Medindia LOGIN REGISTER
Medindia

Trials to Test If Mistletoe can Help Boost the Immune System of Cancer Patients

by Thilaka Ravi on Sep 26 2012 5:06 PM

Trials to Test If Mistletoe can Help Boost the Immune System of Cancer Patients
Can mistletoe therapy really benefit cancer patients? Aberdeen University will conduct scientific trials to test whether mistletoe can help boost the immune system of cancer patients.
Cancer specialist Professor Steven Heys, from the university's medical school, will oversee the pilot study that will involve women with breast cancer.

The study will be run jointly with Camphill Medical Practice in Aberdeen, which regularly offers cancer patients mistletoe therapy.

Dr Stefan Geider, a GP at the Camphill practice, said some patients who have had mistletoe injections had noticed an impact on their wellbeing.

"We see an increase in energy levels, less fatigue, good appetite, better sleeping, high motivation, from my clinical experience," the BBC quoted him as saying

"From seeing patients on a regular basis, my experience is that mistletoe has, with some people - although not with all - an impact on tumour reduction," he said.

But he stressed it was important people realised that it was not a miracle cure.

Advertisement
"Mistletoe has to my experience helped a lot of patients tremendously, both in terms of quality of life as well as life expectancy. But it does not work for everybody - it's not a miracle cure. We need to find out why the mistletoe works for some people, and not for others - that's why we need the trials," he said.

Many in the medical profession do not believe mistletoe has any effect on cancer, and think it should not be prescribed, citing a lack of good quality evidence.

Advertisement
"There isn't any evidence that mistletoe does have an anti-cancer effect, in terms of prolonging the life of patients," said Cancer specialist Prof Heys.

"What it does do, possibly, is improve the quality of life of patients with breast cancer who are having chemotherapy.

"Therefore I think it's important to look and evaluate that and study it, in very good randomised controlled trials, conducted in a very controlled setting," he stated.

He said many of his patients were now using alternative treatments alongside traditional ones.

"A recent study we conducted last year showed that 70 percent of patients were taking complementary or alternative medicines," he said.

"Given that, I think it's important to be able to understand if mistletoe does have effects on quality of life so that we can present that to patients," he noted.

Source-ANI


Advertisement