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October 08 2000
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Sugar and Cancer

 

Originally printed by The Alternative Research Foundation

It puzzles me why the simple concept "sugar feeds cancer" can be so dramatically overlooked as part of a comprehensive cancer treatment plan.

Of the 4 million cancer patients being treated in America today, hardly any are offered any scientifically guided nutrition therapy beyond being told to "just eat good foods." Most patients I work with arrive with a complete lack of nutritional advice.

I believe many cancer patients would have a major improvement in their outcome if they controlled the supply of cancer's preferred fuel, glucose.

By slowing the cancer's growth, patients allow their immune systems and medical debulking therapies -- chemotherapy, radiation and surgery to reduce the bulk of the tumor mass -- to catch up to the disease.

Controlling one's blood-glucose levels through diet, supplements, exercise, meditation and prescription drugs when necessary can be one of the most crucial components to a cancer recovery program. The sound bite -- sugar feeds cancer -- is simple. The explanation is a little more complex.

The 1931 Nobel laureate in medicine, German Otto Warburg, Ph.D., first discovered that cancer cells have a fundamentally different energy metabolism compared to healthy cells.

The crux of his Nobel thesis was that malignant tumors frequently exhibit an increase in anaerobic glycolysis -- a process whereby glucose is used as a fuel by cancer cells with lactic acid as an anaerobic byproduct -- compared to normal tissues.

The large amount of lactic acid produced by this fermentation of glucose from cancer cells is then transported to the liver. This conversion of glucose to lactate generates a lower, more acidic pH in cancerous tissues as well as overall physical fatigue from lactic acid buildup. Thus, larger tumors tend to exhibit a more acidic pH.

This inefficient pathway for energy metabolism yields only 2 moles of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) energy per mole of glucose, compared to 38 moles of ATP in the complete aerobic oxidation of glucose.

By extracting only about 5 percent (2 vs. 38 moles of ATP) of the available energy in the food supply and the body's calorie stores, the cancer is "wasting" energy, and the patient becomes tired and undernourished. This vicious cycle increases body wasting.

It is one reason why 40 percent of cancer patients die from malnutrition, or cachexia. Hence, cancer therapies should encompass regulating blood-glucose levels via diet, supplements, non-oral solutions for cachectic patients who lose their appetite, medication, exercise, gradual weight loss and stress reduction. Professional guidance and patient self-discipline are crucial at this point in the cancer process. The quest is not to eliminate sugars or carbohydrates from the diet but rather to control blood glucose within a narrow range to help starve the cancer and bolster immune function.

The glycemic index is a measure of how a given food affects blood-glucose levels, with each food assigned a numbered rating. The lower the rating, the slower the digestion and absorption process, which provides a healthier, more gradual infusion of sugars into the bloodstream.

Conversely, a high rating means blood-glucose levels are increased quickly, which stimulates the pancreas to secrete insulin to drop blood-sugar levels. This rapid fluctuation of blood-sugar levels is unhealthy because of the stress it places on the body

Sugar in the Body and Diet

Sugar is a generic term used to identify simple carbohydrates, which includes monosaccharides such as fructose, glucose and galactose; and disaccharides such as maltose and sucrose (white table sugar). Think of these sugars as different-shaped bricks in a wall.

When fructose is the primary monosaccharide brick in the wall, the glycemic index registers as healthier, since this simple sugar is slowly absorbed in the gut, then converted to glucose in the liver. This makes for "time-release foods," which offer a more gradual rise and fall in blood-glucose levels.

If glucose is the primary monosaccharide brick in the wall, the glycemic index will be higher and less healthy for the individual. As the brick wall is torn apart in digestion, the glucose is pumped across the intestinal wall directly into the bloodstream, rapidly raising blood-glucose levels.

In other words, there is a "window of efficacy" for glucose in the blood: levels too low make one feel lethargic and can create clinical hypoglycemia; levels too high start creating the rippling effect of diabetic health problems.

The 1997 American Diabetes Association blood-glucose standards consider 126 mg glucose/dL blood or greater to be diabetic; 111 to 125 mg/dL is impaired glucose tolerance and less than 110 mg/dL is considered normal.

Meanwhile, the Paleolithic diet of our ancestors, which consisted of lean meats, vegetables and small amounts of whole grains, nuts, seeds and fruits, is estimated to have generated blood glucose levels between 60 and 90 mg/dL.

Obviously, today's high-sugar diets are having unhealthy effects as far as blood-sugar is concerned. Excess blood glucose may initiate yeast overgrowth, blood vessel deterioration, heart disease and other health conditions.

