Why are natural products considered safe over conventional chemotherapy

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In summary, the paper discusses that traditional natural products are considered safe over chemotherapeutic drugs because they have multi-targeting effects and are affordable. However, both herbal medicines and chemotherapeutic drugs have a similar chemical composition for the medicine to work, but still, herbal meds show fewer side effects.
  • #1
TytoAlba95
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Hi there.
I am reading a paper and got stumped by a question: Why are traditional natural products considered safe over conventional chemotherapy drugs?

"Chemotherapy is very important in cancer treatment but
most of the drugs which are currently used in chemotherapy
have lesser potential because they are mono-targeting, very
expensive and cause severe side effects. The medicinal plants
and herbs can be more effective because they have multi-targeting
effect. They are also affordable and safer."(from the paper)

I guess that herbal medicines cause fewer side-effects than allopathic medicines and hence are considered safer. However, both herbal medicines and chemotherapeutic drugs have a similar chemical composition for the medicine to work, but still, herbal meds show fewer side effects, why?

Mentor Note: Adding link to reference supplied by the OP:
SanjuktaGhosh said:
Could you please add this link to the main post?
Link: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29160133
 
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  • #2
SanjuktaGhosh said:
I am reading a paper
This is not a sufficient reference. There is no way for anyone to know what paper you are reading.
 
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  • #3
SanjuktaGhosh said:
...herbal meds show fewer side effects, why?
Usually they show less main effect too (if they were even ever tested for effect, what is not always sure).

But the more general answer for your question is, that they are often considered safe only because of marketing.
 
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  • #4
SanjuktaGhosh said:
Hi there.
I am reading a paper and got stumped by a question: Why are traditional natural products considered safe over conventional chemotherapy drugs?

"Chemotherapy is very important in cancer treatment but
most of the drugs which are currently used in chemotherapy
have lesser potential because they are mono-targeting, very
expensive and cause severe side effects. The medicinal plants
and herbs can be more effective because they have multi-targeting
effect. They are also affordable and safer."(from the paper)

I guess that herbal medicines cause fewer side-effects than allopathic medicines and hence are considered safer. However, both herbal medicines and chemotherapeutic drugs have a similar chemical composition for the medicine to work, but still, herbal meds show fewer side effects, why?
This from the UK

https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/cancer-in-general/treatment/complementary-alternative-therapies/individual-therapies/herbal-medicine
 
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  • #6
Rive said:
But the more general answer for your question is, that they are often considered safe only because of marketing.
I couldn't get you.
 
  • #7
SanjuktaGhosh said:
Why are traditional natural products considered safe over conventional chemotherapy drugs?

As a whole they are not. There are certainly some natural products that are safe, but there are many that are not. People generally believe "natural" products to be safer than "synthetic" chemicals, but this is the result of marketing from companies and other interested entities that exploit the public's fear of the unknown to stoke chemophobia and convince people to pay money for products with labels like "all natural" or "non-GMO."

In the US, most chemotherapy drugs are approved by the FDA and need to undergo testing in large clinical trials to prove safety and efficacy. Alternative treatments, such as herbal remedies, however, are largely unregulated and have not undergone any testing in clinical trials to assess their safety and efficacy. https://www.cancer.org/treatment/tr...cine/dietary-supplements/fda-regulations.html
 
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  • #8
The ultimate example is homeopathy, which is perfectly safe because it contains nothing at all and therefore does nothing; good or bad.
 
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  • #9
russ_watters said:
The ultimate example is homeopathy, which is perfectly safe because it contains nothing at all and therefore does nothing; good or bad.
This is unfortunately not completely true. The placebo (or nocebo) effect can be quite remarkable.
 
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  • #10
Orodruin said:
This is unfortunately not completely true. The placebo (or nocebo) effect can be quite remarkable.
Getting better and feeling better I would argue are two different things.
 
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  • #11
pinball1970 said:
Getting better and feeling better I would argue are two different things.
Yes, but the placebo effect has been known to be getting people better - not just feeling. Conversely, nocebo has made people significantly worse.
 
  • #12
Orodruin said:
Yes, but the placebo effect has been known to be getting people better - not just feeling. Conversely, nocebo has made people significantly worse.
The ailments treated 'successfully' with aromatherapy, homeopathy, magnets etc tend to be things like addiction, depression, ME, pain related illness like arthritis. So illness where being happy, feeling like you're being looked after and someone is really making an effort to get at your illness and do something about it makes a difference. What is the average time a GP spends with a patient? A homeopath spends more time talking and then administering water to the patient. Does placebo actually cure people? I doubt it would cure anything metabolic or genetic like cancer diabetes, anaemia, cystic fibrosis? Immune response can be affected by levels of stress so being happy is useful for health.
 
