OutSmart Cancer - Precision Oncology. Less Guess Work. More Life!

Why Viral Cancer Cure Claims Spread So Fast (And Why You Should Be Skeptical)

• Dr. Dino Prato - Envita Medical Centers • Season 1 • Episode 95

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0:00 | 13:30

In early 2026, social media buzzed with claims of a 100% success rate for free cancer vaccines, raising hopes for patients eager for a medical breakthrough.

This news highlights how cancer treatment can become a tool in geopolitics and global politics, as nations vie for influence. It's crucial to understand these social media trends and approach such information with critical thinking.

šŸŽÆ What You’ll Learn in This Episode
• Why viral ā€œ100% cureā€ headlines spread so quickly online
• The difference between early research and clinical treatment
• How cancer vaccines and mRNA therapies are being studied
• Why cancer remains biologically complex and individualized
• What multi-omics testing means in oncology
• Why tumor genetics and immune markers matter
• How precision oncology evaluates treatment options
• Why patients should evaluate headlines carefully before making treatment decisions

šŸ“ Envita Medical Centers – Scottsdale, AZ
🌐 Learn more:
www.envita.com
šŸ“ž Speak with a care coordinator: 866-830-4576


ā€œCancer headlines move fast — but treatment decisions should always be guided by data.ā€

Disclaimer
This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your licensed healthcare provider before making any medical decisions. Individual results will vary, and Envita Medical Centers does not guarantee outcomes. Some treatments discussed may not be FDA-approved or available in all locations. Testimonials are shared with patient consent and may not reflect typical results. Do not delay or disregard professional medical care based on the podcast's content. Certain treatments may be available only at Envita’s international clinic in Hermosillo, Mexico. No specific outcomes are promised or implied.
________________________________________
Outcomes Disclaimer
The results referenced from Envita's Precision Cancer Care: 35-Fold Improvement in Response Rates are from a retrospective analysis of 199 late-stage cancer patients treated at Envita Medical Centers between 2021 and 2023, as published in the Journal of Cancer Therapy. These outcomes are not guaranteed and will vary based on individual factors such as cancer type, stage, genetics, immunity and prior treatments. Any comparisons to standard care or clinical trials are based on published data and internal analysis, not head-to-head studies. Individual results will vary.

You can read the full peer-reviewed study at: 

