About this deal
The only helpful advice I modestly give is about incontinence and ED issues which I experienced following my prostatectomy, even then I describe how I handled my incontinence (and deal with urine leakage even now after 12 years) and how we managed to re-establish our sex life. Now, 18 years after her initial cancer diagnosis—after battling cervical, lung, and blood cancers—McLelland is living the life of her dreams. Her own survival story would seem to suggest that she is doing something right, but in such a large cocktail of medication, dietary advice and supplements, it would be hard to 'prove' which ones were working and which were superfluous. And a breast cancer patient who was told by her oncologist she was going to die is still alive and well, going to the gym, working as a nurse, and living a full life—all as a result of following McLelland’s approach to starving her cancer.
Many doctors tell you to avoid all ‘complementary’ treatments like intravenous vitamin C, but some patients are now so scared of chemotherapy and radiotherapy that they avoid conventional treatments altogether. Treatment for the stem cell is hailed as the Holy Grail, so this book plugs the missing piece into why we do not have a cure for cancer.Blood tests revealed that her TM2PK tumor markers (a marker of abnormal glycolysis) had dropped from 397 to 21. Eating healthily is good for all but I don't think it is proven to be of benefit at stopping or alleviating PCa.
McLelland discovered that there were numerous drugs on the market designed for other purposes (like heart disease or infections) that could go beyond diet and supplements to effectively cut off cancer’s various fuel lines. Of course, Jane McLelland's approach to cancer treatment is unproven, and it is so complex a regime that it would be difficult to prove in a randomised double-blind trial. My impression is that there seem to be many opportunities to get the regime 'wrong', depending on where (you think) you are in the cancer cycle.Jane explains why each patient needs a personalised approach and, importantly, how to work this out. This book will answer all the burning questions you face when you begin to explore complementary cancer care.