The average 5 year survival rate of cancel is 70% so that 80% had no worse symptoms is going to be within the sample size error for this sort of thing. There's also probably issues with how the sample is taken.
At first glance, I'd conclude this "study" at this point without further analysis basically tells us ivermectin does nothing.
This specific study only really tells us ivermectin and mebendazole aren't incredibly toxic, everything else, good or bad, is left in the realm of unproven speculation.
No control group, no attempts to account for other concurrent treatments effects, and no comparison to typical remission rates. Just "we gave these to people and they happened to survive"
In addition, many patients continued to receive concurrent therapies at follow-up, including chemotherapy (27.9%), radiation therapy (21.3%), and surgery (19.7%), alongside supplement use (49.2%) and dietary modification (37.7%).
Shortly before ivermectin became horse medicine a study showed it could trigger apoptosis in some cancer cells. Another showed it could 'reset' immunity some cancers develop to chemo. A few other positive studies.
But none showed it cured cancer by itself.
So adding it to traditional treatment seems like a good idea, but I certainly wouldn't rely on it to save me.
Worthless.
The average 5 year survival rate of cancel is 70% so that 80% had no worse symptoms is going to be within the sample size error for this sort of thing. There's also probably issues with how the sample is taken.
At first glance, I'd conclude this "study" at this point without further analysis basically tells us ivermectin does nothing.
This specific study only really tells us ivermectin and mebendazole aren't incredibly toxic, everything else, good or bad, is left in the realm of unproven speculation.
No control group, no attempts to account for other concurrent treatments effects, and no comparison to typical remission rates. Just "we gave these to people and they happened to survive"
Original - https://expose-news.com/2026/04/10/ivermectin-and-mebendazole-treatment-for-cancer/
In case anyone is only title reading:
Shortly before ivermectin became horse medicine a study showed it could trigger apoptosis in some cancer cells. Another showed it could 'reset' immunity some cancers develop to chemo. A few other positive studies.
But none showed it cured cancer by itself.
So adding it to traditional treatment seems like a good idea, but I certainly wouldn't rely on it to save me.
isn't ivermectin just an anti-viral and antiparasite? why are they even trying it on cancer patients?
Ivermectin isnt antiviral. Its ant parasite. I havent seen much evidence that it works on viruses.