Patient Zero Comes Back From Stage Four Cancer: Was It Ivermectin?

Guest Post by Mary Beth Pfeiffer

Physicians at five clinics nationwide will try to answer that question.
Paul Mann received chemotherapy and radiation treatments for metastatic prostate cancer. “It was just so hard,” he said. “Then I thought, I can’t give up. I have it written on my arm that I won’t.” He took ivermectin and supplements after traditional care and is in remission. (Photos from Paul Mann)

After ten rounds of radiation and six of chemotherapy, Paul Mann, fifty-five years old, wanted to know his chances. “You’re squeaking by day to day,” his doctor told him. It had been five months since his diagnosis. He was referred to a hospice service and seen by a minister.

Then something happened of which most end-of-the-line cancer patients can only dream.

Mann, a government intelligence analyst from Fenton, Missouri, received a call from a doctor he had heard about from a friend; the doctor had treated breast cancer for thirty years. They talked for three hours in calls that became a Tuesday routine. Early on, a drug named ivermectin came up. It was approved, had few side effects, and had been shown in laboratory and animal studies to kill several kinds of cancer cells.

Mann got some of it himself, making an eight-hour round-trip drive to Tennessee, the only state where ivermectin can be bought over-the-counter. He took it every day. And two months later, this man with almost no chance of survival was in remission.

“In Paul Mann’s case, the response to treatment after two months of ivermectin was nothing less than astonishing,” said Mann’s guardian angel, Dr. Kathleen Ruddy, a retired cancer surgeon and author of a book on breast cancer. “Off the charts astonishing.”

Mann may someday be called Patient Zero in a first-of-its-kind study, announced by the FLCCC Alliance at its conference today, to see if old drugs like ivermectin work for cancer. Dr. Paul Marik, FLCCC chief scientific officer, and Dr. Ruddy, who was trained at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, will become partners in an “observational study” involving 500 patients and five clinics nationwide. The goal will be to learn if repurposed drugs improve five-year survival rates for several types of cancer, including breast, prostate, lung, and colorectal, an FLCCC press release states.

Dr. Ruddy did not treat Mann but rather talked a dying man through his options. In the same manner, patients in the new study will choose which FDA-approved drugs—like ivermectin, mebendazole, nitazoxanide and others—they want to use to treat their cancers, either along with or instead of traditional therapies. Their progress will be overseen and tracked by clinicians who will share anonymous patient information across sites in a collaboration to see what works.

Of prime importance, “If you have a look at the list of drugs, they are completely safe and devoid of significant side effects,” said Dr. Marik, who wrote a book on repurposing drugs for cancer. “That’s what oncologists don’t like.”

Indeed, the idea to challenge American cancer care with off-the-shelf drugs is, indisputably, a daring undertaking. That’s just one reason why it will be performed “methodically, impartially, and according to the highest standards of medical research,” Dr. Ruddy said.

“We must make sure this is absolutely above board because people are going to go after us furiously,” Dr. Marik told me.


Paul Mann and Dr. Kathleen Ruddy today at the FLCCC Alliance conference. Dr. Ruddy contacted Mann when traditional cancer treatments had been exhausted for his care. Ivermectin brought him back from the brink. (Photo by Mary Beth Pfeiffer)

‘Not dying now’

Mann told his story today at the sold-out FLCCC conference in Phoenix; before going public, he and Dr. Ruddy shared it with me.

When Paul Mann was diagnosed in June of 2022, his chest, abdomen, and pelvic region were riddled with tumors. The cancer had invaded his spine and sternum; it was in his ribs and shoulders. His PSA level, the prime indicator of prostate cancer—where the cancer began—was “off the charts,” said Ruddy, who trained at Memorial Sloan-Kettering and cared for 10,000 breast cancer patients.

Here are some of the things Mann recalls doctors telling him during his four months of traditional care:

“You are completely full of cancer; you are well beyond any kind of surgery.”

“There’s no cure. We’re just trying to prolong things as much as we can.”

“We’ve done the best we can. That’s kind of all there is that can be done.”

