and other similar antidepressants like Seroxat, Effexor and Cipramil, all approved in previous trials were now thought to increase the chances of suicide in teenagers! This, of course, raises another point which is how long is enough for a drug trial?)

All I want is honesty. More honesty and less ’spin’ and ‘hype’ It’s not too much to ask, is it? The US solicitor Spitzer has threatened Glaxo with a class action because it extolled the virtues of one of its drugs, without saying too much about the numerous negative side effects found during the trials.

The FDA are so hard pressed monitoring all the trials of all the new drugs they needed more staff. What happened? The nice pharmaceutical companies loaned them some of theirs. The phrase ‘poachers turned gamekeepers’ springs to mind.


In Science Notebook, in The Times in September 2004, Anjana Ahuja wrote:

Honesty is the best medicine if you’re a drugs giant with something to hide

In an interview for T2 last week, Richard Horton, editor of The Lancet, was startlingly candid about how pharmaceutical companies sway research agendas, buy up academics and peddle overpriced, improperly tested drugs. Researchers who take the corporate shilling, he told me, make a “bargain with the Devil”.

Now read this from The New York Review of Books and written by Marcia Angell, the former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine. The pharmaceutical industry is “primarily a marketing machine to sell drugs of dubious benefit… [and] uses its wealth and power to co-opt every institution that might stand in its way, including the US Congress, the Food and Drugs Administration, academic medical centres, and the medical profession itself”. Angell expands her tirade in a new book, The Truth about Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What We Can Do About It.

Their attacks could hardly have been timed better. A fortnight ago 11 medical journals announced that they would refuse to publish the results of clinical trials unless those trials had been registered at their inception. The idea is to prevent companies publishing only flattering results. Since published trials are often pooled in umbrella studies – meta-analyses – the absence of disappointing results, while keeping share prices buoyant, can misrepresent the usefulness and even safety of medicines. Dr Richard Sullivan, from Cancer Research UK, says it is possible that some patients are receiving ineffective drugs because consultants are unaware of negative findings buried in unpublished data. Given that some anti-cancer therapies have unforgiving side-effects, it is a serious matter.

The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, to which giants such as Merck belong, said last week that it would create a database to which companies could voluntarily contribute both good and bad trial results. But the idea met a brutal response. Catherine de Angelis, the editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, asks: “Why would you put the fox in charge of the hen house?”

Critics have it in for the Big Pharma, and they are certainly not bothering to sugar the pill.


Catherine Woollams

When Catherine was first ill and having radiotherapy she asked her doctors what would they recommend if the treatment failed. They said that they’d been at a US conference and they had a new drug in the US called Gleevec which he wanted to bring in the UK and, they added excitedly, that they could use it for Catherine.

I interjected that Gleevec was made by a Swiss company Novartis. It had been used in trials with 89 glioma patients (in fact, it was called Glivac, previously). It did not work at all. However, in other trials with another cancer (myeloid leukaemia) it had been found to have real merit, it had received FDA approval for that cancer and changed it’s name to Gleevec. Why would you want to give it to my daughter for her glioma?

Worse was to follow. My ex-wife and daughter went to see the doctors when the tumour re-appeared. Who said they planned to use a combination of three drugs, called PCV, and this had ‘a 70 per cent success rate’. This is TOSH. 70 per cent ‘cure’? 70 per cent survive 5 years? What? PCV actually made Catherine so ill she could only take one round. She had no white cells left at all.

Open quotesPCV actually made Catherine so ill she could only take one roundClose quotes

But the medical profession can give you injections to get your white cells back up. Imagine seeing your daughter injecting herself so much she couldn’t walk as a result. And the white cells did not return.

At the Brain Tumour Conference, Angela and Neil Dickson of SDRT told me that they had just been to a conference where scientists said PCV should be banned because it so debilitated the immune system, and it had only ever shown a little success in children under 5.

The doctors next recommended Temozolamide (which anyway only has FDA approval for Grade 3 tumours). This had undergone trials amongst 54 people for just one year, with 5 having their tumour disappear during that time. Is this the sort of standards of excellence required to join Professor Baum’s special club?

This drug didn’t work either, and Catherine’s immune system stayed low and, again, she could not have a second round of the drug.

But then, I truly feel sorry for oncologists. The medical system pushes them towards surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and for brain tumours, the chemotherapy doesn’t work. You don’t have to believe me. The Lancet in February 2004 says it doesn’t work for brain tumours, just as Professor Pilkington said in icon in May 2003.

Open quotesI truly feel sorry for oncologistsClose quotes

Meanwhile in MD Anderson, they are testing a new type of drug which stops the growth factors of brain cancer cells. It’s called Tarceva. One little problem. Just a little too often it causes a brain haemorrhage!

