Cancer: causes and cures

Here is a very recent case from my inner circle : a friend, 41 years of age, unjabbed, dealing with inflammation for quite some time and working on the emotional side as well, but has just been diagnosed with breast cancer and is going in for treatment this week. Here is the written medical diagnosis from the biopsy:

15 December 2025

Diagnosis: C50 (ICD-10; breast cancer) – [malignant neoplasm of breast]


Core needle biopsies from a 14 mm mass located in the left breast, upper outer quadrant (2 o’clock position) show invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC/NST), grade 3.

Immunohistochemistry / biomarkers:
  • ER (estrogen receptor): 4%
  • PR (progesterone receptor): 0%
  • Proliferation index (MIB-1 / Ki-67): 80%
  • HER2 (c-erbB2): negative (ISH < 4)
The findings indicate a high-proliferation [high-growth-rate], ER/PR-negative, HER2-negative ductal carcinoma. Other breast tissue and the axillary (armpit) lymph nodes are normal.

Plan:
Urgent referral to a breast unit / breast clinic.

From the Forum suggestions so far, the following seems to be a good start:
DMSO with sodium bicarbonate applied topically
DMO with iodine applied topically
(these alternately)

Castor oil pack (well saturated flannel cloth)
Liposomal Vitamin C (Mercola 3g 3x per day) - could this by higher?
Ivermectin (1 mg per kg of body weight, taken orally once daily) = Makis Protocol
Fenbendazole (222 mg / day) = Makis Protocol
Zero sugar

Any other advice would be welcomed - posting this case here might also help others.

She welcomes other treatments, but time will tell how much she will apply the protocols and when / how she will get the products. Possibly this trial motivates her to rest and deal with that inflammation and emotional issues or past trauma, which she knows has affected her health. I’ll be there to give advice or help with procurement if needed, as she has asked, and I have this amazing Forum behind me.🙏
 
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Here is a very recent case from my inner circle : a friend, 41 years of age, unjabbed, dealing with inflammation for quite some time and working on the emotional side as well, but has just been diagnosed with breast cancer and is going in for treatment this week. Here is the written medical diagnosis from the biopsy:



From the Forum suggestions so far, the following seems to be a good start:
DMSO with sodium bicarbonate applied topically
DMO with iodine applied topically
(these alternately)

Castor oil pack (well saturated flannel cloth)
Liposomal Vitamin C (Mercola 3g 3x per day) - could this by higher?
Ivermectin (1 mg per kg of body weight, taken orally once daily) = Makis Protocol
Fenbendazole (222 mg / day) = Makis Protocol
Zero sugar

Any other advice would be welcomed - posting this case here might also help others.

She welcomes other treatments, but time will tell how much she will apply the protocols and when / how she will get the products. Possibly this trial motivates her to rest and deal with that inflammation and emotional issues or past trauma, which she knows has affected her health. I’ll be there to give advice or help with procurement if needed, as she has asked, and I have this amazing Forum behind me.🙏

I'm no expert, but I would think that adding a B-vitamin complex, Magnesium, and Vitamin D+K2 for general system support could be helpful. Others please chime in if I'm wrong.

If she wants to add herbs, it may be worthwhile to look at Rhodiola, which some evidence suggests is good for treating breast cancer specifically. Dosage can be quite high (2 g/day), and long-term studies have shown no side effects. From Stephen Buhner:

Rhodiola, various species, has been found effective in the treatment of breast cancer. It inhibits the tumorigenic properties of invasive mammary epithelial cells, inhibits superficial bladder cancer, suppresses T241 fibrosarcoma tumor cell proliferation, and reduces angiogenesis in various tumor lines. Rhodiola imbricata is highly protective in mice against whole-body lethal radiation.

The plant has also been found highly antioxidant in numerous studies, to be liver protective, and to be highly protective of the cardiovascular system.

Artemisia is another one to look into, maybe with a professional herbalist? There are some side effects with use.

