Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Cancer Warriors

484 members • Free

Integrative Cancer Advantage

74 members • Free

Cancer Thrivers

15 members • Free

The Aspinall Way

26k members • Free

Kickstarter Challenge

24.1k members • Free

7 contributions to Cancer Warriors
“Toward a Future Without Cancer” “A Promise of Hope”
want to speak directly to everyone walking this difficult path. Yes — I am working relentlessly toward a lasting and effective cure for cancer. This work is driven by science, compassion, and the belief that cancer is not unbeatable. Progress is real, and every day we move closer to therapies that are more precise, less toxic, and designed to work with the body, not against it. While this work continues, there are important things each person can do to reduce risk and support their body: • Prioritize real, whole foods and reduce processed sugar • Support your immune system through proper sleep and stress management • Stay physically active in ways your body allows • Avoid unnecessary toxins and chronic inflammation • Seek early screening and do not ignore warning signs • Most importantly — never lose hope or delay care out of fear Cancer is not just a physical battle; it is emotional, mental, and spiritual. Healing requires compassion, truth, and persistence. My commitment is to continue pushing the boundaries of science so that one day, cancer is no longer something we fear — but something we overcome. We are building that future together.
2 likes • 5h
@Lisa Drake Absolutely, that makes a lot of sense! Sleep and stress are huge influencers on how our body responds, especially over the long term. It’s impressive that you’re aware of the pattern now—getting back to meditation and your 6 pm screen ban sounds like a strong, concrete plan. Even small, consistent steps can make a big difference in restoring balance and slowing progression. You’ve got this!
0 likes • 5h
@Lisa Drake you're welcome
Cancer Management: A Balanced, Informed, and Compassionate Approach
A cancer diagnosis changes life in an instant. While every journey is different, there are principles that consistently help patients navigate treatment with greater strength, clarity, and resilience. 1. Build a multidisciplinary care team Cancer is not just a tumor—it affects the whole body. The most effective care involves oncologists, surgeons, nurses, nutritionists, mental health professionals, and when appropriate, integrative medicine specialists. Never hesitate to ask for second opinions or additional expertise. 2. Understand your disease and your options Knowledge is empowering. Ask questions until you clearly understand your diagnosis, stage, molecular markers, and treatment choices. When patients are informed, they make better decisions and feel more in control. 3. Support your immune system wisely The immune system plays a central role in cancer control. Adequate nutrition, sleep, stress reduction, and avoiding unnecessary immune suppressors matter. Immune-based treatments can be powerful, but they require careful monitoring and balance. 4. Nutrition is not optional—it’s therapeutic Cancer and its treatments place enormous metabolic stress on the body. Focus on whole, nutrient-dense foods, adequate protein, hydration, and maintaining muscle mass. Malnutrition weakens immunity and tolerance to therapy. 5. Protect your mental and emotional health Fear, grief, and uncertainty are normal. Addressing emotional health is not a luxury—it directly impacts outcomes. Counseling, support groups, mindfulness, and spiritual support can be as important as chemotherapy or radiation. 6. Listen to your body and report changes early Side effects, new symptoms, or sudden changes should never be ignored. Early intervention can prevent complications and sometimes save lives. 7. Maintain hope, but stay grounded Hope is not denial of reality—it is commitment to doing everything possible, one step at a time. Celebrate small wins. Progress in cancer care is real, and many patients live meaningful, long lives after diagnosis.
2 likes • 13d
@Michael Wright I understand your point. You’re right that there are no properly controlled double-blind placebo studies proving many of these assertions, and oncology as a field relies heavily on observational data, imperfect trials, and outcomes that are often far from ideal—especially in diseases like glioblastoma. My position isn’t that current standards are definitively proven to be optimal, but that they reflect the best evidence we currently have, despite its clear limitations.
Cancer prevention
Cancer doesn’t appear overnight — it builds silently through years of habits, exposures, and unrecognized warning signs. The good news is that we have more control than we think. Every small choice we make today shapes our long-term health. Here are the habits I encourage every patient to take seriously: Protect your body from tobacco and excess alcohol. These remain major, preventable risk factors. Move every day. Regular activity strengthens immunity and lowers inflammation. Choose food that nourishes you. More plants, fewer processed meals — your cells will thank you. Care for your skin. Sun protection is one of the simplest ways to prevent cancer. Prioritize sleep and manage stress. Your body heals, repairs, and resets when you rest. Stay up-to-date with screenings and vaccines. Early detection is one of our strongest tools. You don’t need perfection — you need awareness and consistency. Protecting your health today is one of the greatest gifts you can give your future self.
