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What is an Integrative Approach to Cancer Treatment?đ©ș
I wanted to find a way to create a deeper connection with my followers and provide more insights into the content I share on other platforms. I'm excited to give you all a closer, more personal look into my worldâsharing insights from my life, my research, and work.
Integrative vs. Conventional Cancer Treatment
Conventional cancer treatment typically involves chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery to remove the tumor.
A growing tumor can press on organs, block blood flow, interfere with digestion or breathing, and produce large amounts of lactic acid that stress the body. In these situations, reducing the tumor load is necessary for safety, relieving symptoms caused by tumor growth, and for preventing emergencies.
But after treating thousands of patients, Iâve seen that removing the tumor does not automatically restore health. Cancer is the outcome of deeper imbalances throughout the body. The terrainâhormones, metabolism, acidity, hypoxia, inadequate immune system, inflammation, etc.âis what creates a cancer kingdom. If the underlying contributors arenât addressed, the body is still operating in the same environment that allowed the cancer to develop.
On top of that, chemotherapy, radiation, and even major surgeries can be very hard on the body. They can weaken the immune system, lower metabolism, increase inflammation, and deplete nutrients. This weakened state can make it harder for the body to repair itself and can unfortunately create conditions that promote recurrence.
A truly effective approach to cancer treatment must involve restoring the entire body. Cancer is a SYSTEMIC disease.
1. Reducing the tumor burden:
Because chemo, radiation, and surgery are so hard on the body, many researchers and doctors have looked for gentler approaches to reducing the tumor burden. Research has shown that several therapies can slow tumor growth, improve treatment tolerance, and target cancer cell vulnerabilities without the same level of toxicity.
High dose vitamin C IV: At pharmacologic doses, vitamin C acts as a pro-oxidant in the tumor microenvironment, generating hydrogen peroxide that cancer cells cannot neutralize. This can slow tumor growth, improve quality of life, and does not target healthy tissues.
Hyperthermia: Raising tissue temperature weakens cancer cells by stressing their already fragile mitochondria. Hyperthermia can make tumors more sensitive to other treatments and can directly slow growth by disrupting protein stability.
Repurposed drugs (Doxycycline, Fenbendazole, Ivermectin, Dichloroacetate, aspirin, etc.): These medicines were developed for other conditions but have mechanisms that disrupt cancer metabolism. Some block mitochondrial biogenesis, others interfere with microtubules or glycolysis, and some reduce inflammation. In combination with other treatments, they can meaningfully reduce growth pressure on the tumor.
Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda): Cancer cells create an acidic microenvironment by relying on glycolysis and producing excess lactic acid. Sodium bicarbonate helps neutralize this acidity, improving oxygenation and making the tumor less invasive. It can reduce metastasis potential and improve the effectiveness of other treatments.
2. Balancing hormones:
Hormones influence nearly every process in the body. Theyâre biochemical signals that interpret the internal terrain and tell tissues how to behave. High estrogen, high cortisol, prolactin, excess insulin, and growth-promoting hormones are frequently implicated in cancer. They respond to stressors by encouraging tissues to regenerate, but when these signals stay elevated, they create a constant growth-driven environment that supports cancer development. Balancing hormones is essential for restoring normal cell behavior.
Natural progesterone (oral or topical): Progesterone directly opposes estrogenâs proliferative effects, lowers cortisol, reduces prolactin, supports thyroid function, stabilizes cell differentiation, and calms inflammation. In women (and sometimes in men), progesterone therapy helps counteract growth signals and creates a more regulated hormonal environment.
Pregnenolone: Pregnenolone used to help rebuild the bodyâs protective steroid pathways, oppose cortisol, support the brain and heart, reduce inflammation, and improve stress tolerance. It has also been shown to protect healthy cells from certain chemotherapy-related injuries.
Thyroid hormones(T3/T4 therapy):The thyroid controls energy production, oxygen use, and cell differentiation. Using T3, T4, or combination therapy corrects low metabolic rate, lowers inflammation, and improves cell function.
