Beware of Online Cancer Fraud
While health fraud is a cruel form of greed, fraud involving cancer treatments can be particularly heartless – especially because fraudulent information can travel around the Web in an instant. “Anyone who suffers from cancer, or knows someone who does, understands the fear and desperation that can set in,” says Gary Coody, RPh., the national health fraud coordinator and a consumer safety officer with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Regulatory Affairs. “There can be a great temptation to jump at anything that appears to offer a chance for a cure.”
Medicinal products and devices intended to treat cancer must gain FDA approval before they are marketed. The agency’s review process helps ensure that these products are safe and effective.
Nevertheless, it’s always possible to find someone or some company hawking bogus cancer “treatments.” Such “treatments” come in many forms, including pills, tonics, and creams. “They’re frequently offered as natural treatments and ‘dietary supplements,’” says Coody. Many of these fraudulent cancer products even appear completely harmless, but may cause indirect harm by delaying or interfering with proven, beneficial treatments.
“Advertisements and other promotional materials touting bogus cancer ‘cures’ have probably been around as long as the printing press,” says Coody. “However, the Internet has compounded the problem by providing the peddlers of these often dangerous products a whole new outlet.”
It’s always possible to find someone or some company hawking bogus cancer “treatments.”
Unproven ‘Remedies,’ False
Promises
Coody cites black salves
as one of the fake cancer “remedies”
that indeed have proven to be harmful.
“Although it is illegal to market these
salves as a cancer treatment, they are
readily available online,” he says.
The salves are sold with false promises
that they will cure cancer by “drawing
out” the disease from beneath the skin.
“However, there is no scientific evidence
that black salves are effective,” says
Janet Woodcock, director of FDA’s Center
for Drug Evaluation and Research.
“Even worse, black salves can cause
direct harm to the patient.”
The corrosive, oily salves “essentially burn off layers of the skin and surrounding normal tissue,” says Woodcock. “This is not a simple, painless process. There are documented cases of these salves destroying large parts of people’s skin and underlying tissue, leaving terrible scars.”
Another unproven “remedy” that has been hawked for decades is an herbal regimen known as the Hoxsey Cancer Treatment. “FDA has taken regulatory and enforcement action against this discredited course of therapy beginning in the 1950s,” says Coody.
“There is no scientific evidence that it has any value to treat cancer,” he adds. “Yet consumers can go online right now and find all sorts of false claims that Hoxsey treatment is effective against the disease.”
Red Flags
Coody says that firms engaged
in cancer treatment or prevention
fraud often use exaggerated and bogus
claims to promote these products. He
adds that consumers should recognize
the following phrases as red flags:
- Treats all forms of cancer
- Skin cancers disappear
- Shrinks malignant tumors
- Non-toxic
- Doesn’t make you sick
- Avoid painful surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or other conventional treatments
- Treat Non-Melanoma Skin Cancers easily and safely
“Unproven claims are also found in
unverified testimonials, research results,
or even in product and website names,”
says Coody. He offers important points
that consumers seeking cancer treatments
should keep in mind:
- Always consult with your healthcare professional before starting a new treatment or adding one to existing therapies. “Some products may interact with your medicines or keep them from working the way they are supposed to,” says Coody.
- Understand the difference between fraudulent drug products and what FDA calls investigational drugs. Investigational drugs undergo clinical testing to determine if they are safe and effective for their intended uses. Fraudulent products, on the other hand, are unapproved and typically have never been clinically tested or reviewed by FDA for safety and effectiveness. Marketing them is a violation of federal law.
“There are legal ways for patients to access investigational drugs,” says Coody. “The most common way is by taking part in clinical trials. But patients can also receive investigational drugs outside of clinical trials in some cases.” For more details on this, see FDA's "Speeding Access to Important New Therapies".
Agencies Take Action
FDA and
the U.S. Federal Trade Commission,
in collaboration with other North
American government agencies, have
announced a new initiative to prevent
these deceptive products from reaching
consumers. Coody says that as
part of the joint campaign, FDA and
FTC have sent approximately 135
warning letters and two advisory
letters to firms that market these products
online. The initiative originated
not only from consumer complaints,
he says, but also from a Web surf for
fraudulent cancer products by FDA
and members of the Mexico-United
States-Canada Health fraud working
group.
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Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration
This article was published in Coping® with Cancer magazine, September/October 2008.


