Any physician can legally prescribe any FDA-approved drug for any purpose, not just the purpose for which the drug was initially approved. From Webmd (https://www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/features/off-label-drug-use-what-you-need-to-know#1 ) However, doctors tend to be conservative and in fear of unnecessary liability when they do not follow standards of practice. And insurance companies often do not pay for off-label drugs.
Off-label" means the medication is being used in a manner not specified in the FDA's approved label or insert. Every prescription drug marketed in the U.S. carries an individual, FDA-approved label. This label is a written report that provides detailed instructions regarding the approved uses and doses. The FDA regulates drug approval, not drug prescribing. Doctors are free to prescribe a drug for any reason they think is medically appropriate. Cancer treatment often involves using certain chemotherapy drugs off-label, because a chemotherapy drug approved for one type of cancer may actually target many different types of tumors.
The use of off-label drugs has gained particular attention recently with the publication of the Jim Tippens Protocol, which uses the anti-parasitic drug, Fenbendazole as a major component. There are many reports of healing terminal cancer on the Fenbendazole facebook group. This is another piece of the puzzle that fits nicely into the teachings of Dr. Simon Yu. Dr. Yu has extensive clinical experience and has treated many patients with chronic illnesses including cancer with near-miraculous results. If you have cancer, we highly recommend that you read the transcript of Dr. Yu's interview here.
Jane Mclelland's book "How to Starve Cancer" uses a multi-pronged approach of off-label drugs to cut off all three metabolic pathways of cancer stem cells including:
(NOTE: CPF website does not provide medical advice nor do we encourage the use of the below drugs or any other protocol without the approval of your physician on medications appropriate for your condition and their dosage. We simply provide information that may be used for educational purposes to develop a plan in conjunction with the recommendations of your physician). In this case, we are providing this information as an illustration of the trend to treat cancer in the cocktail approach with the increasingly accepted use of off-label drugs.
- metformin : active against all 3 pathways a stem cell can use to get fuel
-doxycycline : antibiotic that also disrupts all thee pathways
-berberine: : also active against all three pathways
-DHEA (not for hormone-driven cancer)
-a statin that is fat-soluble , like propranolol
-EGCG (from green tea)
-quercetin
-2 DG "2 deoxy D Glucose"
-aspirin (baby)
- loratadine (claritin) or hydroxychloroquine
- dipyridamole
-NSAIDs (take w Statin)
-luteolin
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