What is the Effectiveness of Fenbendazol and Cancer?

Executive Summary

  • Fenbendazol is a drug with nearly identical uses as Ivermectin.
  • The question addressed in this article is whether fenbendazol is helpful against cancer.

Introduction

In a previous article titled How Ivermectin Is Useful for Treating Cancer, we covered the evidence for the benefits of Ivermectin for cancer. Here, we use fenbendazol for cancer.

What is Fenbendazol?

This description is from Wikipedia.

fenbendazol is a broad spectrum benzimidazole anthelmintic used against gastrointestinal parasites including: giardia, roundworms, hookworms, whipworms, the tapeworm genus Taenia (but not effective against Dipylidium caninum, a common dog tapeworm), pinworms, aelurostrongylus, paragonimiasis, strongyles, and strongyloides that can be administered to sheep, cattle, horses, fish, dogs, cats, rabbits, most reptiles, freshwater shrimp tanks as planaria and hydra treatments, as well as seals.

An anthelmintic is a class of antiparasitics that kills the parasite but leaves the host unharmed. Anthelmintics are disadvantaged because parasites have evolved to resist this class of antiparasitics. Recall that parasites like viruses are much simpler organisms than we are used to — so simple and often tiny that they can’t be seen. Viruses are even more straightforward, lacking any biological machinery to be considered “alive.” Both can evolve quickly, and most parasites have become resistant to anthelmintics. This is explained in the following quotation.

Results in sheep and goats since 2010 reveal an average prevalence of resistance to benzimidazoles of 86%, macrocyclic lactones except moxidectin 52%, levamisole 48%, and moxidectin 21%. – Wikipedia

However, this is unimportant in this article as we are investigating using an anthelmintic, fenbendazol, against cancer.

Only for Animals?

Fenbendazol is an extremely popular antiparasitic sold under too many names, as covered at drugs.com. Panacur is one brand of fenbendazol that can be purchased online.

Now the medical establishment and their controlled media will say that because this drug is used on animals, only illiterate hillbillies would use such a thing on themselves. The problem with this false claim is the large number of drugs used for humans and animals. Furthermore, the FDA approved the most recent covid booster after being tested on only eight mice. (the results were hidden from the public)

Test Drugs on Mammals, Use the Same Drugs for Humans and Animals, — but Don’t Use Veterinary Drugs on Humans?

Why are drugs continually tested on mice if humans should never take the same medicine as animals? Shockingly, mice are mammals also (who knew?). And this “mice conspiracy” goes quite deep. Suppose the medical establishment’s claims against drugs used for animals will continue. In that case, they need to stop using mice in experiments, as all the data accumulated from these studies is irrelevant. There are millions of mice around the world in labs being experimented on today because they are “cheap” and reproduce quickly. They are considered the lowest cost and most accessible to manage “substitute humans.”

This video explains why mice are used in medical research. 

The video makes the argument that medical research is extremely firmly mice based — using around 20 to 30 million mice a year — but that many of the mice studies end up not translating to humans. However, some discrepancies in outcomes between mice and human trials are undoubtedly due to the cheaper mice-based studies having fewer controls. Human problems cannot be approved in the US until testing is performed on mice. 

The medical establishment’s inconsistent or hypocritical stance (using mice for testing but then stating that there is a clear dividing line between veterinary and human drugs — even though many medications are used for animals and humans) is simple. The medical establishment does not want a cross-over in selling veterinary and human medicines; veterinary drugs are sold inexpensively, while human medications are not.

So when testing new drugs, they use animals like crazy, but when selling drugs, they put up an illogical firewall; this firewall is unrelated to what is scientifically true but is simply because it is profit-maximizing to do so.

Antiparasitics Have a Cross Over to Fighting Cancer

When Ivermectin was first discovered, cultured, and modified from an original bacteria found on a golf course in Japan — it proved remarkably effective against parasites.