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  • #13
pinball1970 said:
Does placebo actually cure people? ... cancer...
This can easily lead to a difficult war of definitions, but cancer treatment often measured as additional time instead of plain 'success'. In this context placebo (and any other type of portioned faith) has meaning: sometimes even a false nose can be considered useful.

I do hate homeopathy and other industries selling faith at high price, but I have to admit that in this regard the clinically tested chemicals still has a lot to learn.

Also, I have to mention that pretty big part of medicines does not actually aim to cure anything: they only makes you feel better.
 
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  • #14
Rive said:
This can easily lead to a difficult war of definitions, but cancer treatment often measured as additional time instead of plain 'success'. In this context placebo (and any other type of portioned faith) has meaning: sometimes even a false nose can be considered useful.

I do hate homeopathy and other industries selling faith at high price, but I have to admit that in this regard the clinically tested chemicals still has a lot to learn.

Also, I have to mention that pretty big part of medicines does not actually aim to cure anything: they only makes you feel better.
Surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy can be curative and are successful for some cancers.
 
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  • #15
"The ultimate example is homeopathy, which is perfectly safe because it contains nothing at all and therefore does nothing; good or bad."

I'd beg to differ: homeopathy is potentially lethal because it promises benefit beyond placebo, may prevent timely medical intervention.
( And, yes, given cash flow constraints, purchase of expensive homeopathic 'remedies' may preclude purchase of functional medication / treatment... )

FWIW, a 'friend of friend' made the mistake of praising her favourite homeopathic remedy's benefits within my hearing. Given the non-trivial cost, and the belief that such serial dilution (*) unto nowt wondrously enhanced its powers, I suggested it should work even better if not ingested, if simply left in bottle and carefully observed.
Then I suggested it should work if left in shop window and observed there, no purchase required.
Then I suggested it should work if imagined as seen in shop window, so available 'out of hours'...
She thought this was a wonderful wheeze.
By which time she realized what I'd done, I'd left...
;-)

*) Watching typical homeopath do serial dilutions is a singular torture for any-one who's done proper analytical pipetting...
 
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  • #16
Nik_2213 said:
"The ultimate example is homeopathy, which is perfectly safe because it contains nothing at all and therefore does nothing; good or bad."

I'd beg to differ: homeopathy is potentially lethal because it promises benefit beyond placebo, may prevent timely medical intervention.
At the risk of speaking for Russ, I'll bet he would agree.

I'd say he was talking about the medicinal effect being neither positive nor negative.

The risk from believing in snake oil certainly can have a deleterious effect on seeking proper care and treatment.
 
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  • #17
Then there is the tragic story of the guy who overdosed on his homeopathic drugs. He forgot to take it.
 
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  • #18
SanjuktaGhosh said:
Hi there.
I am reading a paper and got stumped by a question: Why are traditional natural products considered safe over conventional chemotherapy drugs?

"Chemotherapy is very important in cancer treatment but
most of the drugs which are currently used in chemotherapy
have lesser potential because they are mono-targeting, very
expensive and cause severe side effects. The medicinal plants
and herbs can be more effective because they have multi-targeting
effect. They are also affordable and safer."(from the paper)

I guess that herbal medicines cause fewer side-effects than allopathic medicines and hence are considered safer. However, both herbal medicines and chemotherapeutic drugs have a similar chemical composition for the medicine to work, but still, herbal meds show fewer side effects, why?

Mentor Note: Adding link to reference supplied by the OP:
I think the answer is that people just like to think they are.

I am allergic to the 'skins' of most fruits, for example I am allergic to whole nuts but can eat marzipan fine. It is the skin of the nut I react to. Nuts are the worst, but I react in some way to all fruit and vegetable skins to a greater or lesser extent. I find a lot of 'natural' products grind in all the skin materials too, so I generally assume I will react badly to 'natural' products.

Most 'natural skin creams' are a disaster to me. If moisturising is necessary I have to stick with refined oil goo only = vaseline!
 
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  • #19
Many people believe in the link between the mind and the body, healthy mind means and healthy body. If one believes they will get better, the body reacts to this.