Anti-serotonin medications: Excess serotonin can raise prolactin, impair thyroid function, increase inflammation, and slow metabolism. Medications such as cyproheptadine are sometimes used to lower elevated serotonin activity, reduce prolactin, and shift the body away from stress physiology.
Anti-estrogens: These include aromatase inhibitors and selective estrogen receptor modulators, used when testing shows elevated estrogen activity. They help reduce estrogen-driven cell growth.
3. Repleting nutrients:
Cancer places heavy metabolic demands on the body, and many patients start treatment already deficient in nutrients needed for energy production and healthy cell function. Repleting nutrients is a targeted medical approach to restoring the metabolic pathways that regulate inflammation, energy, and cellular function. When these deficits are corrected, patients typically tolerate treatment better and recover more efficiently. Here are just a few:
High dose thiamine: Thiamine (vitamin B1) is essential for mitochondrial energy production and carbohydrate metabolism, which is severely impaired in cancer. High-dose thiamine can help bypass metabolic blocks, improve fatigue, support the nervous system, and stabilize glucose handling.
Niacinamide: Niacinamide supports NADâș production, which is central to mitochondrial function, DNA repair, and cellular resilience. Cancer and chemotherapy both drain NADâș stores. Restoring niacinamide improves metabolic efficiency, lowers inflammation, stabilizes blood sugar, and protects healthy cells during treatment.
Vitamin D/K: Vitamin D regulates immune function, inflammation, and cell differentiation. Vitamin K works synergistically by directing calcium into tissues that need it and preventing calcification in places that do not. In combination, D and K help support immune surveillance, reduce inflammation, and maintain normal cell growth patterns. Many cancer patients are significantly deficient.
Magnesium: Magnesium is required for hundreds of enzymatic reactions, including ATP production, muscle function, nerve signaling, and inflammation control. Treatment, stress hormones, and poor intake rapidly deplete magnesium.
4. Addressing infections and restoring healthy gut function:
Many cancer patients come to the clinic with underlying bacterial, viral, or gut-related issues that place extra pressure on the immune system. These problems increase inflammation, raise cortisol, interfere with digestion and nutrient absorption, and force the immune system to stay chronically activated.
A major part of this dysfunction stems from disruption of the gut microbiome, which houses nearly 80% of the immune system. When the gut ecosystem is imbalancedâwhether due to infections, antibiotic overuse, chronic stress, or dietary triggersâit impairs both local and systemic immunity. This creates a vicious cycle: a weakened gut barrier leads to immune dysregulation, inflammation, and increased toxic load, all of which interfere with cancer therapy and slow healing. Restoring microbial balance helps lower systemic stress and creates a more stable foundation for the rest of the treatment plan.
Bacterial, viral, and fungal infections: Chronic infections, including H. pylori, periodontal pathogens, gut overgrowth, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), herpes simplex virus (HSV), and fungal organisms like Candida, are common and can contribute to ongoing inflammation, immune dysregulation, and poor treatment response. Depending on the case, treatment may include targeted antibiotics (ex: amoxicillin, doxycycline), antifungals (ex: Itraconazole), or natural antimicrobials and antivirals.
Parasites: Parasitic infections can impair nutrient absorption and contribute to inflammation. Options like Ivermectin or Fenbendazole can be helpful depending on the specific parasite.
Mold: Exposure to environmental mold or internally colonized fungal overgrowth can lead to mycotoxin accumulation, immune suppression, mitochondrial dysfunction, and neurological symptoms. Patients may not always show overt signs of mold exposure, but it can silently impair detoxification and cellular energy. Treatment may include binders (like activated charcoal or bentonite clay), antifungal medications, and mold avoidance protocols.
Endotoxin: Endotoxin is a toxic fragment released by certain gut bacteria. When the gut barrier is weakened, endotoxin enters the bloodstream and triggers systemic inflammation, higher cortisol, liver stress, and impaired thyroid function. Management may include activated charcoal to bind endotoxin, glycine to support the gut lining, and antibiotics if bacterial overgrowth is contributing to excess production.