At one point, Mann was hospitalized for more than a month for chemotherapy complications and radiation esophagitis, his timeline shows. At the end of treatment in October 2022, he could only say that radiation had eased the debilitating pain in his right pelvis and chemotherapy had resolved the cancer in his skull.

That was when Mann got the call from Ruddy. A month later, he started ivermectin. But he took other things too: ground flax seed to reduce tumor-feeding testosterone; chaga mushroom powder and antioxidant-rich soursop extract; high-dose vitamin D and zinc. He stopped eating sugar.

“He was dying, and the man’s not dying now,” said Dr. Ruddy. “He goes out and dances three times a week.”

His current PSA level is so low that Ruddy said it indicates “complete biochemical remission.” The tumors disappeared and cancer in other parts of his body appear to have stopped growing. “His clinical remission over the past year has also been remarkable—very close to a ‘complete clinical remission’ at this point in time.”

Having run five marathons and many more half marathons, Mann was strong and ready for the fight of his life. He is happy to be alive, but the experience has left him “kind of just numb and shell-shocked.”

“People know cancer is bad,” Mann told me. “People know chemo makes you throw up. They don’t know about the cold table you lay on in the radiation treatment room.  Or how lonely it is at 3 a.m. in a hospital room when you’re so cold you can’t sleep.”

No miracles promised 

Prompted by her experience with Mann, Ruddy launched a small study in which, over the last year, she monitored cancer patients treated by other doctors. The patients, like Mann, took repurposed drugs, made lifestyle and diet changes, and often also took traditional cancer therapies. “I’ve seen truly astonishing results, not in every case but in a sufficient number of cases,” she said in the press release.

Her project is not about a miracle cure. Rather, it hopes to offer a new model for cancer remission that is affordable, readily available, and has few of the devastating side effects known to many chemotherapy patients. On cost: I recently checked with an international distributor of ivermectin, which many doctors used effectively against Covid-19. The price was 25 cents per 12 milligram pill, not including $35 for shipping.

Big Pharma will not like this movement, which is a problem in itself.

So is ivermectin’s false reputation—honed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a way to usher in Covid vaccines—as harmful “horse paste.” Mann didn’t buy it. “IVM was really raked over the coals and given a bad name,” he said. “I believed the good things about ivermectin,” including that its developers won the Nobel Prize in 2015 and that it effectively treated Covid-19. Beyond that, the scientific literature is rife with studies of common, old drugs—ivermectin, mebendazole, fenbendazole, and more—that killed cancer cells or otherwise facilitated the process. 

Ruddy’s study is overseen by an ethics board that helps guide the project’s goals of patient safety, scientific rigor, independent statistical analysis, and eventual peer review. In looking for improved survival rates compared to historical controls, the study will also attempt to tease out the role of other factors—for example the menu of supplements Mann took.

I asked Ruddy what the chances were that Paul Mann would come back from the brink? “It approaches zero in historical controls,” she told me.

God of Pi 

The possibilities of the project are captured in Ruddy’s name for it: God of Pi. “I believe that Pi is the mathematical proof of the existence of God,” she said. “Infinitely indivisible.”

Operated under a Private Membership Association, the repurposed-drugs project will be open to patients with any type of cancer because that’s where the medical literature points. “Twenty years of research in the lab shows ivermectin works against . . .” and here she lists so many cancers, so fast, that I get breast, uterine, pancreas, esophageal, squamous cell, but can’t keep up. Finally, she says, “Just name one.”

While she talks a lot about ivermectin, Ruddy does not want to oversell the potential of ivermectin or any other drug, like mebendazole and metformin, which are commonly mentioned in reports on repurposed drugs for cancer. “We need to think methodically, so not to be sensational, overpromising,” she said. “It’s very, very important to me to protect the integrity of the study. The way to protect the integrity is to acknowledge: It’s a study.”

In that vein, the trial isn’t run by a protocol. Rather, it is a living, evolving exploration of what works similar, Ruddy says, to the famous seventy-five-year Framingham heart study, which changed drug, health and dietary advisories by years-long observation of thousands of people across three generations.