You never find people recovering from serious illness and then afterwards stating "I gave up completely and suddenly i got better" where as you do find people recovering who claim "I refused to give into this condition."

There is no scentific proof of this of course, but I personally believe a positive mental attitude can influence the body's healing ability somewhat. I strongly emphasise the word "influence" in my statement as opposed to "cure."

On the syntheic vs natural/herbal remedies debate, I'm not sure how much of this is down to marketing. I think most people mentally determine that natural remedies are better for you as they are from nature and not man made. I do not subscribe to this theory.
 
  • #20
We are running into the issue of the meaning of the word 'theory' in the thread.

Non-science people use the word theory to mean 'I just thought up a cool idea'. It can be a current belief based on hearsay. Or internet buzz.

Science people use the word theory to mean a statement about the real world that has been tested and verified, repeatedly. Theories have the "ability" to predict things we had not observed in the original work on the subject.
Neutron stars and black holes were discovered after using calculations based on Einstein's Theory of General Relativity to calculate that they must exist. Even though there was no evidence (at the time) to assert that they existed.

Helen Quinn has a lot to say on this subject:

https://ned.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/March07/Quinn/Quinn.html
 
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  • #21
jim mcnamara said:
Science people use the word theory to mean a statement about the real world that has been tested and verified, repeatedly. Theories have the "ability" to predict things we had not observed in the original work on the subject.
I am not entirely convinced. Science people are also prone to over-using the word, mixing 'theory' with 'hypothesis'.
 
  • #23
SanjuktaGhosh said:
...most of the drugs which are currently used in chemotherapy
have lesser potential because they are mono-targeting, very
expensive and cause severe side effects.

I won't argue with the "very expensive" part. However, the rest of this analysis is self-contradictory, IMO. Mono-targeting drugs are exactly those that produce fewer side effects, all other things being equal. It's the affinities of multiple targets for a pharmaceutical that are likely to produce side effects because those other targets are likely to affect other life processes and the inhibition/stimulation of those other target processes produce effects that may be dysfunctional. For example SRIs, the antidepressants that have largely replaced earlier antidepressants like the tricyclics and MAO inhibitors, are more specific for inter-neuronal transmitters, while the earlier generations inhibited muscarinic nicotinic receptors and histamine receptors which caused drowsiness and potentially serious effects on cardiac rhythms. In general, I prefer taking a medication that's effective at the lowest doses because that choice will be the most specific alternative, with the least potential for causing side effects.

One reason why many people believe that herbal remedies are safer is that they believe that pure pharmaceuticals are "chemicals". But what are plant materials if not chemicals? The recognition that some plants, eg. wheat grass, contain polyphenols, is at least a recognition that herbs may owe any efficacy they possesses to 'chemicals'. As long as they aren't listed among the contraindications in the flyer that accompanies pharmaceuticals (or other references), I see no harm in eating sources of polyphenols like wheatgrass and taking chemotherapeutics at the same time. But I definitely would not substitute the former for the latter.
 
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  • #24
@Mark header said
This reference is from an advocacy organization promoting certain ideas about herbal cancer treatments, not a peer-reviewed report of research into the subject. I gave up reading when I realized that it is a compendium of opinions, not observations.

The site is designed for the general public, more specifically those individuals who have cancer or who know someone who has it. If you drill down you can find the researchers and programmes.
Edit. Just to add they draw on resource like Cochrane data bases which provides most relevant meta analysis regarding herbal remedies.
 
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  • #25
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  • #26
Its an interesting question but when you see someone promoting herbal drugs over chemotherapy in cancer it might be time to dust of your sceptical hat. Someone who is familiar with cancer treatment would tell you that there have been major changes in our understanding and treatment of various cancers, with more than half of the people effected being cured and large numbers have the disease managed as a chronic condition.

There is an increasing use of combination treatments that use drugs and surgery or radiotherapy in combination, the view that natural products are safer than chemotherapy seems to suggest the person isn't aware of the fact that more than 50% of cytotoxic drugs are natural products. Plants have been a significant source of drugs and there is renewed interest in some plants because they contain compounds that interfere with some important cell signalling, that can influence cancers. Unfortunately in their natural form there can be a lot of problems in getting sufficient quantities to the active ingredients absorbed and maintained in the body, this is where research comes into play. There is also an issue that some effects might be useful in some cancers and actually harmful in others. I've linked to an interesting review.