Chicken and Egg

What are we trying to do? I know that drugs are being developed which will be more targeted and not kill so many good cells. We now understand, much more clearly, the biochemistry of the cancer cell and how it differs from the normal cell and so we can make smart bombs that are far less cytotoxic. I know that others are being developed that, for example like Arimidex, cut the cancer cells’ fuel, or target a unique enzyme or property of the cancer cell. I am all for this.

But.

We seem hell bent on ignoring one, not so little, factor.

Open quotesPeople with weaker immune systems develop more cancersClose quotes

Research in the USA last year came up with the conclusion we all would have expected: People with weaker immune systems develop more cancers. A weak immune system gives you less of the defenders you need to deal with any attacking cancer cell. And remember each of us develops at least 200 or so pre-cancerous cells per day; our immune systems have developed during our evolution to deal effectively with them all.

We have various levels of immune system. To keep it simple I’ll divide it into three parts.

  • friendly bacteria in the gut: These aid digestion, produce biotin (an essential antioxidant) and crucially devour yeasts, microbes and fungi that you ingest daily. Without them your first line of defence is missing.
  • your liver: The largest organ in your body and responsible for cleaning and detoxifying your blood. Without a fully working liver toxins start to pile up around the body causing the whole immune system to ‘clog up’.
  • your white cells: These have a variety of separate but interrelated functions; for example to identify foreign invading cells, to neutralise them and to help remove them from the system.

Let’s take these in turn:

It is quite simply a fact that to take steroids, antibiotics or chemotherapy destroys the friendly bacteria in the gut.

Open quotesTo take steroids, antibiotics or chemotherapy destroys the friendly bacteria in the gutClose quotes

This allows the harmful yeasts, bacteria and microbes to multiply. In the presence of their favourite foods (like sugar, alcohol, refined carbohydrates, dairy and yeasty foods) they will multiply and even enter the blood system. They can colonise in areas of the body and they are anaerobes (don’t need oxygen), just like cancer cells. Some experts go as far as to link their presence to cancer.

The effects of chemotherapy greatly weaken the liver’s detoxification abilities. For example, chemotherapy and radiotherapy kill cells. Some cancer cells, some normal cells. And the dead cells pass to the liver, which has to work hard to break them down and pass them out into the intestines. Cholesterol builds up around some of the dead cells to form stones, sometimes several thousands of them. These in turn block the bile ducts and prevent the elimination of toxins. One US estimate was that virtually every cancer patient had these gallstones. The effects of chemotherapy greatly weaken the liver’s detoxification abilities.

And so the whole immune system ‘backs up’ and it becomes harder to get the toxins out of the body.

But finally, most of these drugs destroy your white cells leaving you with little or none of nature’s defence against foreign cells – like cancer cells.

And that’s the conundrum. At the very moment you need your immune system in tip top working order, most chemotherapy flattens it. Temporarily or even permanently.

Charlotte Gerson

Talk to Charlotte Gerson and she will amplify this further. With brain tumours she claims a success rate of about one third of people coming to her clinic. But if patients have already had chemotherapy, this falls to just 2 or 3 per cent, she says.

Some cancer experts will tell you that patients already have a weakened immune system caused by the cancer. Chicken and egg. But Catherine’s measured blood ’scores’ fell through the floor when she had chemotherapy, and the injections couldn’t return them at all. Indeed it was only a course of Cat’s Claw, Astragalus and organic iron that took her back to somewhere near normal.

Of course some cancers can ‘hide’ from the immune system. But then there are scientists working on ways of ‘kick starting’ the immune system. In icon we already covered one such treatment: Dendritic Cell Therapy.

The $64,000 Question

So, how many doctors and oncologists say to their patients at the moment of diagnosis “Right Mr Jones; the first thing we must do is get your immune system in tip top working order to help it recognise the rogue cells. After all, we want your body in its best fighting shape.”

In Michael Gearin-Tosh’s book (Living Proof: A Medical Mutiny), Dr Wheatley (a doctor of philosophy) quotes Dr Jeffrey Bland, a biochemist who simply states that every cancer therapy should include nutritional consultation as a standard of care. Not to, he says, should be considered, “malpractice by omission”.

Open quotesThe WHO estimate that 50% of all cancers are caused by poor diet; 25% by toxins and 25% by infectionClose quotes

I will tell you now that everyone we talk to, who has just been diagnosed with cancer, is nutritionally toxic (for example, too much salt in their diet) and/or nutritionally deficient (they simply don’t ingest decent levels of antioxidants through diet and/or supplements).

The World Health Organisation is quite clear. They estimate that 50 per cent of all cancers are caused by poor diet; 25 per cent by toxins and 25 per cent by infection.

Do doctors start at this point? Could there be an infection? We have recently completed our own independent blood tests on Catherine and they show that she definitely has a fungal infection in her brain and there is a trace of viral infection. Might not these just possibly be causal?

