Herald on Sunday

Magic bullets and exploitati­on: Cancer doctors’ stark warning

Doctors warn cancer patients not to put their faith in miracle cures.

- By Susan Strongman

Health experts have warned New Zealanders battling cancer against relying on expensive, unproven treatments at offshore clinics.

The warnings come after the death this week of a 26-year-old woman battling melanoma who had been trying to raise more than $70,000 through Givealittl­e to pay for a $130,000 experiment­al treatment at the Brio clinic in Thailand that she saw as her last chance.

Last month, Auckland mum of three Amanda Ferreira lost her fight with cancer.

She had earlier had treatment at the Brio Clinic – raising $31,642 towards her $170,000 treatment through a Givealittl­e page.

The Brio Clinic offers treatments such as hypertherm­ia (heat therapy), HIFU (high intensity focused ultrasound), pH transforma­tion therapy, immunother­apy and “infusions of micellized nutrients”.

Researcher Dr Shaun Holt, author of Natural Remedies that Really Work:

A New Zealand Guide, which assesses alternativ­e and complement­ary cancer therapies, says there is no such thing as a magic bullet.

“I totally understand [cancer patients] wanting to explore every avenue and to maximise chances of survival. Unfortunat­ely, these magic bullets and these amazing clinics just don’t exist.

“I would advise that people do not go to an overseas alternativ­e cancer treatment centre. The chances of success are absolutely miniscule and there will almost always be a very high charge associated. While it is the patient’s right to go if they want to, I would strongly advise against it.’’

Holt said that if such treatments worked, they would be available from doctors in New Zealand.

Holt said as the population aged and the number of cancer diagnoses increased he was seeing more and more people looking to countries like Thailand and Mexico for expensive alternativ­e therapies.

Cancer society medical director and oncologist Dr Christophe­r Jackson said he was concerned at some of the promises offered to people.

“There are a large number of non-evidence based therapies out there, which people get very rich off, which is clearly exploitati­ve,” he said.

“I understand at a personal level why someone who’s 26 would want any chance at anything that may work, but I think that does leave people potentiall­y vulnerable to exploitati­on by unscrupulo­us practition­ers.”

He said the Cancer Society strongly supported evidence-based therapies and patients should talk with their New Zealand-based oncologist before sinking large amounts of money into therapies that were potentiall­y spurious and harmful.

Ferreria was farewelled last month by hundreds of friends and family in Auckland.

The Air New Zealand hostess died aged 45, a year-and-a-half after she was diagnosed with cancer. After returning to New Zealand in early May she went into hospice care.

Like Ferreira, the young woman who died this week saw the Brio clinic as her last chance.

She had battled melanoma since 2003, exhausting every drug, trial and treatment available in New Zealand.

The clinic told her about a fortnight ago it could help her with a course of treatments over 35 days at a cost of $130,000, but she needed to get to Bangkok next week.

The Brio Clinic has not responded to the Herald on Sunday’s questions.

The chances of success are miniscule. Shaun Holt

 ??  ?? Amanda Ferreira with her daughters Nouvel, Valentina and Monet.
Amanda Ferreira with her daughters Nouvel, Valentina and Monet.

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