Inventors are injecting bleach into cancer and hope to bring treatment to the United States

According to a statement he shared earlier this month on his alternative, Liu has been in his rental apartment in Beijing, by mixing citric acid with sodium chlorate, showing on his alternative that a “violent explosion” occurred when he made a mistake.
“The explosion obscured my vision,” Liu wrote. “The dense clouds of chlorine dioxide burst out my face, filling my eyes, nose and mouth. I stumbled upon back to the apartment and rushed into the bathroom to flush the liquid from my eyes and respiratory tract. The lungs burned. Later, I would find that the glass on the glass 4-5 times pierced my glass, pierced my per pied per.” Liu also revealed that his 3-year-old daughter was nearby when the explosion occurred.
Liu began preclinical studies of animals in 2016 and then began using highly concentrated solutions to treat human patients. He claims that he has treated 20 patients so far.
When asked to provide evidence to support his claim for effectiveness, Liu had links with many preprints that had not been connected and had not been peer-reviewed. He also shared a $5 million seed round pitch deck at a U.S.-centric startup that will provide injections of chlorine dioxide.
The introduction contains “case studies” of many patients he has treated (including dogs), but there is no detailed scientific data on the deck, but rather an unsettling image of the patient tumor. The deck also contains evidence of therapeutic efficacy, a screenshot of a WhatsApp conversation with patients who are clearly treating hepatic tumors with chlorine dioxide.
“Screenshots of chatting with patients or their doctors are not evidence of efficacy, but this is the only evidence he has provided,” said oncologist Alex Morozov, who oversees hundreds of drug trials at several companies, including Pfizer. “It goes without saying that patients are not treated unless in the context of clinical trials until appropriate research is conducted in peer-reviewed journals and published in prestigious conferences.”
Linked to Liu’s patient, his description of the treatment seemed to undermine his claim on efficacy and raised serious questions about its safety.
“I bought needles online and made chlorine dioxide alone [then] I injected it into my tumors and lymph nodes alone.
The patient had been taking oral solution of chlorine dioxide as an alternative treatment for cancer, but was not satisfied with the results and she contacted Liu via WhatsApp. She had her first injection of chlorine dioxide last spring evening, and she said she suffered a negative impact almost immediately.
“It was good after the injection, but I was awakened from severe pain [like] “I have never experienced it in my life. The pain lasted three to four days,” she said.
She said that despite the pain, she injected herself again two months later and a month later, and she went to China and despite not having medical training, Liu, he injected her with anesthetic to numb her skin.