List of unproven and disproven cancer treatments

This is a list of alternative treatments that have been promoted to treat or prevent cancer in humans but which lack good scientific and medical evidence of effectiveness. In many cases, there is good scientific evidence that the alleged treatments do not work. Unlike accepted cancer treatments, unproven and disproven treatments are generally ignored or avoided by the medical community, and are often pseudoscientific.[1]

Alternative health systems

Homeopathic medicine bottle and box, marked 'RHUS TOX'
Homeopathic remedies  ineffective for treating cancer

Diet-based

photo portrait of Johanna Budwig, an elderly lady with gray hair and a floral dress
Johanna Budwig  inventor of a flaxseed-based diet

Electromagnetic and energy-based

An orgone accumulator  a subject sitting in one is meant to experience the effects of orgone, an energy force proposed by Wilhelm Reich

Hybrid

human teeth filled with shiny dental amalgam
In Issels treatment all metal fillings are removed from the teeth

Plant and fungus based

Kombucha  a fermented tea promoted as a "cure all"

A cayenne pepper  products based on peppers are promoted as cancer treatments
an unpeeled ginger root beside a small knife
Ginger  promoted for halting tumor growth; evidence is lacking
Purple-colored Concord grapes on the vine with abundant foliage
Grapes  there is very little evidence that eating them can help prevent or treat cancer.
Mistletoe growing on a tree, showing white berries in medium close-up
Mistletoe  Anthroposophical medicine holds that harvesting it when the planets are aligned will yield a cancer treatment
soursop fruit, whole and in section. It is green with scales has white flesh and black seeds
Soursop (or graviola)  an ineffective treatment heavily promoted on the internet
Venus flytrap plant
Venus flytrap  its extract has been promoted as a cure for skin cancer

Physical procedures

A rectal bulb syringe  enemas feature in a number of ineffective cancer treatments such as Gerson therapy and colon cleansing

Spiritual and mental healing

Old ink oriental drawing of a man performing qigong, kneeling cross-legged with an arm extended in the air
Qigong  a kind of meditation accompanied by gentle movements

Synthetic chemicals and other substances

A shark swimming underwater in a bright blue sea
Shark cartilage might be thought of as a cancer treatment because of a mistaken belief that sharks do not get cancer.
An emu's head and neck
Oil extracted from the fat tissue of the emu has been fraudulently marketed as a cancer treatment
sample of human urine in plastic vessel with white screw-top
In urine therapy patients attempt to treat cancer by ingesting their own urine.

References

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  64. "Grapes". American Cancer Society. 1 November 2011.
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  89. "Cat's Claw". American Cancer Society. 12 September 2011.
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  92. "Wheatgrass". American Cancer Society. November 2008.
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  96. "Chiropractic". American Cancer Society. March 2011.
  97. "Craniosacral therapy". American Cancer Society. December 2012.
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  99. "Cupping". American Cancer Society. November 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
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