Understanding and using the glycemic index is an important aspect of diet modification for cancer patients. However, there is also evidence that sugars may feed cancer more efficiently than starches (comprised of long chains of simple sugars), making the index slightly misleading. A study of rats fed diets with equal calories from sugars and starches, for example, found the animals on the high-sugar diet developed more cases of breast cancer.

The glycemic index is a useful tool in guiding the cancer patient toward a healthier diet, but it is not infallible. By using the glycemic index alone, one could be led to thinking a cup of white sugar is healthier than a baked potato.

This is because the glycemic index rating of a sugary food may be lower than that of a starchy food. To be safe, I recommend less fruit, more vegetables, and little to no refined sugars in the diet of cancer patients.

What the Literature Says

A mouse model of human breast cancer demonstrated that tumors are sensitive to blood-glucose levels. Sixty-eight mice were injected with an aggressive strain of breast cancer, then fed diets to induce either high blood-sugar (hyperglycemia), normoglycemia or low blood-sugar (hypoglycemia).

There was a dose-dependent response in which the lower the blood glucose, the greater the survival rate. After 70 days, 8 of 24 hyperglycemic mice survived compared to 16 of 24 normoglycemic and 19 of 20 hypoglycemic.

This suggests that regulating sugar intake is key to slowing breast tumor growth.

In a human study, 10 healthy people were assessed for fasting blood-glucose levels and the phagocytic index of neutrophils, which measures immune-cell ability to envelop and destroy invaders such as cancer. Eating 100 g carbohydrates from glucose, sucrose, honey and orange juice all significantly decreased the capacity of neutrophils to engulf bacteria. Starch did not have this effect.

A four-year study at the National Institute of Public Health and Environmental Protection in the Netherlands compared 111 biliary tract cancer patients with 480 controls. Cancer risk associated with the intake of sugars, independent of other energy sources, more than doubled for the cancer patients.

Furthermore, an epidemiological study in 21 modern countries that keep track of morbidity and mortality (Europe, North America, Japan and others) revealed that sugar intake is a strong risk factor that contributes to higher breast cancer rates, particularly in older women.

Limiting sugar consumption may not be the only line of defense. In fact, an interesting botanical extract from the avocado plant (Persea americana) is showing promise as a new cancer adjunct.

When a purified avocado extract called mannoheptulose was added to a number of tumor cell lines tested in vitro by researchers in the Department of Biochemistry at Oxford University in Britain, they found it inhibited tumor cell glucose uptake by 25 to 75 percent, and it inhibited the enzyme glucokinase responsible for glycolysis. It also inhibited the growth rate of the cultured tumor cell lines.

The same researchers gave lab animals a 1.7 mg/g body weight dose of mannoheptulose for five days; it reduced tumors by 65 to 79 percent. Based on these studies, there is good reason to believe that avocado extract could help cancer patients by limiting glucose to the tumor cells.

Since cancer cells derive most of their energy from anaerobic glycolysis, Joseph Gold, M.D., director of the Syracuse (N.Y.) Cancer Research Institute and former U.S. Air Force research physician, surmised that a chemical called hydrazine sulfate, used in rocket fuel, could inhibit the excessive gluconeogenesis (making sugar from amino acids) that occurs in cachectic cancer patients.

Gold's work demonstrated hydrazine sulfate's ability to slow and reverse cachexia in advanced cancer patients. A placebo-controlled trial followed 101 cancer patients taking either 6 mg hydrazine sulfate three times/day or placebo. After one month, 83 percent of hydrazine sulfate patients increased their weight, compared to 53 percent on placebo.

A similar study by the same principal researchers, partly funded by the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md., followed 65 patients. Those who took hydrazine sulfate and were in good physical condition before the study began lived an average of 17 weeks longer.

The medical establishment may be missing the connection between sugar and its role in tumorigenesis. Consider the million-dollar positive emission tomography device, or PET scan, regarded as one of the ultimate cancer-detection tools. PET scans use radioactively labeled glucose to detect sugar-hungry tumor cells. PET scans are used to plot the progress of cancer patients and to assess whether present protocols are effective.

In Europe, the "sugar feeds cancer" concept is so well accepted that oncologists, or cancer doctors, use the Systemic Cancer Multistep Therapy (SCMT) protocol. Conceived by Manfred von Ardenne in Germany in 1965, SCMT entails injecting patients with glucose to increase blood-glucose concentrations.

This lowers pH values in cancer tissues via lactic acid formation. In turn, this intensifies the thermal sensitivity of the malignant tumors and also induces rapid growth of the cancer. Patients are then given whole-body hyperthermia (42 C core temperature) to further stress the cancer cells, followed by chemotherapy or radiation.

