ARE WE TREATING CANCER, BUT
KILLING THE PATIENT?The consultant
oncologist picks up the phone angrily and calls his oncologist
colleague who has been treating the patient sitting in front of him,
“stop all chemotherapy immediately,” he says, “you have completely
destroyed her liver which is pretty much irrecoverable!” This is
exactly how this patient, who I was seeing for support using natural
medicine, told me the story. She has received over 20 courses of
chemotherapy and radiation treatment, plus countless surgeries, for a
breast cancer that metastized to the bones. Only God knows what her
destiny will be!
The other oncologist treating her
was quite prepared to continue bombarding her with more chemotherapy
and radiation, without even thinking of the detrimental effects and
side effects. The cancer was the enemy and this is what we shall
attack, irrelevant whether we kill the patient. “The tumour shrunk, but
we lost the patient” is something that is often heard in cancer
circles.
To my mind the logic stinks and should be
carefully reviewed by all who say that they treat cancer. I think it is
time to talk a little about
treating cancer for two reasons – first,
it has reached pandemic proportions and many families are afflicted
with the trauma of this disease, and second, because so many people are
dying, even though they are being treated with chemotherapy, surgery
and radiation.
If you are being diagnosed with cancer,
invariable you will be told to undergo surgery, chemotherapy,
radiotherapy, hormonal therapy, etc. These seemed to be the only
so-called “proven” paths to take. Most people believe that all medical
treatments are solidly grounded in science, and that in order to be
made available to patients, such treatments must be unequivocally
proven to be effective by rigorous clinical trials. This is simply not
true!
But are there other paths that the cancer
patient can take, while still under the care of their oncologist? The
problem with any other natural treatment is that it is seen with
suspicion by most medical doctors, often saying that they are unproven
and therefore cannot be used. Dr. David Brownstein, in the foreword of
the book: Avoiding Breast Cancer wrote: “The pharmaceutical companies
want us to believe that a cure for cancer will be found by a
“magic-bullet” drug. This will never occur.”
WHAT
IS THE SUCCESS RATE OF CHEMOTHERAPY?It may be time
to ask the same questions of the traditional cancer treatments that
have been used for so many decades. What are their success rates?
An
important paper has been published in the journal Clinical Oncology.
This meta-analysis, entitled "The Contribution of Cytotoxic
Chemotherapy to 5-year Survival in Adult Malignancies" set out to
accurately quantify and assess the actual benefit conferred by
chemotherapy in the treatment of adults with the commonest types of
cancer.
All three of the paper's authors are
oncologists. Lead author Associate Professor Graeme Morgan is a
radiation oncologist at Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney; Professor
Robyn Ward is a medical oncologist at University of New South Wales/St.
Vincent's Hospital. The third author, Dr. Michael Barton, is a
radiation oncologist and a member of the Collaboration for Cancer
Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Liverpool Health Service, Sydney.
Prof. Ward is also a member of the Therapeutic Goods Authority of the
Australian Federal Department of Health and Aging, the official body
that advises the Australian government on the suitability and efficacy
of drugs to be listed on the national Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule
(PBS) – roughly the equivalent of the US Food and Drug Administration.
Their
meticulous study was based on an analysis of the results of all the
randomized, controlled clinical trials (RCTs) performed in Australia
and the US that reported a statistically significant increase in 5-year
survival due to the use of chemotherapy in adult malignancies. Survival
data were drawn from the Australian cancer registries and the US
National Cancer Institute's Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results
(SEER) registry spanning the period January 1990 until January 2004.
Wherever
data were uncertain, the authors deliberately erred on the side of
over-estimating the benefit of chemotherapy. Even so, the study
concluded that overall, chemotherapy contributes just over 2 percent to
improved survival in cancer patients.
Yet, despite
the mounting evidence of chemotherapy's lack of effectiveness in
prolonging survival, oncologists continue to present chemotherapy as a
rational and promising approach to cancer treatment.
"Some
practitioners still remain optimistic that cytotoxic chemotherapy will
significantly improve cancer survival," the authors wrote in their
introduction. "However, despite the use of new and expensive single and
combination drugs to improve response rates...there has been little
impact from the use of newer regimens" (Morgan 2005).
