My search
for a possible cancer cure began in late 2004 when I found out that my cousin,
lifelong friend and running buddy, Jeff Johnson, had been diagnosed as having
stage-three melanoma. The cancer had appeared out of nowhere and so it was
quite a shock to my cousin and everyone close to him. As luck would have it, I
had spent a lot of time the previous four years or so working on my
dream of someday posting a website aimed at helping aging baby boomers and
others live longer, healthier and happier lives. Naturally, a lot of my
research involved searching for ways to ward off and treat diseases and ills
such as cancer, Alzheimer’s, heart disease, high blood pressure, kidney and
liver disease, and so forth. When I found out about my cousin, I already had a
head start on knowing where and how to look, and so I began to redouble my
efforts and focus my research more on cancer. As a result of my research, I
found a lot of very good information about fighting cancer and other diseases,
boosting our immune systems and improving health in general - much of which you
may find in my simple “How to Live a Long and Healthy Life” book. However, it
was not my research that led me to finding out about the magical, miraculous
oleander plant – it was a card game!
Yes, the way I
first heard about the healing powers of oleander happened one evening when I was
sitting down at a friendly card game and mentioned my cousin’s cancer. An
acquaintance of mine whom I had known for a few years and who had worked for the
American Medical Association at one time, looked across the table at me and, as
serious as could be, said “I know a cure.” He then proceeded to tell me an
amazing story of what he knew about oleander. Later, I found others who told me
essentially the same basic story, although each person seemed to have a slightly
different version. I fully expect that the story is headed toward becoming a
modern day legend someday. Although the versions I heard have differed
somewhat, the basic story line I believe to be essentially correct is as
follows:
In the early
1960's a Turkish doctor by the name of Huseyin Ziya Ozel was searching for a
cure for his pet dog’s cancer when he noticed that a large number of Turkish
villagers referred to him came from high altitudes and he thought that perhaps
there was more to the story than just the higher incidence of skin cancer
associated with higher altitudes:
In
many versions of the story, Doctor Ozel was reported to have observed Turkish
villagers drinking an oleander remedy, which pretty much correlates with the
description of Oleander Leaf on the American Cancer Society website, where it
states that Doctor Ozel started his study of oleander because of folk
traditions that suggested that an extract from oleander was active against
leukemia. It should be noted that Doctor Ozel’s daughter Sumru disputes this
version and states that Doctor Ozell “studied folkloric remedies and discovered
that poultices made of crushed oleander leaves and flour were applied topically
to wounds and produced amazingly fast healing of the wounds.” The author
suspects that this version may have been put forward to put distance between
what Ozel observed and what he later patented in order to protect the patent
from challenges.
According
to Ozel’s daughter, Doctor Ozel made an observation that the majority of cancer
patients referring to him were coming from an altitude above 600 meters. He
thought that there should be a correlation between the rate of cancer occurrence
and some environmental influence.
Whatever
the actual truth, Doctor Ozel obviously did observe Turkish villagers using
oleander and did review that use as well as a number of environmental factors,
and he proceeded to continue his research on oleander based on what he
found.
Further research
showed that Nerium Oleander was most abundant in lower altitudes and practically
did not exist at high altitude. Satisfied that he may have
determined the cause of the villager’s good health, Doctor Ozel became intrigued with the plant and began to prepare
and work with various extracts of Oleander himself in 1966 while he was the head
of the surgical department at Mugla State Hospital of
Turkey.
Doctor Ozel first
conducted animal studies to determine that the substance was non-toxic and, once
he determined the toxicology and effects of Nerium
Oleander Extract (or NOE), he conducted further experiments and developed
his treatment in various forms until he eventually
started tests on terminal human cases.
After initial success
in treating human cancer patients with NOE, Doctor Ozel began to discussing his
findings with other professionals in his field. He sought analysis of the
extract from various Turkish laboratories to understand the empirical results.
They were unable to characterize the extracted compounds. In hope of gaining
assistance from the government or research organizations, he prepared a paper to
present his first human cases at the Fourth Balkanic Medical Days Symposium held
in Ankara on 20 September
1973.
The
cases presented were all considered terminal cases when the patients came to
Doctor Ozel. By law, he could not treat patients with an experimental drug, such
as NOE, unless they had exhausted all other conventional treatment methods with
no response or were diagnosed as advanced stage, terminal cases. At the
symposium he was able to call the attention of the scientific community to NOE
and how the extract had shown to be efficacious on cancer cases of different
varieties. He was sure that his presentation would trigger serious and abundant
research on NOE, and that it finally could be put into service for mankind.
The
response from the scientific community was less than overwhelming. The
skepticism centered mainly on the fact that the presentation contradicted what
little literature there was on oleander species. Clearly the results presented
could not be explained as an extension of prior art but Turkish scientists
strongly denied the facts that Doctor Ozel had presented without any further
research. To conclude, the medical community was reluctant to accept the
results. Doctor Ozel was undaunted by the criticism and lack of support for the
ideas presented. He continued his research and patients continued to seek
treatment.
