Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Ivermectin Squares Off in a New War on Cancer
rescue.substack.com ^ | JAN 31, 2024 | MARY BETH PFEIFFER

Posted on 01/31/2024 9:31:34 AM PST by dennisw

Medical pioneers are putting their Covid treatment expertise to new uses. For two cancer patients, that meant 'complete clinical response.'

With this article, I begin what I hope will be a series of reports on the use of inexpensive generic drugs for the treatment of cancer. In one of the few good things to come out of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, a growing number of physicians who pioneered effective early treatments for Covid-19 is now attempting to learn if safe, off-patent drugs can also work for cancer. So far, results are promising for drugs like ivermectin, mebendazole, and metformin, and supplements like melatonin.

I will write about this emerging movement from the the conference in Phoenix of the Front Line Covid-19 Critical Care Alliance this weekend, where cancer care will be highlighted. (I’m on a panel on censorship Saturday; join me there or watch afterward online.) Here now is the story of one patient and what it may mean for others.

John Ross was fifty-one years old when he was diagnosed, after more than a year of discomfort and growing unwellness, with Stage 3B colon cancer. A three- to four-inch tumor had almost completely blocked and broken through the organ wall; his surrounding lymph nodes were enlarged and presumed cancerous.

In May 2023, Ross started the traditional treatments offered by mainstream medicine—simultaneous radiation and an oral chemotherapy. He did not tell his mainstream cancer doctors that he was also taking, among other things, the repurposed generic drug ivermectin. The drug was famously—and wrongly—vilified as a horse medication during Covid, though it was in reality a Nobel Prize-winning “wonder drug” with huge untapped potential.

Ross and Dr. Mollie James, a functional-medicine physician who oversaw his nontraditional treatment, are modern-day medical trailblazers who might change the way cancer is treated. If they and others in a growing effort are successful, cancer care will be less painful, more affordable, and—the greatest hope—more effective. Practicing in a suburb of St. Louis, Dr. James had used ivermectin and other therapies to successfully fight Covid-19. (I wrote about her treatment of her brother in January of 2022.) She is now taking what she learned in the pandemic and turning it to cancer.

In his quest for the best care, Ross, who lives in Prescott, Wisconsin, went to two major cancer centers in the Midwest. He underwent a battery of blood draws and diagnostic tests and consulted at least a dozen physicians. But only Dr. James found and treated, he said, a low magnesium level, a Vitamin D level that was acceptable but too low, Dr. James believed, for challenging cancer, and, most critically, severe thyroid dysfunction. Nobody had tested for this, he said.

“I don’t know how you are standing here today—I’ve never seen blood this bad,” Dr. James told Ross after his thyroid result came in. First, she said, “I want to get you as healthy as possible before treatment.” Starting three weeks before radiation and chemotherapy, Ross began, along with ivermectin, infusions of high-dose Vitamin C and glutathione; major auto-hemotherapy, also called ozone therapy; and hyperbaric oxygen therapy, along with supplements like high-dose melatonin.

In the ensuing nearly six weeks of radiation and chemotherapy, oncologists, and others caring for Ross remarked repeatedly on how well he was doing. “Even the (radiation) technician, at the last week of treatment, made comments how this is so abnormal to have somebody that wasn’t dealing with any of the burns or anything like that,” including hair loss, Ross recalled.

The clincher, however, came in Ross’s MRI and CT scans in July of 2023. After twenty-eight radiation and chemotherapy treatments and nearly three months of the ivermectin protocol, “Ninety percent of his tumor had turned fibrous, meaning into scar tissue,” Ross’s wife, Roxanne, told me. “And the lymph nodes were half the size,” John added. An oncologist’s report called that an “excellent response.”

Dr. Mollie James, the functional medicine physician who treated John Ross. Dr. James has seen this outcome twice in almost identical colon cancer cases. Both were men in their fifties with advanced lower colorectal disease. One patient, John Ross, went the traditional route as well as taking the path offered by Dr. James. The other patient, who declined an interview for this article, rejected mainstream medicine and went with ivermectin and assorted other therapies.

The outcome for both, Dr. James said: “Complete clinical response with no surgery.”

(EXCERPT)


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Education; Food; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: cancer; ivermectin
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-65 last
To: Bob434

I’ve bought Panacur here in France in tablets of 10 pills of 500mg per pill for 13 euros. It’s (still) freely available without prescription. And still cheap when compared to any big pharma cancer treatment (which in most cases don’t even cure).

Lucky you, I would be happy to find Ivermectin even at 20 US$ a tube (yes, the horse dewormer tubes)! In Europe, it has been forbidden long ago from the market without prescription (thank you Pfiz and Mod). Even vetenaries in France don’t want to prescribe it for fear of being harassed by bureaucrats. In 2021, I had to buy it from an Indian company with address in London, a reliable source recommended by the World Doctors Alliance. A week treatment cost me more than 100 euros!
I regularly check its status because I want to buy some but the embargo seems to have no end in sight.


61 posted on 02/01/2024 12:26:40 PM PST by miniTAX
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 60 | View Replies]

To: dennisw

It would be fantastic to treat cancer with ivermectin, fasting, diet and vitamins rather than immune system destructive chemicals and radiation.


62 posted on 02/01/2024 12:43:56 PM PST by mom.mom (...our flag was still there.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Karl Spooner; Bob434

“hence ‘metformin’ which you can safely replace with Berberine.”

Berberine twice a day (high quality and I’ve tried many brands, all with black pepper for absorption) only took my A1C down from 5.8 to 5.6. But that’s at least something which you can’t say for all supplements.


63 posted on 02/01/2024 4:09:29 PM PST by steve86 (Numquam accusatus, numquam ad curiam ibit, numquam ad carcerem™)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: miniTAX

[[And still cheap when compared to any big pharma cancer treatment]]

Tell me about it- i took one drug when on chemo that cost around $16,000 per treatment just for nausea- not the actual chemo which i9m sure was probably even more expensive- nothing cheap about cancer drugs at all


64 posted on 02/01/2024 7:19:55 PM PST by Bob434
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 61 | View Replies]

To: miniTAX

[[Lucky you, I would be happy to find Ivermectin even at 20 US$ a tube (yes, the horse dewormer tubes)!]]

Yeah- what a shameful thing the medical community did to that drug- they very likely cost many lives by preventing it


65 posted on 02/01/2024 7:21:38 PM PST by Bob434
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 61 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-65 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson