THE MOSS REPORTS
Germany has traditionally had a relatively tolerant and inquiring
attitude towards complementary and alternative medicine. Indeed,
in a sense the Germans could be said to have pioneered the concept
of integrative medicine, with treatments such as mistletoe (Iscador)
taking their place alongside standard approaches to cancer therapy.
It is probably not surprising, therefore, that some of the most
trenchant criticism of conventional cancer treatment has come from
within Germany. Perhaps the most outstanding example of this questioning
attitude was the landmark monograph published in the early 1990s
by the eminent medical statistician, Ulrich Abel, titled Chemotherapy
of Advanced Epithelial Cancer. This paper amounted to a resounding
– and unimpeachable - indictment of standard chemotherapy.
Now the German magazine Der Spiegel has published an article that
again indicts chemotherapy as a treatment for advanced cancer.
For the past thirty years I have been studying and chronicling
the world of cancer therapy, helping cancer patients to decide which
treatments really hold promise and which do not. The fruit of my
long career in this field is The Moss Reports,
a comprehensive library of more than 200 reports, each one detailing
the conventional and alternative treatment of a specific kind of
cancer. For a cancer patient, a Moss Report
represents an invaluable guide and handbook for the journey
ahead.
If you would like to order a Moss Report
for yourself or someone you love, you can do so from our website,
www.cancerdecisions.com,
or by calling Diane at 1-800-980-1234
(814-238-3367 from outside the US).
We look forward to helping you.
HUGH D. RIORDAN, MD (1932-2005)
Hugh D. Riordan, MD, 72, founder and director of the Center for
the Improvement of Human Functioning International, Wichita, KS
collapsed and died of a heart attack on Friday, January 7, 2005.
Hugh was best known as one of the main proponents of high-dose
intravenous vitamin C for treating cancer and other diseases. In
addition, he introduced the use of many other innovative techniques,
including nutritional medicine, ear and body acupuncture, detecting
and removing excessive amounts of heavy metals from the body, detecting
adverse food reactions and hidden parasites, therapeutic massage,
and mind-body medicine.
Hugh himself had many facets. He was a Clinical Assistant Professor
in the Department of Preventive Medicine of the University of Kansas
Medical Center. For 35 years he was a member of the American Psychiatric
Association and, being a strong advocate of breast-feeding, was
on the Professional Advisory Board of La Leche League International.
He was involved in launching the Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine
and served on the board of the International Schizophrenia Foundation.
He was also past president of the American Holistic Medical Association.
Hugh Desaix Riordan was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on May 7,
1932. He received both his BS and MD degrees from the University
of Wisconsin, Madison, and did his internship at St. Francis Regional
Medical Center in Shakopee. He was author or co-author of scores
of scientific articles. The first was called, characteristically
enough, "One Physician Shares A Humanistic Approach To Medical
Practice." The most recent was a vitamin C collaboration that
was published just days before his death (Park S, Park CH, Hahm
ER, et al. Activation of Raf1 and the ERK pathway in response to
l-ascorbic acid in acute myeloid leukemia cells. Cell Signal. 2005;17:111-9).
Hugh was also the author of the two-volume work, Medical Mavericks,
a witty history of those who changed the practice of medicine by
being different. He was working on a third volume at the time of
his death.
Hugh also gave literally hundreds of speeches. I had the pleasure
of sitting next to him when he presented his speech, "The Use
of High Dose Intravenous Vitamin C in Cancer and other Diseases
- A 28 Year Perspective," at the 2003 meeting of the American
College for Advancement in Medicine (ACAM), in Washington, DC. I
remember the warm response that this audience gave him as a cherished
pioneer in the medical profession.
Hugh leaves his wife, Jan, six children (including the well-known
CAM practitioner, Neil Riordan, PA) and 11 grandchildren. He was
looking forward to celebrating the 30th anniversary of his Center
for the Improvement of Human Functioning this year. Sadly, that
was not to be. However, over 70 dedicated employees, volunteers
and consultants will continue his work. And that may be his greatest
legacy.
GERMAN MAGAZINE BLASTS CHEMOTHERAPY
While I was in Germany last October an article on chemotherapy appeared
in Der Spiegel, which is Germany's - in fact Europe's - highest-circulating
news magazine. On average, over one million copies are sold every
week, making it the German equivalent of Time or Newsweek. The article,
highly critical of chemotherapy, created quite a stir.
Der Spiegel, which has a history of being iconoclastic, has criticized
the cancer establishment before. In the early 1990s it gave ample
coverage to a critical report from Heidelberg epidemiologist Ulrich
Abel, PhD, showing that chemotherapy was ineffective in the treatment
of advanced carcinomas. (It was Abel's book that first inspired
me to write Questioning Chemotherapy.)
The latest article shows that for patients in the advanced stages
of the major forms of cancer, chemotherapy has no appreciable effect
on survival. This will come as no surprise to long-time readers
of this newsletter. But the Spiegel article comes at a time when
the pharmaceutical industry is already reeling from revelations
of price gouging and the suppression of research data that indicated
life-threatening side effects from some of its best-selling drugs.
It follows a similarly hard-hitting exposé last spring in
the American news magazine, Fortune. Perhaps such widely circulated
articles will lead to a public outcry or at least to a changed perception
of the value of chemotherapy—a treatment method that normally
goes unquestioned in the mainstream media.
Poisonous Cures
The title of the article is "Useless Poisonous Cures"
(Giftkur ohne Nutzen). Unfortunately, Der Spiegel's website provides
no English translation of the article. I have therefore summarized
the contents for English-speaking readers.
The article reads as follows:
Increasingly sophisticated and expensive cellular poisons are being
given to seriously ill patients with colon, breast, lung and prostate
cancer. Now an epidemiologist has analyzed the actual rate of life
extension in such patients. His findings are that despite all the
alleged progress, patients do not actually live a day longer.
On Christmas eve, Erike Meyer (fictitious name) was taken to Prosper
Hospital in Recklinghausen. Her doctors removed a malignant tumor
from her colon and also removed her spleen. At the beginning of
August, however, they discovered that her tumor had metastasized
(spread). On Tuesday of the past week the 64-year-old homemaker
began her first round of chemotherapy.
"This is a complete nightmare for me," said Frau Meyer.
"I never thought that I would one day develop cancer. But I
hope that I will become better. Ones chances are always better with
chemotherapy." (Die sind ja immer weiter mit der Chemotherapie.)
At the Clinical Center of the University of Munich one scientist
does not share her optimism. Epidemiologist Dieter Hoelzel, 62,
says that "as far as survival with metastatic cancer of the
colon, breast, lung and prostate goes, there has been no progress
in the past 25 years." He has documented the outcome of patients
treated since 1978 in and around Munich, according to the standard
methods of oncology. These are people suffering from the advanced
stages of one of the four major internal cancers, which annually
claim about 100,000 victims in Germany alone. These tumors are the
big killers.
If a tumor has metastasized, and can no longer be reached by surgery
or X rays, then chemotherapy is considered the treatment of last
resort. For decades, a series of new cellular poisons have been
used. Often drug manufacturers have also demanded astronomically
high prices. In exchange, they promise a longer life.
"A chance at life!" say large billboards, each about
9 feet high, for the drug Taxotere. The manufacturer of a competing
product recruits patients using the slogan "Taxol – give
yourself a future!" (Taxol - dem Leben eine Zukunft geben!)
Erika Meyer's physician in Recklinghausen speaks with confidence.
Chemotherapy has clearly improved over the past 20 years, says conventional
oncologist Friedrich Overkamp, MD, 47. "A considerable extension
of lifespan" can be attained, he says.