Still has cancer

More than 400 days have passed since Mann’s dire diagnosis. He is alive, active and working. He cannot say if this is because of his last-ditch ivermectin or the supplements or a combination, all of which he continues to take. He says he still has cancer.

“I still have metastasis in the bones,” he said. “I’m still a stage 4 cancer person . . . I really don’t consider myself a survivor yet.” But he surely has better odds. And hope.

Ruddy won’t discuss the overall results of her study so far, and data will not be available for some time. Releasing numbers of successes and failures would be a breach of protocol and unethical in a study that must be extremely well done and careful.

“If we don’t get this one right, no one is going to get it right for a good long while,” she told me. “We are breaking ice here. We will be attacked. We will be maligned. We’ve got to conduct the study in a way so attacks don’t undermine the work.”

Dr. Marik summed up the establishment response to ivermectin’s potential during during a panel at the conference. “This little fungus that grew in a golf course in Japan,” he said, “is scaring the shit out of them.”

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Here’s the text of today’s announcement by the FLCCC Alliance:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

February 2, 2024

CONTACT:

[email protected]

FLCCC Alliance Announces Its First Groundbreaking Study to Determine Efficacy of Repurposed Drugs in Treating Cancer

A team of U.S. clinicians will participate in an observational study to determine improvements in the five-year survival rate for several types of cancer

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, at their sold-out education conference, the FLCCC Alliance announced that it has partnered with renowned breast cancer physician and researcher Kathleen Ruddy, MD, to conduct an observational study in five U.S. clinics to track patient responses to various adjunct cancer therapies using repurposed drugs and determine improvements in the five-year survival rate to several types of cancer including breast, prostate, lung, and colorectal.

More people than ever will be diagnosed with cancer this year, according to the American Cancer Society. Conventional cancer treatments have succeeded in preventing more than 4 million deaths from cancer since 1991. However, emerging research continues to demonstrate that more can be done using treatment regimens that include well-studied repurposed drugs.

“We hope that our research will bring attention to often overlooked methods for treating cancer as well as managing the symptoms from conventional treatment,” said Paul E. Marik, M.D., FCCM, FCCP, lead author of the study, chief scientific officer of the FLCCC and former Chief, Pulmonary and

Critical Care Medicine at Eastern Virginia Medical School. “Our research is intended to advance a better understanding of how cancer can be treated more efficiently, with fewer side effects, through using well-studied approaches that include readily available medications that are well-studied and known to have minimal side effects.”

The final study results will focus on improvements in the five-year survival rate of certain cancers and include patients from five clinics nationwide that will collaborate and share anonymous patient information in a centralized collection tool where the data will be tracked and analyzed.

“Cancer continues to increase at an alarming rate, especially among younger populations, creating an imminent public health crisis,” said Kathleen Ruddy, MD, founder of the New Jersey-based practice Breast Health and Healing. “Over the past year, I’ve had the privilege of following patients with a

variety of cancers who’ve chosen to use FDA-approved, alternative medications as part of their cancer care. I’ve seen truly astonishing results, not in every case but in a sufficient number of cases that I am compelled to continue to pursue the question, ‘Do drugs like ivermectin, mebendazole, nitazoxanide and others improve the survival of patients with cancer?’ I am thrilled and honored to have the opportunity to partner with Dr. Marik and the FLCCC to answer this question methodically, impartially, and according to the highest standards of medical research.”

The five clinics participating in the study are:

  • Breast Health and Healing, led by Kathleen Ruddy, MD.
  • Leading Edge Clinic, led by Pierre Kory, MD, MPA and Scott Marsland, FNP-C
  • Brio Medical, a holistic, integrative cancer healing center, led by Nathan Goodyear, MD
  • Meakin Metabolic Care, led by Charles Meakin, MD
  • James Clinic, led by Mollie James, MD

The FLCCC Alliance published its Cancer Care Monograph in June 2023. A copy of the monograph can be found here: https://covid19criticalcare.com/reviews-and-monographs/cancer-care/

About the FLCCC Alliance

The FLCCC Alliance was organized in March 2020 by a group of highly published, world renowned critical care physicians and scholars with the academic support of allied physicians from around the world. FLCCC’s goal is to research and develop lifesaving protocols for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 in all stages of illness including the I-RECOVER protocols for “Long COVID” and Post Vaccine Syndrome. For more information: www.FLCCC.net