I think the issue of placebo effects may be best ignored, its an effect that is inconsistent and rather arbitrary and its significant is probably overrated, its main effects appear to be seen in conditions that have a considerable subjective or experiential element. Research into things like mental health conditions and pain are plagued by these effects but there is little evidence of an effect in biologically based health problems. This is not to rule it out, we know that stress has a wide range of effects on a person, but whether this is significant enough is debatable. Again there is a link that looks at some of the issues and problems.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1044579X17301554https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/480038
 
  • #27
MikeeMiracle said:
Many people believe in the link between the mind and the body, healthy mind means and healthy body. If one believes they will get better, the body reacts to this.

You never find people recovering from serious illness and then afterwards stating "I gave up completely and suddenly i got better" where as you do find people recovering who claim "I refused to give into this condition."

There is no scentific proof of this of course, but I personally believe a positive mental attitude can influence the body's healing ability somewhat. I strongly emphasise the word "influence" in my statement as opposed to "cure."

On the syntheic vs natural/herbal remedies debate, I'm not sure how much of this is down to marketing. I think most people mentally determine that natural remedies are better for you as they are from nature and not man made. I do not subscribe to this theory.
I have liver cancer, no current option of successful removal. The last couple days before my forecast death I was alert for about 2 hours out of 24.

I gave up completely and suddenly I got better.

I gave up. No drama, I was going to die and that was it, crying or anger would make no difference. I relaxed and passed out.
Against all odds I woke up and inside of a month I was up and at it five and six hours a day.
I know enough about genetics to understand being alive is based on physical interactions.

Say I was raised in atmosphere that did not encourage education over faith?
Imagine the difficulty I would have not attributing my survival to final acceptance on the night I was to die. Looking at death up close and personal changed my life, hard to exaggerate the intensity.

Two whole years of bonus time. No sweat, if there is never a good time to die there is never a bad time to die.
I live whether I like it or not, my attitude had little to nothing to do with the situation.
Fighting would not help, neither did my acceptance. I am alive, same as all who survive.

The statistics on therapies, either surgical or chemical all had identical results: No extension of lifespan, just a lot of pain and hospitalization during the last days. No aversion to either in general.
 
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  • #28
Torbert said:
I have liver cancer, no current option of successful removal. The last couple days before my forecast death I was alert for about 2 hours out of 24.

I gave up completely and suddenly I got better.

I gave up. No drama, I was going to die and that was it, crying or anger would make no difference. I relaxed and passed out.
Against all odds I woke up and inside of a month I was up and at it five and six hours a day.
I know enough about genetics to understand being alive is based on physical interactions.

Say I was raised in atmosphere that did not encourage education over faith?
Imagine the difficulty I would have not attributing my survival to final acceptance on the night I was to die. Looking at death up close and personal changed my life, hard to exaggerate the intensity.

Two whole years of bonus time. No sweat, if there is never a good time to die there is never a bad time to die.
I live whether I like it or not, my attitude had little to nothing to do with the situation.
Fighting would not help, neither did my acceptance. I am alive, same as all who survive.

The statistics on therapies, either surgical or chemical all had identical results: No extension of lifespan, just a lot of pain and hospitalization during the last days. No aversion to either in general.
That's tough, keep up the fight sir.
 
  • #29
Torbert said:
I have liver cancer, no current option of successful removal. The last couple days before my forecast death I was alert for about 2 hours out of 24.

I gave up completely and suddenly I got better.

I gave up. No drama, I was going to die and that was it, crying or anger would make no difference. I relaxed and passed out.
Against all odds I woke up and inside of a month I was up and at it five and six hours a day.
I know enough about genetics to understand being alive is based on physical interactions.

Say I was raised in atmosphere that did not encourage education over faith?
Imagine the difficulty I would have not attributing my survival to final acceptance on the night I was to die. Looking at death up close and personal changed my life, hard to exaggerate the intensity.

Two whole years of bonus time. No sweat, if there is never a good time to die there is never a bad time to die.
I live whether I like it or not, my attitude had little to nothing to do with the situation.
Fighting would not help, neither did my acceptance. I am alive, same as all who survive.

