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I think the point that is being missed here - at least somewhat - is that, for 30 odd years now, Burzynski has been playing the "brave lone maverick" hero physician role, with a breakthrough and revolutionary cancer cure - note, not just a treatment, but a cure - which is how for at least 2 decades he marketed his controversial antineoplastin therapy.
And it was a cure with no discernible or plausible curative mechanism.
What he was actually doing was claiming a "non-toxic" curative therapy for terminal cancer sufferers, making wildly exaggerated claims for the odds of success for his therapy - offering such patients the hope of life, in other words, profiting by selling hope.
He has played cat and mouse for 30 years with the FDA by entering all attendees into his clinics into either stage 1 or stage 2 clinical trials. In all that time - 30 years - he has provided no peer reviewed papers, and only vague data from these many many trials.
For most types of cancer, and most types of treatment, be it chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or some combination thereof, conventional medicine can give you actual trial data, actual mean survival times, an overall assessment of the progression and prognosis of the disease, but Burzynski cannot, except in wildly exaggerated video claims.
No trial data, no proof of concept, no survival times.
In conventional medicine, it is highly unethical to place someone on an experimental treatment, unless you have genuine informed consent - and you are certainly not expected to pay for the privilege.
In actual fact, Burzynskis "revolutionary" antineoplastin therapy is administered in conjunction with cocktails of chemotherapy drugs, all of which are charged at a premium, and it is therefore likely that any benefit seen might be more due to the chemotherapy than the ANP.
He exaggerates his success rate. He charges over-inflated prices for the chemotherapy that is administered. His ANPs are unproven and in themselves have some fairly nasty side-effects. I think he is extremely unethical if not down right criminal myself.
This is not some sort of complimentary or alternative therapy being offered as an adjunct to conventional therapy. This is him gaming the system and living off the misery of patients, offering a "tailored" therapy without any evidence to support its benefit, sheltering from the authorities under the umbrella of patients being enrolled onto a clinical trial.
That raising of hope, these fundraising drives to raise thousands of pounds or dollars from local communities, those patients desperate to find another 30,000 to continue their course of treatment I find distressing, personally.