SCMT was tested on 103 patients with metastasized cancer or recurrent primary tumors in a clinical phase-I study at the Von Ardenne Institute of Applied Medical Research in Dresden, Germany. Five-year survival rates in SCMT-treated patients increased by 25 to 50 percent, and the complete rate of tumor regression increased by 30 to 50 percent.

The protocol induces rapid growth of the cancer, then treats the tumor with toxic therapies for a dramatic improvement in outcome.

The irrefutable role of glucose in the growth and metastasis of cancer cells can enhance many therapies. Some of these include diets designed with the glycemic index in mind to regulate increases in blood glucose, hence selectively starving the cancer cells; low-glucose TPN solutions; avocado extract to inhibit glucose uptake in cancer cells; hydrazine sulfate to inhibit gluconeogenesis in cancer cells; and SCMT.

A female patient in her 50s, with lung cancer, came to our clinic, having been given a death sentence by her Florida oncologist. She was cooperative and understood the connection between nutrition and cancer. She changed her diet considerably, leaving out 90 percent of the sugar she used to eat.

She found that wheat bread and oat cereal now had their own wild sweetness, even without added sugar.

With appropriately restrained medical therapy -- including high-dose radiation targeted to tumor sites and fractionated chemotherapy, a technique that distributes the normal one large weekly chemo dose into a 60-hour infusion lasting days -- a good attitude and an optimal nutrition program which included Sam's formula nine times/day, she beat her terminal lung cancer.

I saw her last month, five years later and still disease-free, probably looking better than the doctor who told her there was no hope.



Dr. Mercola Dr. Mercola's Comments:

Nearly all of us are addicted to sugar. There is not one single food item that is generally more damaging to health. The problem is that most of us are addicted to it. The Hellers in their book, Carbohydrate Addicts, discuss the evidence supporting this link. I do not agree with their one hour reward meal, but otherwise the book helps one understand the depth of this problem.

Related Article:

The Dangers of Sugar

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Community Comments ( 9 )
Comment on this Article
  
  
BJSlap
[ Joined on 09/08 ] [ Posted on September 24, 2008 ]
1 Points        
   
 
Novice User

I had a mastectomy, and chemo in '96', & in '97' after chemo was over it showed that the "lobuler" cancer was still there. I changed Dr.'s, then in August 08, I was told I had cancer in the same spot, but a different kind of cancer this time. Can you believe that it is in the same spot, but now it is "ductal" cancer? The Dr. wants to give me radiation, and shots. I have turned them down, & decided to try doing it on my own, along with the "Good Lord's" help that is. I plan to do,1 t.of baking soda twice a day, & 1/2 t. of sea salt each day. I also plan on taking 2-3 T. Braggs Vineger, & 1. T.Honey. I am now trying to get some "S U N S H I N E" each day (while it last), then onto cod liver oil for the winter months.Then of course I'm trying to improve on my food diet, & cut back on my sugar intake, (which was very bad). Does  anybody know if it is bad to do the salt, & baking soda both?  Am I taking too much of anything, or not enough? I don't know if there is any harm to doing both, or if one could cancel out the other. If anyone knows of anything else that I should be doing, let me know, as I need help. Thanks, B. J.

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
Dawn V.
[ Joined on 09/08 ]  [ Posted on September 27, 2008]
       
   
Novice User
  Mercola

Hi -- I had a mastectomy in 2006.  It was considered ductal/invasive and HER2+.  I was prescribed chemo, heceptin, and  tamoxifen; however, I chose a holistic approach to healing instead.  I thankfully am now cancer-free.  Many of the resources I found to help me create my program came from Mercola.com.  Several of the books that were invaluable to me were authored by Ralph Moss (ralphmoss.com) regarding the use of antioxidants, as well as the truth about the cancer industry (Questioning Chemotherapy) -- his site is full of imperative info.  Another book that is amazing is A Cancer Battle Plan, by Anne and David Frahm -- an excellent blueprint for clearing cancer holistically.  Also, the work of Norman Walker, who advocates juice fasting and colon therapy is VITAL.  Dr. John Lee's book, what your Doctor May Not Tell You About Breast Cancer is very important.  I also see an acupuncturist and work with Chinese medicine.  Dr. Nan Lu's book, A Woman's Guide to Healing from Breast Cancer is excellent, although it does not advocate raw foods.  For me, I find that eating about 50% raw and 50 % cooked works, as does periodic juice fasting for maintenance, along with regular colon hydrotherapy (gravity method).  The idea is to keep the liver CLEAN and to OXYGENATE/ALKALIZE the body on a cellular level -- cancer cannot exist where there is oxygen; cancer exists only in acidic environments.  Do things that create oxygen: exercise, psychotherapy, meditation, etc. -- activities that allow you to express and bring you JOY! :)  Best of luck!  Dawn   PS:  Two invaluable supplements that I use are:  Peter Gillham's Organic Life Vitamins (bioavailable from food source) and Super Ionic Minerals (bioavailable ionic minerals -- high in fulvic acid), by Omica (omica.com) -- both products hit the system immediately upon ingesting.   And look at Linus Pauling's research regarding vitamin C.    

