Tag Archives: CAM cancer treatments

Hyperthermia treatment in cancer tumors

Have you ever had an epiphany moment? The kind that makes you want to kick yourself? I had one those last year when I attended a lecture titled “Hyperthermia: From laboratory to clinical research and practice”  (part of the Jerusalem International Conference on Integrative Medicine) by Dr. Joseph Brenner, MD.

Dr. Brenner is the managing director of the Oncology Clinic at Wolfson Hospital in Holon, Israel. He is also the founder and medical director of New-Hope, The Center for Biologic and Metabolic Non-Toxic Medicine in Oncology located in Tel-Aviv, Israel. What made me sit in up my seat was the fact that Dr. Brenner, who has been using a method called Hyperthermia to treat cancer tumors in patients at New Hope, presented a number of cases in which treatment with Hyperthermia was able to significantly shrink the cancer tumors – enabling the patients to then continue with standard cancer treatment.

So why did I want to kick myself? For two reasons:

Some of the successful cases Dr. Brenner presented were patients with pancreatic cancer. This type of cancer remains one of the more deadly cancers, with low cure/remission rates and poor prognoses for most patients (such as the well-publicized cases of Luciano Pavarotti and Patrick Swayze).

The fact that my husband lasted nearly a year after being diagnosed – with Stage 4 cancer, surgery to bypass the pancreas, emergency surgery to fix a leaking blood vessel, and a short (and thankfully temporary) systems failure – was considered remarkable. In fact, I remember one doctor telling him he had no more that 18 weeks to live – but then, I always said my husband was too stubborn to listen to his doctors.

The second reason is that this treatment has been around for some time. This was not a ground-breaking lecture – back in 1997(!), Dr. Brenner organized a large medical conference in Tel Aviv called”Hope 2000”. One of the lecturers who attended the conference was Prof. Frederick Douwes, director of St. George Hospital in Bad Aibling, Germany, himself a world-renowned Hyperthermia expert, who has been using this treatment even longer.

Now let me be clear – there is no magic bullet – and there is no promise for every cancer patient, pancreas or otherwise. All I am saying is that I wish I had known about Dr. Brenner’s clinic and treatment method back in 1997, because I know my husband would have wanted to try this treatment. [He did try many different treatments besides radiation and chemotherapy, including shark cartilage treatment in Mexico, Juniper extractions in Germany, and more.]

You should know that not everyone believes in Hyperthermia; practitioners who use this treatment continue to face an uphill battle with their colleagues and with the health services (less so in Germany, where CAM has become more mainstream and accepted).

May your epiphany be much less painful than mine – and wishing you all good health.

Living with cancer – using CAM to prolong cancer remission

A cancer diagnosis used to be all but a death sentence. For my husband, diagnosed with Stage IV pancreatic carcinoma, this was still the case (because early pancreatic cancer often does not cause symptoms, pancreatic cancer is often not diagnosed until it is advanced, and complete remission is rare). Today, however, the way we view cancer is changing.

At a recent conference on integrative medicine (The Jerusalem International Conference on Integrative Medicine), I was struck by one lecture simply titled “The Integration of CAM in the treatment of chronic breast cancer.” Breast cancer as a chronic disease? I knew that survival rates for breast cancer had gone up, but the concept of breast cancer as a chronic disease – indeed the idea of living with breast cancer – seemed to be a radical change in our approach to cancer.

According to Prof. Gershom Zajicek, MD, (Professor of Experimental Medicine and Cancer Research at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem; you can find more information on his research at http://cancerandwoblistofarticles.blogspot.com/), recent evidence in cancer research suggests that, in many cases, even if the primary tumor is caught at an early stage, tumor cells have already seeded metastatic sites in a patient’s body. That was certainly the case with my mother’s breast cancer (which re-emerged as bone metastases just a few years after her initial cancer went into remission).

Prof. Zajicek refers to research published by the National Cancer Institute that shows that approximately 30 percent of the patients diagnosed with early stage breast cancer were found to have breast cancer cells in their bone marrow (http://www.cancer.gov/newscenter/ pressreleases/2008/metastaticoutreachbarkan). While these research results sound rather depressing, consider other studies Prof. Zajicek quotes (from the SEER database), which show that for many patients, breast cancer is a chronic disease, in other words a disease patients can live with for many years (www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEf96AYGFsc).

Prof. Zajicek explains that an important part of maintaining breast cancer’s status as a chronic disease is inducing prolonged remission, in which case patients are faced with two options: chemotherapy or CAM treatments. With time, however, cancer generally resists all chemotherapy. That’s when CAM becomes patients’ only therapeutic option.

What do CAM treatments do?
Using different types of CAM treatments (refer to the list at the end of this blog for some examples), therapists promote in their patients the body’s own ability to fight back – something that conventional therapies (chemotherapy and radiation) simply cannot do. Prof. Zajicek explains that CAM treatments make use of three instincts that he says directly affect the physico-chemical process in the body: a self-healing instinct, imagination (such as guided imagery), and empathy.

In this third instinct, Prof. Zajicek points out that many patients live with cancer in peace for many years. He refers to these patients as “Cancer Yogis” because, similar to the way Hindu Yogis control their physiology, Cancer Yogis control their cancer remission and may prolong it. When patients attend cancer support groups and meet these Cancer Yogis, they learn through empathy these Yogis’ way to induce remission.

Learning more about CAM and cancer treatments
You can find additional information on the use of CAM in cancer treatment at http://www.cam-cancer.org. Here are just a few of the CAM treatments used in helping cancer patients:

  • Homeopathy
  • Acupuncture (used, for example, for treating pain, hot flushes, nausea, vomiting and other side effects of chemotherapy and radiation)
  • Chinese herbal medicine
  • Biologically-based treatments (vitamins, herbs, food that promote healing, special diets)
  • Therapeutic touch treatments such as healing, Qigong, Tai-Chi, Reiki
  • Mind-body medicines such as meditation, biofeedback, hypnosis, yoga, imagery
  • Manipulative and body-based treatments such as massage, reflexology, shiatsu, pressure points