http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/CancerPrev...3810892&page=1
Cancer Victim Invents Possible Chemo Alternative
Suffering Under Chemotherapy, Retired Man Develops Radio-Wave Treatment
Nov. 2, 2007
This is the story of a man whose reaction to a cancer diagnosis was to go to
his garage and invent something -- a machine that serious scientists are now
taking seriously.
John Kanzius made his fortune owning radio stations in Pennsylvania, then
retired with his wife to Florida. Five years ago, he was diagnosed with
leukemia.
While he was undergoing chemotherapy he decided there has to be a better way
to fight this illness. And even though he wasn't a doctor, he figured he
could figure it out himself.
Kanzius said he was inspired to invent his cancer-fighting machine after
seeing the children who were getting chemotherapy at the same time he was.
"I noticed young kids losing their smiles, losing their hair. And I said to
myself, 'Today's chemotherapy is cruel. There's gotta be a better way to
cure cancer,'" Kanzius told ABC News.
So he set out to invent his own chemotherapy alternative, and his wife,
Marianne, had a front row seat.
"He woke me up in the middle of the night making all this clamor in the
kitchen," she said.
Using pie pans, spare parts from ham radios and know-how from his days as a
radio engineer, he invented the first generation of what would become a
machine that uses radio waves -- not radioactivity -- to fight cancer.
Now could a garage invention turn into a breakthrough cancer treatment?
Some medical professionals think maybe.
"It's beyond remarkable," said Dr. Steven Curley of the MD Anderson Cancer
Center at the University of Texas. "He was just a private citizen who just
came up with an idea and had the wherewithal and the tinkering ability to do
it."
Curley and his colleagues at the center took Kanzius' made-in-the-garage
invention very seriously.
They began testing the radio-wave technology on animals, and say they
completely destroyed liver cancer tumors in rabbits. The findings will be
part of a study to be published in the journal Cancer.
Kanzius got tearful when talking about the study. "Not until the manuscripts
were available online for me to read did the gravity of what we
developed.hit me," he said.
Bu cancer experts are quick to point out this research is very preliminary.
"I would guess, based on what we know now that we are probably five years
from the first clinical trials in humans. Hopefully it will be faster," said
Dr. Robert C. Young of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.
Kanzius' cancer is now in remission. And he is careful when asked whether he
thinks his invention can ever be used on him.
"My only wish is that I could be around long enough to see the first human
trials."
Experts stress that it's important to emphasize that this research is still
in the very early stages. Just because it appears to have worked in animals
does not mean it will work in humans. It is nonetheless a remarkable story.
One scientist told ABC News that in 20 years of cancer research he has never
encountered anything like this.
End.
Read the comments, Dr. Rife was right.