Overview: Oral Cancer Treatment Protocol Using Natural Compounds
This general oral treatment protocol for cancer focuses on natural medicines and over-the-counter compounds. While it may need to be adjusted for different types of cancer, it offers a comprehensive starting point.
Before following this protocol, readers should review related essays such as Kurosawa Essays™, Kurosawa Koctails and Cancer Control, Kurosawa Koctail™: Cancer Treatment Targets, and Anna’s Story for crucial background context.
The original website features three main cancer protocols: this oral protocol and two topical protocols (topical protocols are not included here). The following section outlines the oral approach in detail.
Why Fat Matters: Carrier for Natural Medicines
Many natural compounds are fat-soluble, not water-soluble. To be effective in the body, these compounds must dissolve into individual molecules — a process called bioavailability.
For example, boiling garlic or chilies in water releases little aroma, but heating them in oil significantly intensifies the scent. This illustrates how fat is a more effective carrier for certain bioactive compounds.
Lymphatic Absorption vs. Liver Metabolism
Fat-soluble compounds are absorbed via the lymphatic system, which bypasses the liver’s metabolic filtering. This avoids the “First Pass Phenomenon,” where the liver may degrade or neutralize many active compounds before they reach target tissues.
Since metastatic cancer cells often spread through the lymphatic system, delivering treatment via this route increases the chances of effectively targeting these cells.
The Role of Coconut Milk in This Protocol
Coconut milk is used as the carrier in this protocol because it:
- Contains both fat and water, supporting the delivery of both fat-soluble and water-soluble compounds
- Enables absorption via the lymphatic system
- Includes lauric acid, known for its toxicity to cancer cells and certain viruses (e.g., HIV, Hepatitis B/C, and herpes)
Using coconut milk is intentional — it maximizes bioavailability and targets delivery.
Oral Protocol: Ingredients and Instructions
Base Formula (Twice Daily)
In ¼ to ½ cup of warm (not boiling) coconut milk, mix:
- 2–3 capsules of paw paw extract (standardized to 12 mg acetogenins)
- 10 grams of palmitic acid (about 1 rounded tablespoon)
- 2,000 IU of vitamin D3 (usually 2 capsules)
Instructions:
- Take on a semi-empty stomach
- Avoid consuming calcium-rich foods (e.g., dairy) 1 hour before or after, as calcium can neutralize palmitic acid
How it works:
- Palmitic acid induces cancer cell death via mitochondrial instability
- Pawpaw deprives cancer cells of ATP
- Vitamin D3 converts to calcitriol, which modulates cancer-related pathways
Supplemental Powders: Daily Use
Mix into ice cream, yogurt, or cold applesauce:
- 2 grams EGCGSyn
- 2 grams ChrySyn
- 2 grams LutiSyn
(1 ½ teaspoons of each daily; double the dose for advanced cancers)
These powders are formulated to enter the lymphatic system directly and target cancer biochemistry by blocking key enzymes and signaling pathways, such as:
- Membrane receptor tyrosine kinases
- Fatty acid synthase (FAS)
- NF-kappaB
- PI3K/AKT
- And others
Night Protocol: Melatonin Timing
Take 30–50 mg of melatonin at 10 PM. For advanced breast or prostate cancers, also take:
- 6 mg at 6 AM
- 6 mg at 2 PM
Melatonin may cause drowsiness at first, but the body typically adapts. It is a powerful, natural anti-cancer agent.
Product Notes and Availability
- Vitamin D3 – Available in 1,000 IU capsules
- Melatonin – Commonly found in 3 mg to 10 mg capsules
- Pawpaw – Look for capsules standardized to 12 mg acetogenins
Credited to: Stephen Martin, Ph.D
Chief Scientist, Grouppe Kurosawa
All Rights Reserved