This week's blog is written by Dr Nasha Winters who we interviewed on our radio show in June about her book “The Metabolic Approach To Cancer” which she wrote with Jess Higgins Kelley.
Coming up to my 26th year out
from a terminal cancer diagnosis, I am no stranger to the stigma, fear, overwhelm, confusion and paralysis that can accompany such a life-changing
phrase: “You have cancer”.
I am also hypersensitive to the impetus to
jump immediately into treatment with no regard to the individual or to the
origins of this process. The real
medical emergency of a cancer diagnosis IS the diagnosis itself. How you respond and react to those three
words can profoundly impact your therapeutic outcome.
Rushing blindly in to a surgery,
chemotherapy, radiation, targeted therapy, alternative therapy, dietary
intervention, etc. is a dangerous and slippery slope. There is no reason why you shouldn’t take a
moment and breath.
Those 3 words - “You have cancer”- are
simply a light switch coming on. This is
an opportunity to start using that light to illuminate what is happening in, on
and around you. What is this diagnosis
trying to tell you? This is NOT the time
to dive headfirst into any particular treatment approach. It is the time to start your detective
work.
A few life saving and life changing
recommendations I would make for anyone on this journey - whether it is your
first time or a recurrence, is this:
1) Stop. Be still. Breath. Turn off the
computer. Don’t immediately talk to
everyone you know. This is YOUR
body. This is YOUR process. It is a sacred moment to get really clear on
how you got here and where you need to go next.
2) Get a second opinion. Even a third. And from different institutions. You will find, for the most part, the recommendations will vary. Find what resonates with you.
3)
TEST. BEFORE someone starts any form of treatment
get the following:
a. If you had a biopsy that led to
this diagnosis, have it sent off for molecular profiling to a company like
Caris, Foundation One, Rational Therapeutics, etc.
b. If you didn’t have a biopsy, and
you want/need one, perhaps meet with an integrative oncology practitioner who
can prepare your body for the biopsy to help keep the cells intact with things
like modified citrus pectin or scheduling biopsy/surgery and scans around
menstrual cycle as your hormonal levels will impact results, and the likelihood
of metastasis is higher if biopsy/surgery done during the estrogenic
phase.
i. Example: Breast MRI,
ultrasound, mammography or thermography is best between day 5 and 15 of
menstrual cycle (day 1 is the first day of your period) https://www.itnonline.com/article/breast-mri-all-about-timing
ii. Same holds true for any other biopsies or surgeries in menstruating
women for any form of cancer http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/014067369192927T
c. Get a liquid biopsy www.biocept.com to determine circulating
tumor cell count and circulating fragmented cancer DNA along with molecular
profile on actionable targets. And use
it often to assess your response to therapy and to monitor you AFTER completion
of therapy. This is an FDA approved,
insurance covered test and validated for the following tumor types:
i. Lung
ii. Breast
iii. Gastric
iv. Colorectal
v. Prostate
vi. Melanoma
vii. Renal Cell (kidney)
viii.
Ovarian
d. You can also look into liquid
assays to check for chemosensitivity and response to non-conventional therapies
with RGCC out of Greece www.rgcc-group.com
or BioFocus out of Germany www.biofocus.de
e. I would also strongly
consider the following tests to have as a baseline to assess your overall
terrain and to bring to light triggers to your cancering process: CBC with diff, CMP, GGT, Ferritin, CRP,
Sedrate, LDH, Fibrinogen, Homocysteine, TSH, Total T4, Free T3, T3 Uptake,
Thyroid Antibodies, 25-OH D3, HbA1C, Insulin, IGF-1, Serum Copper,
Ceruloplasmin, Serum Zinc and any tumor marker testing appropriate to the
cancer type. This information will be
useful to understand what patterns you carried prior to embarking on any
treatment so you may start to address these drivers from the get go with other
means like diet, lifestyle, supplements, etc. To learn more about testing I
recommend Jenny Hrbacek, RN book: “Cancer
Free! Are You Sure?”
f. Assemble your team! Your oncologist has likely had ZERO training
in nutrition so VERY important to get a therapeutic nutritionist, who is
well-versed in metabolic therapies/treatment with diet of cancer (this is often
NOT a Registered Dietician RD). You need
someone to support your emotional body as well---a therapist, life coach,
support group, or church. And someone
who can navigate the world of both conventional and alternative or integrative
approaches such as an integrative naturopathic oncologist or someone well versed
in how these paradigms should be woven together.
g. And, take the Terrain TenTM
Questionnaire at the front of our new book: “The Metabolic Approach To Cancer” (available
on Amazon here) to assess your terrain with regards to other exposures contributing
to a cancering process. The book can
then guide you on how to make the changes necessary to support your whole
terrain.
4) And, once you have collected
all the data, work with someone who can pull it all together and help create a
focused plan of action that is specific to YOU! That might include conventional, non-conventional or combination
treatments along with diet, herbs, supplements and lifestyle interventions to boost
immune function, drive a cytotoxic (cancer cell death) process, encourage a metabolic
overhaul, create better response to therapy and with less side effects while
enhancing quality of life.
Please know you are far more powerful than
you are led to believe on this journey. Do your due diligence to take a thoughtful, researched approach to your
wellbeing. Know you are a divinely
unique individual with particular epigenetic hiccups, biochemical processes and
life circumstances that impact how you will respond to any given treatment and
adjust accordingly. And may you thrive,
not just survive!
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