Guest guest Posted April 14, 2000 Report Share Posted April 14, 2000 Kathy and all, Thanks for the response, Kathy. > Message: 4 > Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 10:07:26 EDT > From: InghamSeeker@... > Subject: Re: Quality of advice? > > To Moran, Surgeon: > > , thank you for your response to my post concerning the > regimen I use > for breast cancer. IMO, it is important that we get to hear both > confirming > and opposing opinions regarding such serious health matters. > Please note, > however, that I was responding to a request for this information > from someone > who had already chosen " alternative " methods to heal her cancer. > Thousands > have chosen not to have surgery, chemo and radiation due to the > negative side > effects of these modalities. I have been following alternative treatment of cancer for several years, and the vast majority of AM users continue to have at least some conventional treatments. > > To answer your question about my diagnoses, the specimen used was > a " right > breast mass aspirate (2 slides rec'd.) " by find needle biopsy. > The diagnoses > was: " Positive for malignant cells. Mammary carcinoma with features > suggestive of lobular-type. " Thankyou. This means it almost certainly is cancer, although sometimes the results of cytology are overturned upon removal of the lump. It is interesting (and good for you) if it is a lobular cancer, as these have a much better prognosis on average than the much more common ductal cancer. They are slowly growing and usually extremely hormonally sensitive. I wonder if one or other of the many treatments you are using has an antiestrogen effect, like tamoxifen. Some phytooestrogens and isoflavones could have this effect, and it would be one explanation for the reduction in size. I do not consider myself " cured " of > cancer. I > believe that I have my cancer under control at this point in time > and that > the formerly cancerous lump in my breast is benign due to the > steps I took to > make this so. I also believe that I am still at risk for a recurrence of > cancer, which is why I continue to follow the regimen I began > three years ago. > > My remark that conventional treatment may be worse than the disease is > well-founded. First, excision of a cancerous tumor may spread > the disease by > piercing the protective envelope that surrounds the tumor, > allowing cancerous > cells to travel to other parts of the body. I am sorry, but this is one of the most pernicious myths of alternative medicine, and unnecessarily scares many people. In your case the tumour would have been removed with a good 1cm margin of surrounding normal breast tissue, the surgeon being as careful as possible not to go close to the cancer anywhere. Tumour spread is not even a theoretical issue with competent and gentle surgery, which aims to keeps as far away from the cancer cells as is anatomically possible. People seem to imagine us meticulously dissecting out visible cancer. It is nothing like that, for we know that if we go too close to the cancer recurrence at the operation site is likely. It is this rather than distant spread that is the worry with surgery. So the risk of causing distant spread with careful surgery is about the same as exists with everyday knocks and bumps to the tumour, or with palpation (feeling) of the tumour, or with the needle biopsy. The proven high cure rates with surgery alone with many types of early cancer (even after INCISIONAL BIOPSY- cutting into the tumour) should firmly disprove this myth for all practical purposes. The notion that we surgeons would continue to advocate surgery despite " allowing cancer cells to spread to other parts of the body " is very hurtful, as is the implication that we might never have considered this point ourselves in well over a century of treating cancer. Please allow me a small but bitter jibe ---- this reflects the cloistered nature of much AM ideology, because it can so easily be refuted by looking at information outside the usual incestuous circle of AM information sources. > suppress the immune system, which is not the right approach (IMO) while > battling a disease that is caused by a suppressed immune system. It has been confirmed that these modalities suppress the immune system. So does surgery, but it recovers quickly after all of these. The problem with the immune system theory is that common types of cancer are demonstrably NOT due to any general failure of the immune system. The cancer develops as the result of a mutation to its DNA. The actual gene sequences involved have now been identified for many cancers. The immune system can't react to the cancer as it does not recognise the cells as foreign -- not surprisingly since they arise from the body's own cells. It doesn't matter how strong the immune system is. Severe immune suppression in AIDS and transplant patients certainly can induce some cancers, but mainly rare specific types of cancer (Kaposi's tumours etc.). > Chemo and > radiation are often the cause of death, not the cancer itself, > because they > poison the entire system. Sometimes they can inadvertently cause death when used in certain ways. I don't know what " poison the entire system " means, in medical terms. But the radiotherapy and chemotherapy used to treat widespread disease is a very different process to that used in primary treatments such as we are discussing here. The chemotherapy used as an adjunct in premenopausal breast cancer is a relatively mild regime and while I do not pretend that it is fun, it must be very rarely fatal. It produces a small increase in cure rates (well proven, nevertheless). If a woman refused to have it after full informed consent I would not push it. Other surgeons may well not either. The radiotherapy is more important if the breast is to be preserved, to prevent local recurrence, which can occur in up to 20% of cases after lumpectomy otherwise. It is much less often necessary after mastectomy where wider clearances of the cancer can be obtained. The breast can become swollen and sore for quite a while after radiotherapy, but other side effects are unusual, as with modern techniques any effect on tissues other than the breast can be minimised. Was all this gone into thoroughly with you at the time? Were you offered the opportunity to talk to women who have undergone the treatment? I choose to let my body do what it was > meant to > do, eliminate cancer cells if given the proper environment to do so, by > building my immune system. Obviously, the is not the answer for > every woman > with breast cancer - but it is my answer and it has served me > well. I still > have my breast, I have shrunk my tumor by half, and my immune system is > strong and getting stronger each day that I continue on this program. > > Conventional treatment would have: removed most of my breast > (the surgeon > stated that for my pea-sized tumor a mass of approximately the size of a > lemon would have been removed - which, frankly, is most of my breast) This sounds excessive. It would not necessarily include any skin, which mainly controls breast size and shape in small breasts. Usually a one cm margin would be adequate-- about a golf