Growing numbers of cancer sufferers are trying the Tippens Protocolโa remedy not approved by the FDAโwith oncologists reporting good anecdotal success.
Joe Tippens never planned to discover a potential remedy that he credits with saving his life and thrusting him into the spotlight among notable cancer survivors. The 67-year-old businessman told The Epoch Times that he just wanted to beat a type of cancer with an extremely low survival rate.
In August 2016, Tippens was diagnosed with small cell lung cancer with a fist-sized tumor. After undergoing chemotherapy and radiation five times per week in Houston, the large tumor in his left lung was eliminated. However, Tippens said the treatments came closer to killing him than curing him.
When he returned home to Oklahoma after New Yearโs, he received devastating news. His oncologist told him that he had zero chance of surviving for more than a few months.
โIn January of 2017, my [positron-emission tomography] scan lit up like a Christmas tree and I had wide metastasis everywhere, including in my neck, bones, pancreas, and liver,โ Tippens said.
Finding a Lifeline
Facing a prognosis of three months to live, Tippens heard an intriguing story from a veterinarian he knew: A scientist with terminal cancer had reportedly cured her lab mice and then herself using fenbendazole, an antiparasitic drug.
The story was the beginning of what eventually became the โJoe Tippens Protocol.โ
Fenbendazole, used for 30 years to treat intestinal parasites in animals, has not received Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for human use, meaning that doctors cannot prescribe it for people. However, with a terminal diagnosis and nothing to lose, Tippens decided to try it alongside his conventional treatments.
Tippens found that Panacur, a trade name for fenbendazole, was sold over the counter at outlets that carry veterinary medications.
Starting in the third week of January 2017, Tippens began taking the canine medication Panacurโ1 gram per day for three consecutive days per week. After four days without the medication, which contains about 222 milligrams of fenbendazole per gram, he would repeat his three-day routine. Three months later, Tippens was cancer-free.
His protocol also included Theracurmin, a form of the active compound in turmeric, and CBD, an extract of cannabis that does not cause intoxication.
Byย Huey Freeman