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31 Comments
Steve Z.
Steve Z.
February 4, 2024 7:45 am

My iver and fend contact in India called saying they wouldn’t be able to stock those 2 meds in the future. He said Pfizer is buying all the manufacturing of these 2 meds.
I believe that’s one of the reasons iver was so actively demonized by Big Pharma over the past 4 years. If global cancer rates started falling, everybody would want to find out how and why.
Big Pharma/Medicine has to protect that annual multi $Billion cancer gig.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  Steve Z.
February 4, 2024 9:16 am

Big Pharma/Medicine has to protect that annual multi $Billion cancer gig.

Yup… They’re going to do the scum suck’n bill gates method of business. They can’t steal ivermectin but they’ll spend a billion or two discrediting the drug and when that doesn’t work they’ll seek to buy any patents or processes involved in manufacturing the drugs.

Once these evil and vile scum get a hold of, or control, they’ll make it impossible for anyone to purchase the drugs. There is a very real need to purge the world of these evil fuckers starting with schwab and working our way UP. Afterwards we can work our way down, sweeping up the rats below these asswipes.

GNL
GNL
  anon a moos
February 4, 2024 10:02 am

Whatever we do, we mustn’t call it G.R.E.E.D.

RusoPaisa
RusoPaisa
  anon a moos
February 6, 2024 3:35 am

Someone with stage 4 needs to start the trend, ENOUGH.

B_MC
B_MC
  Steve Z.
February 4, 2024 9:45 am

Pfizer is buying all the manufacturing

They always try to control or eliminate the competition.

Johnson & Johnson to Acquire $2 Billion Drug Developer “Ambrx Biopharma” to Treat Turbo Cancers with Same Tech as Pfizer’s $43 Billion Seagen Acquisition

Johnson & Johnson to Acquire $2 Billion Drug Developer “Ambrx Biopharma” to Treat Turbo Cancers with Same Tech as Pfizer’s $43 Billion Seagen Acquisition

m
m
  Steve Z.
February 4, 2024 11:23 am

Huh?
And Pfizer assumes nobody else will invest in new Iver production facilities, after Pfizer took the existing off the market. Sounds like a plan. Stupid, but a plan.

Todd Packer's Mentor
Todd Packer's Mentor
February 4, 2024 8:51 am

This is very encouraging to read.

Rick
Rick
February 4, 2024 10:25 am

So how much and how often, do you take it. Asking for a friend.

Silverfox
Silverfox
  Rick
February 4, 2024 12:32 pm

I can’t give medical advice; However, the dispenser for the, “Your not a Horse” paste, measures by weight.

I’ve been taking the Pony Paste since April 2020. On two occasions I began to come down with flu type symptoms and promptly took another dose. Symptoms were mild, and dissipated within 16 hours. Others in the house got full on influzsomething. Other than that, I haven’t had a sick day since then. You should be able to find Duravet Ivermectin on Amazon. Stock up if you do.

In addition, I just completed a 40 day course of Fenben. One a day, as a prophylaxes measure. Other supplements include: Vitamins, C, D, Zinc, and NAC. The NAC has amazing properties when taken prior to going out for a drink or three.

Curt
Curt
  Silverfox
February 5, 2024 12:34 am

Iver works on lots of other things, such as West Nile virus.

Silverfox
Silverfox
  Curt
February 5, 2024 12:45 pm

Don’t know if you know the history of Iver; It was ultimately dispensed to fight a range of parasites. May have a benefit against MS too. It’s been out for over 40 years now. The poster child for, “Safe and Effective”, you could say.

overthecliff
overthecliff
February 4, 2024 10:34 am

Fenton Missouri is a suburb of St. Louis.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 4, 2024 10:52 am

You can buy Ivermectin on-line without prescription at: ivermectin.com.
American made for and by patriots, it’s $190.00 for 100 12mg tablets. I just invested in a quality pill splitter and do 3mg a week so it’s pretty cost effective and I still have the higher doses if needed, might want to buy now before it’s outlawed again.

m
m
  Anonymous
February 4, 2024 2:03 pm

For comparison, in Russia on ozon.ru you can get 100 pills of 12mg IVM for 5000 Rubels (about $55) including shipping.