In 1974, he published
additional case reports in the Turkish Medical Journal “Dirim”. Doctor Ozel
resigned from his position as Chief Doctor at
Mugla
State
Hospital that same year in
order to be able to work on NOE and initiate research on the
subject,
Doctor Ozel contacted
various universities in Istanbul. Years passed and
he realized that no serious scientific research could be performed in any of the
local universities. In the meantime, his old patients referred new ones to him,
and more cancer patients presented to him as word of the results of the
treatment spread.
In 1985 he started to
look for research facilities abroad. During 1986-1987 some tests performed in
Europe proved the effect
of NOE on the immune system as well as cancer tumors. The studies showed that it
was at least six times as potent as the most active commercially available
immune-stimulants (Schizophylan, Krestin and Lentinan, which were patented by
the Japanese in the 1980s).
In 1988, a research
team was formed at Munich University Pharmacology Institute to isolate the
active components contained in the N.O. extract. Several polysaccharides were
identified that might be responsible for some part of the immune activity. On
17-22 July 1990, the initial results were presented as a poster at the symposium
of Biology and Chemistry of Active Natural Substances (BACANS) which was held in
Bonn,
Germany. The presentation was
published in Planta Medica 1990-56:66. However, no single component of the
extract was found to be the sole source of its benefits. Instead, the activity
is induced by a complex mixture of components contained in the extract, acting
synergistically to modulate the immune system. Since the early 1970’s, Doctor
Ozel has been treating patients with advanced and inoperable cancer as well as a
wide variety of other of illnesses. His results have been truly remarkable. In
fact, so fantastic were the stories of his success that Doctor Ozel had to
endure long periods of controversy from the Turkish medical establishment and
there were those who tried to charge the good doctor with being a charlatan.
Happily, the truth of his successes won out and such charges were dropped from
consideration when his results were proven. Scores of patients rose up to
defend the good doctor, testifying about how they had been cured when all other
treatment options had failed.
The patented name
of Doctor Ozel's oleander extract is Anvirzel™, whose trademark was once owned
by Ozelle Pharmaceuticals, which was formed by Doctor Ozel’s son and other
investors. Today, trademark rights are in dispute. Unfortunately, since Doctor
Ozel had claimed that oleander was a cure for cancer, as opposed to a natural
supplement, and since his extract was patented and given a trademark, the FDA
now considers oleander as an unproven medicine which, because of the toxicity of
the raw plant, must have it's safety and effectiveness proven before the FDA
will allow it's use even as a herbal supplement, and so it is very difficult to
obtain herbal supplements which contain oleander in the United States.
Today, the lengthy
and costly three-phase FDA trial process for approval of Anvirzel™ or any other
oleander extract, is far from over, although many people and millions of
investor dollars are counting on it ultimately being approved. In 2000, Ozelle
Pharmaceuticals had successful phase I FDA trials conducted on Anvirzel™, but
subsequently ran into investor problems and had to reorganize. Although Ozelle
continues to publish plans that it will soon begin phase II trials with
Anvirzel™, such plans have not yet reached fruition and funding appears to
continue to be a major problem for Ozelle.
In the interim, a competing company,
Phoenix Biotech, also obtained a patent for Anvirzel™ in
Honduras and has applied for a
U.S. patent as well, and a clinic has
been established in
Honduras by the name of Salud Integral. For
the past eight years, the clinic has successfully treated a number of patients,
many of whom travel from the
United
States for initial diagnosis and
treatment, as well as three-month supplies of Anvirzel™ for various cancers,
hepatitis-C, psoriasis and other immune
disorders.
Within just the past three years, a
third competing company appeared by the name of Shimoda Atlantic Oncology
Biosciences, and claimed to have developed its own oleander extract named
Xenavex™ which it claimed was much stronger due to an ethanol extraction
method. As it turned out, I and others exposed the company as a fraud that was
created to cheat investors and the drug was actually a heart medication imported
from Russia. Furthermore, although the
imported Russian medicine does have slightly higher concentrations of oleandrin,
the ethanol extraction method results in the loss of other compounds that
researchers believe work together in a synergistic way to make oleander extract
so powerful (over 500 trace compounds have been identified in an aqueous, or
water, oleander extract, including vital long-chain polysaccharides that are
lost in ethanol extraction methods because they precipitate out during the
extraction process).
Sadly, I must report that it may be
many years, if ever, before an oleander based medicine wins FDA approval. The
simple fact is that it takes hundreds of millions of dollars to get a new drug
successfully through all the FDA trials, and this pretty much bars competition
to all but the very large pharmaceutical companies. Many feel that if the issue
ever went to court, the patent itself would be hard to defend, since it is based
on a common plant and a centuries-old folk remedy. Others feel that, because of
the billions of dollars in profits at stake for the trillion-dollar world
pharmaceutical industry and their myriad cancer treatments, no oleander medicine
will ever be approved in the
United
States.
The best hope as of the time of this
writing appears to be the development of an oleander based tablet by Phoenix
Biotech which is reported to be have a much stronger concentration of oleandrin
and the other cardiac glycosides while losing none of the other essential
synergistic compounds. Only time will tell if a major pharmaceutical company
with the requisite funds will pick up
this new oleander product from Phoenix, shepherd it through FDA trials, and finally
bring it to market.
Live Long, Live Healthy, Live
Happy!