The statistics on therapies, either surgical or chemical all had identical results: No extension of lifespan, just a lot of pain and hospitalization during the last days. No aversion to either in general.
I'm pleased your doing well, but I do wonder where you are getting your statistics from. There have been huge improvements in outcomes for cancer treatment. There are all sorts of things that effect outcomes but in the 1970's there was a general view that being alive 5 years after diagnosis was a fairly good indicator of a "cure", around 30% of people with cancer actually achieved this, though with huge variations based on the type of cancer. The current figure for 5 year survival is now around 55% though this measure is now considered less reliable as more people are surviving for long periods managing their cancer as a chronic disease.
The 10 year survival figures are now considered a better indicator and the improvements have followed the same trend, around half of the people diagnosed can now expect to live 10 years or more. These figures don't reflect the current revolution in biologic therapies which will clearly have a huge impact. There have also been significant improvements in symptom control.

https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/he...ics/survival/all-cancers-combined#heading-One
 
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  • #30
The cancer went dormant, this is, if not common, not unheard of. The statistics were from the time of initial discovery and CAT scan of the tumor. I am sure things have changed since then.
One doctor was visibly hostile at my refusal of treatment. He felt what the researchers could learn from my treatment, even though it did not extend my life, would worth more than any discomfort I may have been put through. Through the suffering of others I am sure knowledge is greater and more options may be available.
It returned early this year and I am down to about five hours a day of activity, broken up into several short sessions.
No surprise, but no effort on my part will change the outcome. One of the precepts of the Buddha I find comfort in: To live is to suffer, to allow knowledge of suffering to cause further suffering is to suffer twice.

I hurt only when I hurt and other times are spent trying to follow 'A' threads with fifty year old math. This requires a level of concentration that does not allow worries of the world to enter.
Entertainment videos are far from adequate for distraction.
 
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  • #32
Care: Anecdotal.
I've heard of rare cases of unexpected remission after immune system 'just perked up'. Several such were folk who'd planned a 'final wondrous fling' of a foreign holiday, got umpteen vaccinations. Getting a 'BCG' booster against TB to assist 'Community Immunity' may help, too.
But, no money back, no guarantees, and beware those circling woosters...

That said, unless medically unwise, please get your seasonal 'flu & decadal pneumonia vaccinations: silly to squander remaining time due complications from potentially avertable hazards...

Against those, I'd set the vast majority of cases where, despite heroic medical efforts, the 'Big C' just progressed, or returned after scant few years of remission. 'Tis a complex business and, the closer you study each case, the more an individual's genetics & epigenetics seem involved.

IMHO, we're still several decades from sufficiently personalised treatment...
 
  • #33
I really have misgivings about Herbal Medications for Cancer. The reason they are safe is they don't kill any cells and probably don't make you feel like your being poisoned. Many people decide to quit and die unfortunately because they cannot handle how chemo makes them feel. With current pain meds for ANYONE being raked over the coals I find it hard for people to even put up with doctors saying they don't want them to be addicted during their cancer treatment. I have a few words for those people and they are not nice. My father died of cancer 6 months after the mass in his intestines leading to his stomach was cut out. Just like the doctor said he would. I would hate to think my father to have to pass screaming in pain. It is ignorant, irresponsible and reprehensible.
 
  • #34
We are getting into anecdotal stories and "what if". Time for the thread to take a trip to General Discussion.
Thread moved.
 
  • #35
Nik_2213 said:
"The ultimate example is homeopathy, which is perfectly safe because it contains nothing at all and therefore does nothing; good or bad."

I'd beg to differ: homeopathy is potentially lethal because it promises benefit beyond placebo, may prevent timely medical intervention.
( And, yes, given cash flow constraints, purchase of expensive homeopathic 'remedies' may preclude purchase of functional medication / treatment... )

FWIW, a 'friend of friend' made the mistake of praising her favourite homeopathic remedy's benefits within my hearing. Given the non-trivial cost, and the belief that such serial dilution (*) unto nowt wondrously enhanced its powers, I suggested it should work even better if not ingested, if simply left in bottle and carefully observed.
Then I suggested it should work if left in shop window and observed there, no purchase required.
Then I suggested it should work if imagined as seen in shop window, so available 'out of hours'...
She thought this was a wonderful wheeze.
By which time she realized what I'd done, I'd left...
;-)

*) Watching typical homeopath do serial dilutions is a singular torture for any-one who's done proper analytical pipetting...
Homeopathic healing is at the same level as faith-based healing to me. Neither of them cure anyting and only offer false hope.

Regarding the OP. One of the natural alternatives to chemo is CBD oil. The CBD oil movement claims that it not only can it prevent cancer but is able to cure it. There has been no evidence, at least that I found, that it's able to do any of this. I've only found one proven medical study regarding CBD or marijuana and cancer. Smoking marijuana while on chemo brings your appetite back.
 
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