The Philippine Star

FDA warns vs fake cancer treatments sold on internet

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TRENTON — US regulators are warning consumers to avoid 65 bogus products hawked on the internet with false claims that they can cure, treat, diagnose or prevent cancer.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) says these products, mostly sold on websites and social media sites, can be harmful, waste money and result in people not getting approved, effective treatments.

The pills, creams and teas are untested and not approved by the FDA, which has called them a “cruel deception.” Some contain ingredient­s that can be risky or interact dangerousl­y with prescripti­on drugs. The FDA on Tuesday posted the warning letters it sent to 14 manufactur­ers, telling them to remove their fraudulent claims describing the products as drugs, or face stiff penalties.

“Anyone who suffers from cancer, or know someone who does, understand­s the fear and desperatio­n that can set in,” FDA consumer safety officer Nicole Kornspan said in a statement. “There could be a great temptation to jump at anything that appears to offer a chance for a cure.”

Many of the treatments are touted with illegal claims, such as “miraculous­ly kills cancer cells in tumors,” ‘’more effective than chemothera­py,” and “treats all forms of cancer,” the FDA said. Often, they’re advertised as safe, natural products or dietary supplement­s.

Some of the products are marketed for cats and dogs.

The FDA said it has issued more than 90 warning letters over the past decade to companies selling fraudulent cancer products. The agency said many of those companies stopped selling the products or making fraudulent claims, yet numerous unsafe products are still for sale because it’s easy for scammers to switch to new websites. –

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