ball size in your case. In even small breasts an 8 mm tumour can usually be excised with minimal, if any, deformity. ; > removal of lymph nodes (the surgeon stated that 10 to 12 lymph > nodes would > be removed), leaving my right breast and arm wide open to a variety of > infections and a recurrence of cancer Not so. The removal of glands is partly to remove any that are involved by cancer, but also for prognostic information. If the glands were involved there is a much stronger possibility that cancer will have already spread via the bloodstream and chemotherapy should be more seriously considered. If they are heavily involved radiotherapy to the axilla may be advised to prevent recurrence. We prefer not to have to do this because it is then that you risk the swollen arms and infections, but it is better than uncontrolled cancer under the arm. Many centres now are trying sentinel node biopsy after lymph node mapping which it is hoped will enable the same information to be obtained by the removal of one lymph node only (there are about thirty under the arm). We constantly try to make our treatments as easy as possible for the patient, without compromising cure rates. But there is no biological principle that says that cancer should be easy to treat, nor evidence that this is so. My guess is that the cure rate with alternatives, judging from the number of believable anecdotes around, is no higher than one in a hundred. I am here to be convinced otherwise, if anyone has firm figures. ; radiation and chemo, > leaving my immune > system unable to fight a systemic disease that is in no way > confined to my > right breast. There are no grounds for this. >All of this for an 85% cure rate? No way!! I assume you were at the time, in your turn, being given the impression that you could achieve a better? -- equivalent? cure rate using alternative treatments. This is why we are having this discussion, because I believe people who choose this course are risking their lives and possibly horrendous disability by following what may be no more than a nice dream. You and others here are now passing this dream on to others. My own experience of people who have chosen this course is that they have always come to grief. Perhaps I have only seen the unlucky ones, but they have come back with much more advanced cancers, and wind up being forced to have even more aggressive treatment than may have been initially possible, with little prospect of cure, simply to control unpleasant local disease. The cancer may be ulcerating through the skin, and smelly enough that their family insists they seek treatment, and painful. Are you prepared to accept partial responsibility for outcomes like this, when you tell someone that conventional treatments are often worse than the disease? Someone mentioned Lorraine Day. Yes, I am familiar with her case. She skates over the obvious fact that her cancer got into the state shown on her web site precisely because it was neglected while she was trying alternatives. She clearly refused radiotherapy after a lumpectomy, and this is why she had the recurrence in the first place. Elsewhere she says how she was trying Essiac, which did not work for her. This had to be during the period that the tumour grew to this size. Even if she eventually found an alternative treatment that worked, she is a warning as to how bad things can get while avoiding proven treatments. I am not convinced by her case, as she has a lot of photos on her site, but no " after " one showing the supposedly triumphant final outcome. Why is this, when it would be such a dramatic confirmation of what she claims? Are there now surgical scars or evidence of radiotherapy? I have certainly only ever seen such tumours in grossly neglected cancers, and do not believe for one moment that it grew to this size in " less than three weeks " . Nor do I trust a doctor who makes money selling videotapes of a cancer cure, but who doesn't bother to publish even her own supposedly spectacular cure in a medical journal. Nor do I trust anyone so heavily into medical conspiracies - I KNOW this is nonsense. I think it is possible that she eventually had radiotherapy and/or surgery, but in common with many others, chooses to attribute her " cure " to the alternative treatments. If anyone knows for sure otherwise let me know, and I will notch her up as " probable " , rather than " dubious " . Her approach, from memory, is Gerson-like , which I have investigated without being impressed. You may be right that more people are using alternatives in preference to conventionals. This would explain why in the last 12 months there have been a number of cases appearing in the media where people who have done this and found it didn't work. The Liam Holloway case in New Zealand, and Tyrell Dueck's miserable death in Canada come to mind. I believe these are the tip of an iceberg. Mostly we don't hear about the failures of alternatives. In the above cases it was only because minors were involved, resulting in court actions and publicity. The other source of such data is the sad outcome of so many celebrity accounts of " how I won my battle with cancer (using alternatives) " in the weeklies. Most of these have used conventional treatment too, so no one has anything to be proud of here. > > IMO, surgery, chemo and radiation are barbaric under these > circumstances. > There is good science to demonstrate that the alternatives I chose have > merit. So you say. I would like to see this " good science " . I have been looking for it for a long time now. If the tumor were to start growing, I would have surgery > to remove it > - this was always my intent - but I would never have chemo and > radiation for > breast cancer. I would encourage you to at least do that. > > I hope that I have answered your questions completely. > > Sincerely, Kathy. I did not intend to get into the above, but some readers may be interested in what a surgeon thinks of your remarks about conventional treatment. I really just wanted to make the point here that early cancer of many common types can be cured with considerable reliability by conventional treatments, and that even in those not cured it can prevent some rather awful problems developing. This has to be contrasted with totally unknown prospects with AM. Believe me, I've looked. I feel relieved that yours is a favourable breast cancer, and think it is likely that you will still do well if the cancer starts growing again. One of my patients with lobular cancer started getting local recurrences on the chest wall 26 years ago. With breast cancer this can be a very serious sign, but after removal of many small recurrences and quite heavy radiotherapy, it is now over ten years or so since she had one, and she remains quite well. Thankyou. Regards, . > > > > ________________________________________________________________________ > ________________________________________________________________________ > > Message: 5 > Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 08:21:29 -0700 > From: " Art Brown " <abrown101@...> > Subject: to JR > > Hi JR - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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