5. Restoring tissue oxygenation:
Dr. Otto Warburg, a Nobel Prizeâwinning scientist, is best known for his work showing that cancer cells have a fundamental defect in how they use oxygen. His research established that when cells cannot efficiently utilize oxygen, they shift toward fermentation, a metabolic pattern now recognized as a hallmark of cancer. Many tumors exist in chronically low-oxygen environments, which further drives this metabolic shift. Improving oxygen delivery and utilization helps normalize metabolism, support healthier cell function, and make other therapies work more effectively.
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT): HBOT exposes the body to high-pressure oxygen, increasing the amount dissolved in the blood and delivered to tissues. This can improve wound healing, reduce inflammation, and enhance oxygen availability in areas where blood flow is limited.
Extracorporeal Blood Oxygenation and Ozonation (EBOO): EBOO circulates blood through a filtration and oxygenation system, exposing it to medical ozone. This increases oxygen delivery, reduces inflammatory byproducts, and may improve microcirculation.
CVAC: CVAC is a pressure-controlled chamber that simulates altitude changes through shifts in pressure, temperature, and density. These variations stimulate mitochondrial function, oxygen efficiency, and circulation without requiring exertion which enhances oxygen utilization at the cellular level.

6. Lowering unnecessary stressors:
Cancer arises as a result of severe, prolonged stress on the body. We cannot remove every stressor in someoneâs life, but we can lower many of the pressures that keep the body in a constant state of activation. This helps balance hormones and regulate inflammation. These adjustments donât replace treatment, but they make the body far more capable of responding to it.
Balancing blood sugar: Stable blood sugar lowers cortisol and reduces the need for the pancreas to release large amounts of insulin. Because insulin is a growth-promoting hormone, it can contribute to cancer. To balance blood sugar, patients pair protein with carbohydrates, eat regularly, and avoid long fasting windows that trigger cortisol spikes.
Eating enough calories: Consistently undereating raises cortisol, suppresses thyroid function, and lowers protective hormones like progesterone. Adequate calorie intake signals safety to the body, improves metabolic rate, stabilizes hormones, and reduces the stress physiology that can promote abnormal growth.
Improving light environment: Light is one of the strongest regulators of human physiology. Darkness during the day is a persistent stressor. Natural morning light, on the other hand, helps lower cortisol, stabilizes circadian rhythms, and supports thyroid and metabolic function.
Removing toxins (diet and personal care products): Toxins such as pesticides, plastics, synthetic fragrances, and xenoestrogens burden the liver and raise inflammation. Removing these exposures reduces the load on detox pathways. This includes switching to glass storage, fragrance-free products, clean personal care products, and minimizing pesticide exposure.
7. Addressing traumas and emotional health:
In my 39 years of practicing medicine, I have not met a patient who has not experienced some form of extraordinary emotional stress. While stress is a natural part of life, the more serious kinds, like the loss of a loved one, caregiving responsibilities, divorce, or extreme work cycles, can deeply impact the body. These experiences shape the nervous system and influence hormone patterns. The body responds to everything in our environment, including emotions, so itâs necessary to address the factors that keep the nervous system in a heightened state.
EVOX therapy: EVOX uses biofeedback and perceptual reframing to help the nervous system shift out of repetitive stress patterns. By calming the stress response, it can lower cortisol and improve physiological flexibility.
Journaling and free writing: Free writing is the practice of putting down your thoughts on paper without filtering, editing, or worrying about grammar. It allows us to process emotions and organize thoughts in a way that speaking sometimes cannot. Writing forces us to organize what is happening in our mind and self-reflect.
Connecting with nature: Nature has a unique effect on emotional regulation. Natural environments reduce sensory overload, quiet the parts of the brain involved in rumination, and help the nervous system shift out of heightened emotional reactivity. Sunlight stabilizes circadian rhythms and exposure to natural settings lowers sympathetic (fight-or-flight) activity. Together, these changes reduce cortisol, improve emotional processing, and help the body move out of the chronic stress.
