Wednesday, August 20, 2008

A Safer Therapy for Brain Cancer

Politics aside, the diagnosis of brain cancer is awful. And although there are survivors, the results of conventional treatment are pretty dismal. When I heard that Senator Ted Kennedy had been diagnosed with malignant glioma, I immediately thought of a dear friend who was diagnosed in 2001 with malignant brain cancer. He remained pretty sharp mentally, aside from some forgetfulness, until shortly after he began radiation therapy, when he rapidly went downhill.

The current therapeutic vogue for brain cancer is the gamma knife, which is supposed to be a precise beam of radiation that destroys the tumor and nothing else. So they say. There is collateral damage – if not from the radiation striking normal cells, then from the creation of toxic necrotic disease as the cancer cells die. In 20 years, the gamma knife will probably be viewed as barbaric as we now view bloodletting.

A few days after Kennedy’s diagnosis made the headlines, I accidentally came across a medical review paper published last year, in which the author described cell, animal, and three small clinical (human) studies using gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) to treat gliomas and other types of brain cancers.

GLA is an anti-inflammatory plant oil sold at every health food store in the county. In the human studies, GLA was injected directly into the tumors daily for up to 20 days (obviously something you can’t do at home). Most of the people treated with GLA were alive and well almost three years after diagnosis. They experienced few if any side effects.

None of this means GLA is a cure for brain cancer, or any other type of cancer, for that matter. However, it is another very promising alternative and complementary therapy – one I suspect that Senator Kennedy’s doctors probably have never heard of. (By the way, I did email Senator Kennedy’s office about the GLA study.)

Skeptical? You can read the actual journal article for free by going to www.pubmed.gov, typing “Das UN glioma” (without the quotation marks) into the search box. Share this important article with your doctor and your friends. Maybe, just maybe, we’ll be able to encourage the use of a safe and nontoxic therapy for brain cancer.

Reference: Das UN. Medical Science Monitor, 2007;13: RA119-RA131.