The
Australian authors continued: "...in lung cancer, the median survival
has increased by only 2 months [during the past 20 years, ed.] and an
overall survival benefit of less than 5 percent has been achieved in
the adjuvant treatment of breast, colon and head and neck cancers."
Basically,
the authors found that the contribution of chemotherapy to 5-year
survival in adults was 2.3 percent in Australia, and 2.1 percent in the
USA. They emphasize that, for reasons explained in detail in the study,
these figures "should be regarded as the upper limit of effectiveness"
(i.e., they are an optimistic rather than a pessimistic estimate).
A
FURTHER SIGNIFICANT STUDYAnother cancer researcher
obtained similar results about 25 years ago, back in the eighties. A
German epidemiologist from the Heidelberg/Mannheim Tumour Clinic, Dr.
Ulrich Abel has done a comprehensive review and analysis of every major
study and clinical trial of chemotherapy ever done. To make
certain that he had reviewed everything ever published on chemotherapy,
Abel sent letters to over 350 medical centres around the world asking
them to send him anything they had published on the subject. Abel
researched thousands of articles: it is unlikely that anyone in the
world knows more about chemotherapy than he.
The analysis took
him several years, but the results are astounding: Abel found that the
overall worldwide success rate of chemotherapy was "appalling," only
3%, because there was simply no scientific evidence available anywhere
that chemotherapy can "extend in any appreciable way the lives of
patients suffering from the most common organic cancers."
SUCCESS
OF CHEMOTHERAPY ONLY THREE PERCENT!In fact, he
found similar figures to the Australian oncologists – 3% - yes that is
three percent! Abel emphasizes that chemotherapy rarely can improve the
quality of life. He describes chemotherapy as "a scientific wasteland"
and states that at least 80 percent of chemotherapy administered
throughout the world is worthless, and is akin to the "emperor's new
clothes" - neither doctor nor patient is willing to give up on
chemotherapy even though there is no scientific evidence that it works!
HOW
WILL YOU TREAT YOUR CANCER DOCTOR?In 1986, McGill
Cancer Center scientists sent a questionnaire to 118 doctors who
treated non-small-cell lung cancer. More than three quarters of them
recruited patients and carried out trials of toxic drugs for lung
cancer. They were asked to imagine that they themselves had cancer, and
were asked which of six current trials they themselves would choose. Of
the 79 respondents, 64 (81%) said they would not consent to be in a
trial containing cisplatin, a common chemotherapy drug. Fifty-eight or
74% of the oncologists found all the trials using any type of
chemotherapy unacceptable. What reasons did they
give? Basically, they quoted the ineffectiveness of
chemotherapy and its unacceptable degree of toxicity.
ReferencesAbel,
U., ‘Chemotherapy of Advanced Epithelial Cancer: a critical review’,
Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy, 1992; 46: 439-452.
Morgan
G, Ward R, Barton M. The contribution of cytotoxic chemotherapy to
5-year survival in adult malignancies. Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol).
2004;16(8):549-60.
Moss, R.W., Questioning
Chemotherapy, (Equinox Press, New York, 1995).
Enstrom,
J.E. & Austin, D.F., ‘Interpreting Cancer Survival Rates’,
Science, 1977; 195: 847-851.
Peto, J. &
Easton, D., Cancer Treatment Trials - past failures, current progress
and future prospects’, Cancer Survey, 1989; 8: 513-533.
Benjamin,
D.J., ‘The Efficacy of Surgical Treatment of Cancer’, Medical
Hypotheses, 1993; 40 (2): 129-138.
Issels, J.,
‘Immunotherapy in Progressive Metastatic Cancer - A Fifteen-Year
Follow-up’, Clinical Trials Journal, August 1970: 357-365 with
editorial on pp 355- 356.
Chemotherapy Report, ‘Do
We Need A New Approach to Cancer?’, Burzynski Research Institute Home
Page, www.cancermed.com/chemo.htm
Moore, M.J.,
Tannock, I.F., ‘How Expert Physicians Would Wish to Be Treated If They
Developed Genito-urinary Cancer’, Abstract No. 455. Proc. American
Society of Clinical. Oncology, 1988; 7: 118.
Best
wishes,
Dr. George J Georgiou, Ph.D.,ND.,D.Sc (AM)
Natural
Medicine Practitioner & Researcher
Web:
www.naturaltherapycenter.com
Email:
drgeorge@naturaltherapycenter.com