2 likes • 15d
@Fitch T Thank you for sharing your perspective so openly and respectfully. I genuinely appreciate thoughtful dialogue like this, especially when it comes from lived experience and deep personal research. You’re absolutely right that health is not one-size-fits-all, and many well-intentioned recommendations don’t account for individual biology, environment, or context. Nutrition, for example, is far more complex than simple slogans like “eat more plants.” What works for one person may clearly not work for another, and metabolic individuality matters greatly. On sunlight, your point is well taken. There is growing recognition—even within parts of mainstream medicine—that natural light exposure, particularly morning sunlight, plays a critical role in circadian rhythm regulation, sleep quality, hormonal balance, and mitochondrial health. These areas deserve far more nuance than blanket “avoid the sun” messaging, which has often been driven by fear rather than balance. Regarding vaccines, I hear the pain and concern in what you’re saying. Vaccine injury is real for some individuals, and those experiences should never be dismissed or minimized. Medicine must be humble enough to acknowledge harm where it occurs and ethical enough to protect informed consent and individual choice. Thank you for challenging ideas thoughtfully and advocating for deeper discussion. Progress in medicine depends on exactly this kind of honest, courageous exchange.
End Of Cancer Trait
I want you to know this with certainty: we will reach the final breakthrough in defeating cancer. Every step, every study, every sleepless night brings us closer to a world where cancer is no longer a threat to life. Progress may feel slow, but it is real, and it is happening. Soon, cancer will not be a trait humanity has to fear. We are moving toward a future where hope outruns pain, where science replaces uncertainty, and where no family has to endure this fight alone. We will get there — and we will get there together.
⭐ UPDATE: My Mum’s Astron Health Results Are In — And This Confirms Everything We’ve Been Building
Hey Warriors 🙂, I’ve been a bit quieter lately as we’ve been working behind the scenes on something important: My mum completed the Astron Health multi-omic analysis, and the results have finally arrived. Next week we meet Astron’s integrative oncologist to go through the full interpretation — but I want to share the key insights now, because this is something that can empower every person in this community. ⭐ What Astron Revealed About My Mum’s Cancer Her tumour is not random. It runs on specific biological pathways — almost like an engine with identifiable components. The major drivers they identified were: 🔥 FGFR2 → MAPK (Main Growth Engine) 🔥 VEGF / Angiogenesis (Blood Supply) 🔥 MMP15 (Invasion + Tissue Breakdown) 🔥 WNT Signalling (Stem-Cell Survival + Recurrence) 🔥 FANCA Mutation (DNA-Repair Weakness → ROS Sensitivity) And important update: ➡️ CTCs were only 2, which is very low and extremely reassuring. ⭐ This Report Was NOT Essential — But It Was Incredibly Helpful I want to make something clear to everyone: You do NOT need expensive molecular testing to build an effective, multi-pathway protocol. Over the past 1.5 years, I created my mum’s protocol by studying: - cancer signalling pathways - metabolic vulnerabilities - invasion markers - angiogenesis mechanisms - mitochondrial weaknesses - stem-cell biology And what shocked me was this: The Astron findings matched almost exactly what I had already built through research alone. This is HUGE for this community. It proves that: ✔ you can learn what drives your cancer ✔ you can build precision strategies without testing ✔ you can target the actual pathways behind the disease ✔ you do NOT need to shoot in the dark The report confirmed the work — it didn’t create it. ⭐ The One Pathway We Had Not Fully Targeted: RAS → MAPK Astron’s report highlighted one important component: Atorvastatin This inhibits RAS prenylation, which is the top upstream switch that activates the MAPK pathway — the main engine of her tumour.
4 likes • 19d
This is an incredible amount of work, insight, and dedication — and it really shows how much strength and intention you’re putting into your mum’s care. The most powerful part of this post is the reminder that understanding the biology behind a cancer can help people feel less lost and more in control, whether they choose conventional treatments, complementary approaches, or a combination. I also appreciate how you emphasize that advanced testing can offer clarity, but that learning, asking questions, and understanding pathways can empower people even without it. That message alone will help so many who feel overwhelmed. And your closing words are so important — mindset, belief, and the will to push forward genuinely matter. They don’t replace medical care, but they absolutely shape how someone faces the journey. Thank you for sharing this with such honesty and depth. Wishing you, your mum, and everyone in this community continued strength and clarity as you move forward.
1-7 of 7
Dr Elias Sayour
3
38points to level up
@dr-elias-sayour-8292
pediatric neuro-oncologist and immunotherapy researcher developing innovative RNA-based cancer vaccines.”

Active 1h ago
Joined Dec 5, 2025
Powered by