Of course, the patient may need surgery and it is possible that radiotherapy will help – although US research suggests it only has a 15 per cent 5-year “cure” rate.

And yes, some cancers respond to chemotherapy. But the point is that only a very few can be curedcompletely by chemotherapy, most merely, to some degree, are just managed by chemotherapy. So please will people – supposedly sensible people at that – stop OVERCLAIMING!

Poor Defence

The fact is that if a doctor quickly opts for chemotherapy he is saying that he expects the drug – not your flattened natural defences – to do all the work. And this is simply not credible. Not all the cancer cells may divide during the period of the chemotherapy. Some may even develop their own immunity, and it only needs one to survive.

Open quotesNot all the cancer cells may divide during the period of the chemotherapyClose quotes

Recently I saw some pictures taken using laser light and Russian algae. The chlorophyll in the algae binds to the cancer and pre-cancer cells. The patient had a breast tumour. Before chemotherapy she had three “hot spots” in her breast and a few elsewhere in her body. After chemotherapy the main “hot spots” were smaller but there were a dozen or so around her body.

And there is the rub. Cancer is systemic. The symptoms exist throughout your whole body, they may only manifest themselves in a tumour in one location. This is why it is so hard for radiotherapy or surgery to have long-term effect.

With Catherine recently we discussed what she was doing now versus what she did in year one when cancer was under control. In fact she is more diet conscious now. She doesn’t smoke, take the pill or drink alcohol.

The difference between now and then? A much, much poorer immune system, destroyed by several different chemotherapy drugs the Lancet says don’t work anyway.

Are we angry? No, sad. And completely mystified. Doctors have taken an oath to try to heal people. And to do nothing to harm them. But we feel that doctors don’t even consider the basics.

Open quotesWe feel that doctors don’t even consider the basicsClose quotes

For example:

  • your diet
  • your immune system
  • your chances of yeast or other infection
  • your body energy

Worse, some doctors even laugh, snigger, disparage and discourage patients who dare to suggest taking independent action in these areas.

Actually they’ve probably never even studied them, so it’s not their fault. It’s the fault of the system that trains them and the system that uses all our top doctors, scientists and professors to endlessly test drugs.

Professor Julian Peto of Oxford University and Cancer Research UK was quite clear about this in his speech at the National Conference of Self Help and Support Groups 2003. He stated that there was too much drug research and it took our top doctors and scientists away from investigating possible causes of cancers and bright alternative ideas for their treatment. Certainly if I want to know about cancer causes or complementary therapies the answers rarely lie in the UK or the USA. Most usually the work is taking place in Sweden or Singapore or Australia, Russia or Japan. And what happens when Cancer Research report these findings? Well their PR releases tend to say that the conclusions are “very interesting but more research will have to be done before any action can be taken”. And presumably this means the type of research that gains entry to Professor Baum’s club.

And then they never do it; in the UK we simply do not find the funding for non-drug research.

Open quotesIn the UK we simply do not find the funding for non-drug researchClose quotes

Ask Professor Pilkington whose team has found merit in six natural substances with brain tumours. The project has been scrapped; cancelled for the third time through lack of funding.

We must conduct research on a wide spectrum of possible cancer treatments. Yes, even the Gerson Therapy. Proper research that has one group of people on drugs and an identical group on diet therapy. You see I want to see vigorous research on complementary and alternative therapies too. More research, more honesty, less ’spin’ and less ‘hype’, less uninformed criticism. But the harsh reality is that funding is simply not there. In New York, as we covered in icon in September, Doctor Gonzalez is about to embarrass the FDA. In his diet therapy trial, all but one of his patients has lived the full five years, and considerably longer than those who took the chemotherapy! This is funded by a special US Government body specifically set up to do this sort of research.

You see I actually agree with Professor Baum when he says these other treatments need to be researched or else they will remain on the periphery. But that is not to say that they do not have credibility at the moment. Ask the patients who use them!

Physician Heal Thyself

Open quotesAs I said before, I don’t blame doctorsClose quotes

As I said before, I don’t blame doctors. They work within a system and to recommend vitamin supplements for example over a “tried and trusted” drug might see them struck off.

But this is not to say they couldn’t suggest using vitamin supplements or diet as well. If I ran a cancer clinic I would simply want to do my level best to cure that poor patient sitting in front of me. And I would read and read, study and study and I would want to try different approaches if I didn’t feel the official ones were successful enough.

And let’s face it, with five-year survival rates of 9 per cent on pancreatic cancer, 15 per cent on brain tumours, and even 53 per cent on prostate cancer, I don’t think anyone in UK medicine is in any position to factually disprove me when I say that in my opinion chemotherapy has helped kill my

Tags: , , ,