Lager
Lager
February 4, 2024 10:56 am

The most critical detail:

The price was 25 cents per 12 milligram pill, not including $35 for shipping.

mark gave platform monkeys a source for this product out of India, able to be purchased by mail / email / CC purchase, and the contact is reliable and easy to interact with.
5-star rating. Andrew James is the contact.

Probably wouldn’t be a bad idea to get a quote, and purchase some before TLPTB shut down that avenue for N.A. good health advocates who buck the MS sick care industry narratives.

Thanks, mark.

Jackie Puppet
Jackie Puppet
  Lager
February 4, 2024 12:46 pm

I got IVM from India a few years back, the last time just as the USPS said they were going to crack down on packages coming from the other side of the world.

My package came from Singapore (supposedly), but I think it was shipped there from India, and re-packaged & sent out from there – to try and get around the crack-down.

Cpt_Obviuos
Cpt_Obviuos
February 4, 2024 6:28 pm

Mann, a government intelligence analyst from Fenton, Missouri

*strokes beard*

Brewer55
Brewer55
February 4, 2024 6:44 pm

For those of you that hate cats, you can scroll on past this but, I’d like to share a short story about one of our 3 cats that has been very ill for over 2 months. I’ll consolidate the story for brevity sake.

We took Mattie, a stray that showed up on our doorstep 3.5 years ago, along with a litter of 4 kitties. We had no desire for another animal but, within the next few weeks, we had found homes for the 4 kittens and we decided to keep ‘Mattie’. (So named because she would sit on our front door mat and stare through the glass outside door wanting in).

Mattie has been a very appreciate cat. Having lived outside, one would have thought that she would have been feral. She wasn’t. In fact, she is a couch/lap cat and is a very affectionate. It was kind of obvious how she lived outside so long (we don’t know her age but, it was estimated at 5-7 years by the vet) because she was very alert and knew how to escape from loose dogs and such.

Anyway, around the fall of last year, she started sneezing and was sounding congested. This congestion did not go away and, it got so bad she could hardly breath. Cats, unlike dogs, will only breath through their noses plus, if they can’t smell, they won’t eat. My wife would start hand feeding her wet food and Churu tubes of what I call “the slop”. She would eat it if it was put in her face.

She is a small cat but, very heavy. Jim, if you are reading this per chance, she was not as fat as ‘Big Moe’, your Mom’s cat. It is a good thing because since the first of December, she has lost 3-4 lbs. of her total pre-sickness weight of over 11 lbs.

Ok, I’m getting a little long winded here so, let me get to the crux of why I’m writing this as it relates to the posted article.

The vet started her out on amoxicillin for almost 3 weeks. No improvement.
Then, another strong antibiotic, also no effect.
Then, an antifungal, no effect.
In between some of this a steroid that worked on her (as far as feeling better) short term.

We come now to this past Friday. My wife and I made the decision that she needed to be put down. Early last week she started to get a bulge over her left eye. (That eye already had that 3rd membrane cats have called the nictitating membrane). Her eye looked kinda nasty with only white, and redness showing. During this period, she had also started to bleed a little from her nostrils. Another sign that it might very well be cancer, as the vet suggested a month ago. It was way to expensive to do the tests that would have confirmed the cause for her illness.

On Saturday morning, we got dressed, got the carrier ready, and were getting ready to go to the vet to have her euthanized. But, they were closed. I did not realize every other Saturday they are closed. We were left with Monday (tomorrow morning).

Now, here’s the punch line as they say. Last week, as a last ditch effort, we started giving her a decent size dose of Fenbendazole, very much like Ivermectin, basically a de-wormer. With vets and online it goes by the name ‘Panacur’. We had read about the guy that beat stage 4 cancer taking it. So, we decided we had nothing to lose by trying it. Well, on Saturday morning, the lump on her forehead was much smaller in size. Also, the membrane coving that eye had retracted some revealing the corner of her eye. Wow, what is going on here? Do we dare hope now?

