Repurposed Drugs Or Nah?!

Repurposed Drugs and the Evolving Landscape of Cancer Care

After returning from Colombia I decided to think about the next phase of my treatment with non-homeopathic medicines. I did a deep dive into the broad spectrum benzimidazole. The three most popular in the suppression of cancer being Fenbendozole, Ivermectin, and Mebendazole. I found an amazing website (www.diycancertherapeutics.com) which summaries the benefits and offers protocols for each.

Benzimidazole is defined as a chemical compound that serves as a fundamental structure in a variety of derivatives exhibiting significant biological activities, including antihelmintic, antimicrobial, antitumor, and antioxidant properties. It was initially developed in the 1950s for use in plant fungicides and later for veterinary and human medicine.
— European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2015

I decided to start with the medium dose of Fenbendozole, 222 mg (6 days a week), via the Joe Tippens Protocol. A 30 day supply was $41. (Source: fenbenlab.com)


What Does FenBen Do?

  1. Inhibits glucose uptake

  2. Activates p53 tumor suppressor gene

  3. Triggers apoptosis

  4. Inhibits metastasis (cell division)

  5. Immune modulator

  6. Blocks angiogensis

  7. Depletes glutathione in tumors

  8. Suppresses AKT signaling pathway

  9. Restores normal cell cycle regulation

  10. Synergistic with other natural agents

  11. Cross blood-brain barrier

  12. Developed in 1970s by Hoechst AG patent expired, so Big Pharma won’t invest because can not monopoly to control price

  13. Very similar to the plant alkaloids group of chemotherapies (Taxol)