However, the latest figures from the cancer registry of the University
of Munich do not confirm that view. Survival rates have not improved
over the past decades. Today's patients die just as fast of their
cancer as their fellow sufferers did 25 years ago. While the statistical
curve for colon cancer shows a slight improvement, the survival
rate for breast cancer actually fell over the course of the years.
These fluctuations probably mean nothing, said Dr. Hoelzel, except
the accidental ups-and-downs of statistics without any real significance.
However, he fears that the systematic expansion of chemotherapy
for cancer of the breast could be responsible for the decline of
the survival rate.
These statements from the Munich epidemiologist explicitly do not
apply to the chemotherapy of Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,
leukemia, sarcoma, and testicular cancer. These diseases can be
cured in some cases in an almost spectacular way. Hoelzel's verdict
also does not apply to chemotherapy that is used to shrink tumors
before surgical intervention (neoadjuvant chemotherapy, ed.) or
to destroy stray tumor cells after an operation (adjuvant chemotherapy,
ed.)
But experienced clinicians agree that the balance tips against
chemotherapy when it comes to treating solid tumors in advanced
stages. Gerhard Schaller, MD, 52, a gynecologist at the University
of Bochum, states: "For the survival of women with advanced
breast cancer, chemotherapy previously brought them practically
no benefit - a lot of noise about nothing."
Wolfram Jaeger, MD, 49, Director of Gynecology at the State Clinics
of Düsseldorf, has had similar experiences. "Chemotherapy
gave, and gives, no successes. Enormous numbers of women are treated,
without proven benefit (ohne dass ein Nutzen tatsächlich bewiesen
wäre). If we told this to the patients, however, they would
totally despair."
Millions of Patients
Millions of patients over the past 50 years have undergone chemotherapy.
The first patient with an advanced lymphosarcoma (non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma, ed.) was treated with mustard gas by US physicians in
1942. The tumor shrank in an almost miraculous way. This effect
disappeared after three months and the patient died. Nevertheless,
this temporary success rang in the era of chemotherapy against cancer
suffering.
Cytotoxic drugs are cellular poisons that intervene in a different
way in the proliferation of cells. Because tumor cells divide more
frequently than most other body cells, tumors and metastases are
particularly susceptible to such drugs. Tumors can shrink, and,
every now and then, they disappear even completely. However healthy
cells, which divide rapidly, can also be damaged, including cells
of the hair follicles and the blood forming cells of the bone marrow.
The question [of whether or not chemotherapy really extends life,
ed.] can probably no longer be answered. In clinical studies the
manufacturers always compare their new drugs with older cellular
poisons. There are no control groups that are given no treatment
at all.
In order to be allowed onto the market, it suffices to achieve
a "statistically significant" advantage in one small group
of hand-picked test subjects vs. those treated with some already
approved cellular poison.
Some of the early chemotherapeutic drugs led to the premature death
of patients and were removed from the market. Other patients were
put through hell. They lost their hair and appetite or were plagued
by serious systemic infection.
The late Klaus Thomsen, MD, long-time director of gynecology of
the University Clinic Hamburg-Eppendorf, explained in September
1985, at an international congress in Berlin: "Upon reflection,
we should not be surprised if an increasing number of doctors would
say that they will abandon such an undistinguished form of treatment."
Ten years later, the epidemiologist Ulrich Abel, PhD, of the University
of Heidelberg, put the entire usefulness of chemotherapy in doubt.
For over a year, this scientist reviewed several thousand publications
on chemotherapy. He concluded that "for most internal cancers
no proof exists that chemotherapy, especially the increasingly high
dose variety, increases life expectancy or improves quality of life."
Notable oncologists agreed: the expansion of chemotherapy could
not stop that. But because physicians did not want to admit to their
patients that they were completely defenselessly against cancer,
this poisonous cure became one of the dogmas of medicine. That ‘benefits'
all participants: "The physicians are happy that they have
something they can offer, the patients are happy, that they can
take something, and the industry is happy," say the Düsseldorf
gynecologist Jaeger.