Today, the bump on her noggin appears to have completely receded and a little more of her eye is showing! There is also no bleeding and, she is showing more activity. Walking around, following me around the house, etc.

So, our plans are to take her to the vet in the morning to get an assessment. This has been a day-by-day thing with Mattie since this all started.

One last thing. And some of you may think this is a bit crazy but, my wife put our cats name on our churches prayer list. (They don’t know that “Mattie” is a cat, and not a person!! LOL.) My wife and I have prayed for her because simply put, she is a part of our family and we love her.

In conclusion, this story is not over. Her issues are still not good and, we may still have to put her to sleep but, not right now!

James
James
  Brewer55
February 4, 2024 7:29 pm

Brewer,best of luck with Mattie and good thinking outside the box,why do we and cats put ourselves in boxes anyhow?!

Look forward to hearing Mattie well on way to full recovery and for those who don’t like cats,fuck em,simple as…….

I see nothing wrong with putting cat on prayer list,tis a member of the family.

comment image

Brewer55
Brewer55
  James
February 4, 2024 7:47 pm

Thanks, James.

Brewer55
Brewer55
  James
February 5, 2024 1:24 pm

see my update below to GCP.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Brewer55
February 4, 2024 8:51 pm

Everything right with praying for pets! May the recovery be swift.

Brewer55
Brewer55
  grace country pastor
February 4, 2024 9:04 pm

Thanks, brother!

Brewer55
Brewer55
  grace country pastor
February 5, 2024 1:23 pm

It’s been a very sad morning around our household. When we got up this morning, Mattie was not in a good place. I had already planned on taking her to the vet this morning for an assessment on her condition.

Apparently, the Fenben may have helped reduced the swelling (the reduction of the bulging in her head above one of her eyes) but, it did nothing for the cancer. The vet opened her mouth and she showed me that the blastoma was starting to put pressure on the roof of her mouth towards the back side. We were out of options so, Mattie was put to sleep this morning. I was with her the whole time. The vet was very, very compassionate. The first injection puts her to sleep which was very quick. The second shot stopped her heart. I wept.

Before I left I told the vet and her assistant that although the Word does not speak of our domestic pets making it to heaven, I told her I sure hoped our Good Lord would allow them in.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Brewer55
February 5, 2024 2:09 pm

I’m sorry brother. I’ve been to this place three times myself and it doesn’t get any easier. Still, the joy they bring outweighs the pain of their passing.

James
James
  grace country pastor
February 6, 2024 9:57 am

Brew,sorry to hear this about little Mattie,losing a family member always sucks whether 2 or 4 footed.

I am a agnostic,always searching/questioning but do believe Robert Louis Stevenson had it right when he said dogs will be in heaven before us,feel that applies to all our little family members.

God for some reason does not allow ALL our family members then I go straight from agnostic with open mind to atheist with a hostile closed mind,rather not go there.

comment image

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  James
February 6, 2024 1:23 pm

God for some reason does not allow ALL our family members then I go straight from agnostic with open mind to atheist with a hostile closed mind…

James, God welcomes one and all; His desire is for all men to be saved. It’s people that make the choice to ignore what He says and condemn themselves. All He asks is recognition of who we are and who He is.

Always appreciate your kind postings.

Grace and peace…

anon a moos
anon a moos
  Brewer55
February 6, 2024 10:04 am

My friend you did the right thing as hard as it is. Nothing worse than trying to hold onto a loved pet when its clearly suffering, just to appease your selfishness trying to keep it alive longer.

Do pets make it to heaven? No scripture states such but I believe that those things we cherished here…. will be there too. Why would God give us stones when we need bread?? What I’m fearing is the number of cats that may be there and am hoping there is a limit on the number allowed… 🙂

Brewer55
Brewer55
  anon a moos
February 6, 2024 10:27 am

LOL on the cats in heaven!

Tigger
Tigger
  Brewer55
February 5, 2024 3:45 am

Good to hear. Best of luck!

nkit
nkit
February 5, 2024 12:58 am

Thanks so much for this, Admin..Thank You…