“Artemisinin is also stimulating interest as an antitumor and anti-cancer compound. It has shown effectiveness as an anticancer agent both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro studies have found artemisinin effective against human leukemia cells, breast cancer, and colon cancer. Treatment of both bone cancer and cancer of the lymph nodes in dogs was effective with 10 to 15 days of treatment. The use of artemisinin in people with cancer has shown effectiveness as well; Vietnamese doctors have found it successful in curing 50 percent to 60 percent of several different types of cancer patients.

Clinical practice reports indicate the use of artesenuate in the successful treatment of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (60 mg IM for 14 days), artemisinin for small-cell lung carcinoma (500 mg BID for 4 months), artesenuate (IV) and artemisinin (300 mg BID) for 4 months in the treatment of stage 4 breast cancer with metastases, topical artemisinin in the treatment of multiple skin cancers, oral artemisinin in the treatment of breast cancer with metastases to the spine, and artesenuate in the treatment of stage 4 uveal melanoma.

Turkey tail mushroom is another go-to for cancer in general.
 
Here is the written medical diagnosis from the biopsy:
It's a particularly bad one. No one would judge her if she wanted to do both the chemo and radio, other than surgical resection.

Even though it's best to inform the oncologist or the oncology center pharmacist, I think vitamin C, liposomal capsules, would help her recover much better from their therapies. Something like 2 capsules three times per day. I think Ark did at some point, 2 capsules every hour or so at his worst chemo days.

She should be able to make a full recovery, though.

My 2 cents.
 
It's a particularly bad one. No one would judge her if she wanted to do both the chemo and radio, other than surgical resection.

Even though it's best to inform the oncologist or the oncology center pharmacist, I think vitamin C, liposomal capsules, would help her recover much better from their therapies. Something like 2 capsules three times per day. I think Ark did at some point, 2 capsules every hour or so at his worst chemo days.

She should be able to make a full recovery, though.

My 2 cents.

Quick question: what dosage range of liposomal Vitamin C (per time, per day, milligram amounts) would be recommended in this case?
(As far as supplements in general, in the past she's had some issues metabolizing some supplements and has had some side effects)

The scans and consultation with the surgeon are all going on today and tomorrow. Most likely she will go for hitting it hard on all fronts.
 
Quick question: what dosage range of liposomal Vitamin C (per time, per day, milligram amounts) would be recommended in this case?
That is the problem. Everyone is different. I know people love protocols and EXACT numbers. Her requirements would likely vary on a day to day basis. This is more like an art than an exact science. You'll have to engage your right brain to evaluate the situation better. The above is a good reference number. And she's relatively young and resilient.
 
Any other advice would be welcomed - posting this case here might also help others.

She welcomes other treatments, but time will tell how much she will apply the protocols and when / how she will get the products. Possibly this trial motivates her to rest and deal with that inflammation and emotional issues or past trauma, which she knows has affected her health. I’ll be there to give advice or help with procurement if needed, as she has asked, and I have this amazing Forum behind me.🙏

I am sorry to hear about your friend's health situation, Jefferson.

It's good that she is aware of the link between cancer and mental stress. I guess the connection is always worth reiterating: Jay and Hunter did a very informative, easily digestible interview about the issue. (I personally felt that it "drove the message home" well.)

Time-restricted eating seems to work especially well in women who have had breast cancer. For example, a 13-hour overnight fast reduced cancer recurrence by 40%. (Could a longer fast bring better results?) I suppose it would be supportive even in the treatment phase. Rhonda Patrick interviewed Ruth Patterson (the cancer part at 14:05-19:30):


The "Circadian Biology" approach could also be helpful and supportive, I think. (At least it has been in my own health challenges.) There are several outlets talking about it, one of them is the Quantum Conversations youtube channel, which deals with the topic in a common sense way. For instance, this particular episode is instructive.
 
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