As the inventor of intratumoral chlorine dioxide injections, I’m excited to shar

Today (July 1st), we received news of the world’s first case of intratumoral injection of chlorine dioxide for breast cancer treatment. On May 5th, a British breast cancer patient, under my guidance, underwent an intratumoral injection for her breast cancer. At that time, she described her tumor as being 7x6 cm in size, with two lymph node metastases. I recommended injecting high-concentration chlorine dioxide (above 3000 ppm) at 10% of the tumor volume. She reported injecting 6 ml into the primary tumor and 1 ml into the metastatic sites, but due to unbearable pain, she couldn’t reach the suggested amount.

By early June, she noted that the tumor had softened and reduced in size. Today, she informed me that the tumor now measures 5x4 cm. I estimate that the tumor has shrunk by about 70%. Any clinician with experience in clinical trials would find this reduction ratio astonishing.

Was the “unbearable pain” from the cancer tumor or from the injection? Are chlorine dioxide injections directly into tumors painful? Please deal with this topic more fully.