  
  
Katie777
[ Joined on 02/08 ] [ Posted on March 1, 2008 ]
       
   
 
Novice User

I have had my own cancers, cervical and melanoma (stage 4)  Following removal of the offending cells (surgical) I declined further "medical" treatment.  Changed my diet, exercised, eliminated sugar, worked at "oxygenating" myself and realizing stress was a contributing factor adjusted my attitude.  I am 10 years melanoma free and 20 years on the other.  I watched my father elect the chemo/radiation method on a glioblastoma.  He died within 5 months.  It wasn't pretty.  My husband died of cancer of the parotid glands (a fairly rare cancer)  He too elected the chemo/radiation cure after surgery.  He lived 10 months from diagnosis to death.  Almost any alternative method beats the poison and burn methods used today.

Do your own research.  Kate.

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
davy
[ Joined on 04/08 ]  [ Posted on April 20, 2008]
       
   
Novice User
  Mercola

The article is very informative.  I'm also very interested in Kate's comment.  First of all, you certainly have done well reversing your cancers for so many years. My wife had breast cancer 10 yrs ago and her tumor marker CEA has been rising recently.  Hence, some questions to you Kate if I may.  Can you share with me your sugar eliminating diet?  and what do you do to oxygenate yourself?  

A question to Dr Mercola also if I may : We live in Singapore and we eat a lot of fruits.  Is the sugar content in fruits considered to be sugar?   Thank you.  Davy

Mercola
  
carolejwhite
[ Joined on 06/08 ]  [ Posted on June 27, 2008]
       
   
Novice User
  Mercola

I have just been diagnosed with breast cancer and am still in a state of shock.  I am awaiting to hear from the surgeon for an appointment.  I am interested in learning how to go about starting a new diet eliminating the sugars as you have done.  I am against having chemo or radiation.  Where do I begin?

carole

Mercola
  
praiznhim
[ Joined on 06/06 ]  [ Posted on September 20, 2008]
       
   
This user is BELOW novice level and all their comments need to be reviewed with great caution.
  Mercola

to caroljwhite and anyone looking for alternative treatments. I was diagnosed with breast cancer this year Stage 3. I have been doing IPT (insulin potentiation therapy) chemo along with vitamin iv treatments and have noticed dramatic results. Of course a stricter diet was put in play with hardly any sugars now, more immune-building supplements, zeolite, b-17 and graviola are three of the keys that helped shrink my cancer along with God. After having my second pet scan my tumor went out of my lymph nodes and shrunk about 60% in 2 months on the IPT and vitamin ivs. IPT is similar to the SCMT protocol Dr. Mercola was talking about earlier in his article. There are only about 13 states that do this procedure as it is not widely accepted by oncologists, hospitals or doctors in the medical field. http://www.iptforcancer.com/ this website will give more information on this treatment for cancer and also allow you to locate a practitioner closest to you. God bless!

  
  
Royce Hamer
[ Joined on 06/06 ] [ Posted on March 1, 2008 ]
       
   
 
Novice User

most interestisng a must read for all wishing to be healthy. Suggestion!!! Comment on Cancer dislike for oxygen, alkaline envirioment since this was part of my prostrate cancer cure.

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
cat56
[ Joined on 06/06 ]  [ Posted on March 1, 2008]
       
   
Novice User
  Mercola

Royce, what was the rest of your cancer cure? Just curious, because my father had radiation seed therapy, which got rid of the prostate cancer. But then he got bladder cancer, and when they operated, the prostate and other organs had melted into each other because of the seed therapy. I tried to tell him there were alternatives and help him, but the doctors are the "GOSPEL" when it comes to health to he and my mother, who is a registered nurse!

Mercola
  
davis
[ Joined on 06/06 ]  [ Posted on September 29, 2008]
       
   
Novice User
  Mercola

Where can you get graviola??

Peggy


 
Truste
 
Mercola