There are many ways to strengthen the body, support the immune system, and improve how tissues function during treatment. These approaches are not always discussed in standard care, but they can make a meaningful difference. Addressing the entire internal environment, the terrain in which cancer developed, is just as important as addressing the tumor.
Each patient and cancer case is unique. We all have different needs, so I encourage patients to be proactive and find what works best for them. My hope is that people understand there are many effective options available, and they shouldnât feel limited by a single approach.
When we treat the whole person, not just the tumor, we give the body the best chance to recover fully and prevent recurrence.
I believe that a diagnosis can be an invitation to connect with ourselves on a deeper level. In many diseases, the body is calling to us to explore all areas of our healthâ physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual. There is more than one way to heal. đ
An integrative approach goes beyond treating a diagnosis, which involves evaluating the bodyâs entire terrain: metabolism, inflammation, immune balance, toxic burden, and the subtle changes that precede disease. To understand the entire picture, we need to look at how all of these systems interact and influence one another. At the center we offer advanced testing to do so. A few of these include:
The 3D Body Scan is a non-invasive, full-body imaging system that creates an accurate three-dimensional model of your body.
The scan measures:
Overall and regional body composition
Fat distribution vs. lean mass
Postural alignment and asymmetries
Circumference changes over time
Structural patterns that may reflect inflammation or muscular compensation
Shifts in fluid retention or inflammatory swelling
Changes in metabolic health reflected in body shape and composition
The body often changes long before labs do. For example:
Inflammation may show up as fluid shifts or changes in circumference.
Improvements in metabolic therapies may be reflected in body recomposition.
Stress patterns or pain may reveal themselves in posture.
Detoxification interventions may change fluid balance or fat distribution.
Because the scan is fast and repeatable, we can compare results over time and track whether treatments are creating measurable physiologic improvements.
The Bio-Immune Survey uses electrodermal screening based on acupuncture meridians to evaluate how different organ systems are functioning energetically. Every acupuncture point is associated with an organ or physiological pathway, and by measuring electrical conductance at these points, we can detect patterns of stress, weakness, or dysregulation.
This assessment can reveal:
Immune system overload or under-function
Organs or pathways that may be contributing to inflammation
Detoxification circuits that are struggling or compensating
Hidden stressorsâsuch as food sensitivities, environmental exposures, or microbial imbalances
Energetic disturbances that correlate with emotional or physiological strain
How the body is responding to a treatment plan in real time
A few benefits:
A patient may have normal labs but a Bio-Immune Survey showing immune strainâuseful for early intervention.
It can help explain why someone isnât tolerating certain supplements or treatments.
It often highlights organ systems that need support long before they show measurable dysfunction.
It reveals patterns that correlate with chronic stress, toxin load, or hidden inflammation.
In many cases, it helps us personalize a plan with far greater precision, ensuring weâre supporting the systems that are actually struggling.
If you have received a diagnosis, are experiencing symptoms, or are curious about how to prevent cancer and optimize your health, please contact us at 949-680-1880! For a full list of services, please see below:
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For more information on my approach to cancer treatment: The Cancer Revolution â€ïž
I created a resource that walks through my full integrative approach to treatment and prevention.
In the second edition of The Cancer Revolution, I updated every chapter, reviewed new research, added the latest diagnostics and early-detection tools, and included two new chapters on voltage/frequency medicine and the expanding field of immunotherapy. Youâll also find updated nutrition guidance, food plans, and practical lifestyle recommendations.
This edition is a comprehensive guide for anyone who wants to learn more about how I approach cancer care from an integrative perspectiveâand how these strategies can support healing.
My hope is that this book empowers patients. That it helps you understand your options. And that it reminds you: youâre not powerless. Thereâs so much you can do to support healing and live a full, cancer-free life. đȘ

Talk soon â€ïž,
Dr. C
