Bleach Cancer Treatment: Inventor Seeks US Approval

The $20,000 Bleach Injection: A Cancer Treatment's Controversial Journey to America **Would you inject toxic bleach into your tumor for a chance at a cure?** One Chinese inventor is betting you might, and he's bringing his unproven, $20,000 treatment to the US. This isn't your typical medical breakthrough. We're talking about Xuewu Liu, a man with zero medical training, injecting highly concentrated chlorine dioxide – a toxic bleach solution – directly into cancerous tumors. His claim? It's an AI-driven miracle cure. But is it? The answer might surprise – and deeply worry – you. A Toxic Cocktail: The Treatment and its Risks Liu's treatment involves injecting milliliters of a 20,000 ppm chlorine dioxide solution directly into tumors. Imagine the burning sensation, the intense pain. One patient described agony so severe it woke her from sleep. But the horror doesn't stop there. She also reported her tumor *grew faster* after the procedure, suspecting the treatment may have spread the cancer. Liu disputes this, of course. This isn't just some back-alley operation. Liu's working with a former pharmaceutical executive to bring this unproven treatment to American shores. Their audacious plan? They believe Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s appointment as US health secretary will pave the way. Intrigued? We are too. But there’s a twist… The FDA's Quiet Shift and the Rise of Chlorine Dioxide The FDA recently removed a warning about chlorine dioxide from its website. Was this a routine archival process, as the agency claims? Or a subtle shift opening the door for pseudoscientific treatments? Liu certainly thinks so. He believes this removal, coupled with Kennedy's focus on alternative medicines, will trigger a wave of "serious" chlorine dioxide research. For decades, chlorine dioxide has been peddled as a cure-all, from HIV to autism. It’s a dangerous grift, with no credible evidence to support these claims. Yet, Liu's treatment takes it a step further, using far higher concentrations injected directly into tumors. Explosions, Preprints, and WhatsApp "Evidence" Liu's journey isn't without its own dramatic moments. He mixes the solution in his Beijing apartment, resulting in a violent explosion that left him injured and his young daughter terrified. His "evidence" for the treatment's efficacy? Unreviewed preprints and screenshots of WhatsApp conversations with patients. A leading oncologist calls this "not evidence." A patient's harrowing account reveals a treatment far more terrifying than Liu's marketing suggests. The pain, the potential for spreading cancer, the lack of verifiable results… it’s a chilling picture. The American Push: Patients, Clinics, and a Former Pharma Exec Liu's sights are set on the US. He's already enlisted over 100 American patients for a proposed (and potentially illegal) clinical research program. Desperate cancer patients, facing dwindling options, are signing up. But are they risking their lives for a false hope? He’s teamed up with Scott Hagerman, a former Pfizer executive who now views the pharmaceutical industry as a "corrupt entity." Hagerman believes Liu's lack of medical training is an *advantage*, as he's not "clouded by misguidance." He foresees a future where this treatment is available in the US—perhaps as soon as 2025. Legal Minefield: FDA Regulations and the Right to Try Liu claims his treatment is legal under the US Right to Try Act. Legal experts vehemently disagree. Advertising unproven treatments carries hefty legal risks, potentially violating FDA regulations. The FDA, however, remains silent. The stakes are incredibly high. This isn't just about a new treatment; it's a battle between hope, desperation, pseudoscience, and the regulatory framework designed to protect patients. What happens next? Will Liu succeed in bringing his controversial treatment to the US? The answer remains to be seen. **Stay tuned.**
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