Progress mainly consists in reducing the side effects that are
caused by the drugs themselves. Earlier, these cellular poisons
weakened patients to such an extent that they had to be supervised
in the hospital. Now, however, methods of reducing hair loss, appetite
loss, diarrhea and blood clots lie at hand. Many chemotherapies
can even be carried out on an outpatient basis.
Each quarter, oncologist Friedrich Overkamp uses 1.5 million Euro
worth of medicines on his 1,100 cancer patients. Nationwide (in
Germany) the use of the cytotoxic drugs between August 2003 and
July 2004 added up to 1.8 billion Euro – an increase of 14
per cent compared to the previous year. (Note: the Euro is currently
worth around $1.30).
Monoclonal antibodies, which can recognize cancer cells more specifically,
are the latest market drivers. Again, the drug manufacturers envison
a breakthrough. Nevertheless, in this situation as well, clear proof
is lacking that the lifespan of incurably ill cancer patients is
truly extended. Meanwhile, competition from the new monoclonal antibodies
leads to a situation in which cellular poisons are pushed more aggressively
in the market.
For decades pharmaceutical manufacturers brought more new cytotoxic
drugs to market; in the seventies there were just five, but in the
nineties approximately 25 new drugs were approved.
"If each of these signified some small progress," said
Munich epidemiologist Hoelzel, "then this should have led to
remarkable improvements over the past decades. However, we do not
see that reflected in our cancer register."
It is also difficult to find proof of a survival advantage in the
thousands of reports from the drug industry. For metastatic breast
cancer there are only about ten studies that suggest that a cytotoxic
drug 'cocktail' extends life, when compared to another such mixture.
Because, however, thousands such comparative studies have been performed,
Heidelberg epidemiologist Abel argues that "statistically remarkable
differences in a substantial number of studies are simply due to
an expected coincidence."
The proponents of chemotherapy refer particularly to two influential
works. In the first of these, French researchers studied 724 female
patients who had metastatic breast cancer. The three-year survival
rate after diagnosis increased from 27 per cent (for those treated
between 1987 and 1993) to 43 per cent (1994 to 2000).
However, the epidemiologist Hoelzel attributes this apparent improvement
to a shortcoming in sampling methodology. In the period 1994 to
2000, metastasized breast cancer tended to be more promptly recognized
than it was in the earlier cases (1987-1993). Because the illness
had not progressed so far at first diagnosis, life expectancy was
much greater. This gave the illusion of an apparent increase in
survival time, although of course the apparent improvement in survival
rates was not the result of any therapy.
Defenders of chemotherapy also cite a study from the University
of Texas, Houston, published in August 2003. In this study, the
five-year survival rate of women with metastasized breast cancer
improved continuously over the years 1974 to 2000, from 10 per cent
to 44 per cent. This article also contained an overview of all the
cytostatic drugs, which the authors claimed had made this alleged
progress possible. However, in the study in question women both
with and without metastases were mixed together for comparison.
The groups from more recent time were distorted by the inclusion
of more female patients who had more favorable prognoses. The authors
of this celebratory article actually admit that in a hidden sentence
(in einem versteckten Satz).
"There is no systematic documentation at all," says Hoelzel
of such "trick research" (Trickforschung). "That
is the great deficiency of cancer medicine," complains Dr.
Hoelzel. Meanwhile, with his demand for clean scientific proof,
critic Hoelzel will hardly be allowed to shake up the industry.
Because the industry already manages very well without any proof
of the utility of drugs for patients with advanced cancer.
NOTE: The original German version can be found
on the Internet at:
http://www.pilhar.com/News/Presse/2004/20041004_Spiegel_Giftkur_Chemo.htm
--Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D.
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The news and other items in this newsletter
are intended for informational purposes only. Nothing in this newsletter
is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice.
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