In the video in the spine cancer post, it is claimed that this animal product cures cancer. Here is some more information on the product. It is available in 1 gram servings at Target in the yellow label packet.

The text below is from athe Cancer Active web site

The use of anthelminthic drugs with cancer, however, is nothing new.

Scientific literature prior to the 2018 Nature paper demonstrated the effective use of fenbendazole for various types of cancer cells such as Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (3), Lymphoma (4) Metastatic prostate cancer cells (5) and Glioblastoma, or GBM (6).

In the early 90s, another antihelminthic drug called Levamizole was shown as a effective complementary treatment for colon cancer (CRC) and was shown to restore a depressed immune system.

A further anti-cancer mechanism the researchers found with fenbendazole was that it blocked the uptake of glucose in cancer cells, depriving them of their primary fuel. This discovery supports the use of fenbendazole as an complementary therapy to chemotherapy and radiotherapy as well as metabolic therapies. Another study showed prostate cancer cells were killed where fenbendazole was used together with vitamin E succinate (8).

A fenbendazole anti-cancer protocol?

Anecdotal evidence comes from cancer patient Joe Tippens, an avid researcher who was given three months to live, who decided to try Panacur with the agreement of his consultant (9). Joe took a combination of nutrients alongside fenbendazole, while deciding not to change his diet. It worked!

  • 1 gram granules (3 days on, 4 days off) of canine drug ‘Panacur C’, which contains 222mg of fenbendazole

  • Vitamin E Succinate (800IU daily)

  • Curcumin (600mg daily)

  • CBD oil (25mg per day)


Febendazole toxicity and safety in humans

Although the original clinical approval for fenbendazole was for intestinal parasites and not for cancer, the drug has already gone through human clinical trials and so all of the clinical trial work related to toxicity has already been done and febendazole has been deemed safe for human consumption for many years. 

However, the label for the product approval talks of animals not humans. In animals it is known that there is a likely interaction with salicylanilides like Niclosamide and Dibromsalan.

Chris Woollams, former Oxford University Biochemist and a founder of CANCERactive said, “Fenbendazole is yet another example of a cheap, safe drug intended for a specific health condition, which can be repurposed to be used to treat cancer. There is no doubt it has strong properties but some cancer experts prefer to use Mebendazole, which is commonly licensed for humans rather than animals! We do have an article on CANCERactive about many such repurposed drugs from Metformin to Mebendazole.”

A more complete step by step  protocol is here. 

Please read our disclaimer.