Treatment FAQ

what went wrong: the truth behind the clinical trial of the enzyme treatment of cancer

by Isabelle Bechtelar I Published 3 years ago Updated 2 years ago
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The paper concluded that enzymes were ineffective, while a triple chemo combo was of significant value in the treatment of pancreatic cancer. No one should be shocked to learn that the study’s director, against explicit guidelines prohibiting it, had a vested interest in the success of the experimental triple chemo combo.

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Who discovered the enzymes that make up the pancreas?

However, the German researcher Julius Kühne deserves credit for actually naming this protease in 1876 and for introducing the concept of digestive enzymes as catalysts secreted by the pancreas that allow for ecient breakdown of food in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract.

What did William Roberts prove about hydrochloric acid?

In his 1897 text Collected Contributions on Digestion and Diet, Dr William Roberts reported his experiments “proving” that hydrochloric acid permanently inactivated pancreatic “ferments,” as he called the enzymes, taken by mouth.18 Beard knew of Roberts’s writings, which he held in some esteem, even referencing him by name in his own book The Enzyme Treatment of Cancer.12 Fully accepting Roberts’s conclusions, Beard insisted that for any effect against cancer, the practitioner must administer the pancreas enzymes in an injectable form. Though Beard’s proponents such as Dr Rice did prescribe oral preparations along with the injectable, these were intended strictly as supplemental, not as primary therapy.14Today, 100 years later, most physiologists still cite the same mantra proposed by Roberts, claiming that pancreatic enzymes ingested orally cannot survive contact with hydrochloric acid in the stomach or autodigestion in the duodenum, nor could they ever be absorbed. Critics of our work proclaim that even if pancreatic enzymes do have an anticancer potential, our therapy as administered today can’t possibly succeed because we prescribe oral formulations exclusively. When I lecture, often at the end someone will question the feasibility of systemic benefit with the oral supplements we recommend.

How old is Patient 1?

Patient 1 is a 62-year-old man with a past medical history significant for elevated cholesterol, hypertension, and emphysema associated with a 35-year history of cigarette smoking, though he quit in 2001.

Did Beard's enzymes disappear?

Though relegated to obscurity, during the 20th century, Beard’s enzyme thesis did not disappear completely. Periodically, other physicians and scientists rediscovered his work, saw the potential benefit in his hypothesis, and kept the idea alive, however tenuously. During the 1920s and 1930s, a St Louis physician, Dr F. L. Morse, reported that he had successfully treated a number of advanced cancer patients with injectable pancreatic enzymes. When he presented his well-documented findings to the St Louis Medical Society in 1934—a proceeding published in the

What cancers did Kelley treat?

It was a whole spectrum of patients who had been successfully treated by kelley: pancre- atic cancer, metastatic breast cancer, ovarian cancer, meta- static ovarian cancer, cancers that are notoriously incurable, and here they were, 5 to 10 years later.

What is the best molecular model for cancer?

Now 100 years later, molecular biologists have rediscov- ered the simple fact that Beard had discovered, that the pla- centa is the ideal molecular biology model to study cancer. All over the world, research groups are starting to study the pla- centa to try and understand how cancer works.

How long does pancreatic cancer last?

The average survival for pancreatic cancer is 3 to 6 months, so even in the partial compliers, there was significant prolongation of life. Then there was a group of five who complied completely: at the time I finished the study, the average survival was over 8 years.

When did Dr. Good get his medical degree?

He received his medical degree in 1983. During a postgraduate immunology fellowship under Dr Good, considered the father of modern immunology, he completed a research study evaluating an aggressive nutritional therapy in the treatment of advanced cancer.

Who was the first person to prescribe the same diet for everyone?

In the alternative cancer world, the tendency is to prescribe the same diet for everybody. Max Gerson, MD, was one of the great innovators in nutritional cancer therapy back in the 1940s and 1950s. He treated everyone the same on a basically raw foods, plant-based diet. He thought everyone should be on that.

Was Robert Good an oncologist?

The president of Sloan-kettering at the time, Robert Good, MD, PhD, was already very well known as an independent, creative thinker. He wasn’t an oncologist. He was trained as an immunologist and apparently had an interest in nutrition, and he’d been on the cover ofTime Magazineback in 1972.

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