https://www.scirp.org/journal/paperinformation?paperid=132493

SPEAKER_00

100% success rate, free cancer vaccines, ready for patients now. That's what went viral on social media on February 2026. And if you're a cancer patient or a loved one or someone with cancer in your life, those words hit you like oxygen. Like maybe finally someone solved it. But here's what I need you to understand. When countries compete for global power, cancer patients become a propaganda tool. Between February 1st and the 8th, just here in 2026, the internet exploded with cancer vaccine breakthroughs. Headlines from multiple countries. Russia, 100% effective, ready now, free for everyone. United States, Moderna coming out with their drug, talking about how they're getting great results with the new mirna drug. I did an episode on that, you may want to watch it. Cancer vaccine shows sustainable benefits. Spain that had a complete new strategy to eliminate pancreatic cancer, but it was in mice. Korea coming out with their breakthroughs all in the same week. And here's the backdrop no one's talking about. Just days earlier, January 22nd, 2026, the United States completed its withdrawal from the World Health Organization. The same week these headlines dropped. Russian nuclear arms treaty expired on February 5th, and Trump rejected Putin's offer to extend it. So global health coordination was fractured. Geopolitical tensions were rising. And by the way, we don't share a whole lot of data with Russia on scientific breakthroughs. And that's also a problem because it is a global problem, and doctors should be working together to help patients. And suddenly, every major power came out with cancer cures they wanted to announce. You think that's a coincidence? It's not. There is a global war right now for who can achieve the best treatment. Because when the world is fractured, medicine gets weaponized, not with tanks, but with hope. Yes, there's some good stuff going on around the world, but what's real science versus what's national branding, like Moderna coming out and then pulling their studies out of the US to go do them in Europe with their phase three studies? What's really going on? Why even the best vaccine approach isn't enough? And why precision oncology is required at every level? Meaning no matter what the data is, it has to be custom built for each patient. Because if you fall with this propaganda, you might skip the real treatment, the one that can really help you and make a difference. I'm Dr. Dino Prado, founder of NVITA Medical Center. So the last 25 years, my team and I have helped thousands of patients who have failed some of the top cancer hospitals across the country using immune-centric targeting, technologies from around the world to help patients. And I've seen what happens when patients fall into these propagandas. They call us, they're like, Do you have this treatment? Is it available yet? They don't really understand that a lot of this is propaganda and there's some great things happening, but we got to reel it into the reality. And by the time they realize that that isn't a cure, time has gone by, they've stuck in their standard of care and they failed. So I want you to know that we need to change the way people think of cancer. Don't change anything until you talk to a doctor. So let's get into this episode. When global systems fracture, country self-strengths. Here's what's happened in the span of the last several weeks. January 22nd, 2026, the United States officially completed its withdrawal from the World Health Organization, the global body that coordinates health emergencies and medical standards. February 2nd, the World Health Organization executive board met to consider the implications of that U.S. withdrawal. And on February 5th, 2026, New Start, the last remaining US Russian nuclear arms control treaty expired. Trump rejected Putin's offer to voluntarily extend the limits for one more year. So if you felt like the internet suddenly exploded with cancer vaccines and cures and breakthroughs and headlines all over social media from multiple countries, and I've been getting emails on, you're not the only one. That's not science. It is some science that's in there, but that's really a narrative warfare. And when major powers are competing for influence, countries don't just flex military strength. They try to flex their scientific knowledge and their breakthroughs. And nothing moves faster than the word cancer and cure that moves so quick on the internet. The pattern you need to recognize is really simple because there is some good stuff happening, and I'm going to show you. But here's what you need to recognize in this geopolitical propaganda is real science does exist. Yes, we're getting some new technology. You're going to hear there's a lot going on in cancer cell vaccines, m irNA work, a lot of other targeting all around the immune system. And social media distorts it a bit because you hear things like 100% cure. That's already a red flag. We don't, when you see that, you know you're not really dealing with people that treat cancer. It's just to get the attention of the public. But there is technology that's that is emerging. The reality doesn't match the hype, and that's when you know it isn't real. And that's exactly what happened there on February. So let me walk you through a little bit of each headline and show you what was going on and what was exaggerated and what I think is really just propaganda. But there are things in there that are good. So, first of all, here's what went viral on social media about Russia. Russia came out with an enteromix, which is basically a cancer cell vaccine. It said, ready for use, free for everyone, 100% success rate, curious of all cancer. Sounds incredible, right? But here's the fact when you check it, there's not a lot, not enough data on it. And yes, there are some powerful tools happening here on these cancer cell vaccines. A little bit actually happening there, a little bit happening in in uh Spain, a little bit happening in different parts of the world, even here in the United States. And so when you see that, you kind of know it's a little bit of a red flag. There's something they have. Russians do phenomenal research, they just don't share their information with the US and vice versa. It's sad because we really are one world and we're all working to save people's lives. But some of the work coming out of Russia is fantastic. Some of the work coming out of the United States, it's amazing. You start combining that, we're gonna get some incredible technology. But cancer is heterogeneous, meaning two people with the same type and stage of cancers are gonna have different targets when you test. In the standard healthcare model, they don't test. It's just tumor markers, imaging, biopsy, maybe some DNA biomarkers, and you get some drugs and you're done. But when you start looking at a thousand plus markers, RNA transcriptonomics, immune spatial biology, immune profiling, you'll see that patients have very different markers, same type and stage of cancer and different markers. And so we need to adapt to that. That's where the precision oncology comes in. We need to find the targets for each person. Even if we have newer technology, it still has to be the right match. It may not be the right match. You got to be careful. When I see something that says ready for patients now, it's kind of a red flag because every patient's different. Even if a treatment hasn't made it all the way through the clinical trials, they still may have targets for patients, in my clinical opinion, but it may not be ready for everyone. And so that's pushed out across the world without really doing the work to see if that's the right target for an individual. The other thing I look as another red flag was the word free for everyone, because I've just not seen that in oncology. Oncology, there's nothing free. These drugs are expensive to develop. There's a lot of work in that space. And when you see the word free, everybody cure, those are all red flags. And finally, we want to look at the published data, not because the published data means everything, it's because it tells us about the mechanism of action of a drug. When I look at published data, I look to see yes, if it's peer-reviewed, but I go beyond the results. The results sometimes are skewed. Pharmaceutical companies are classic for skewing results, let alone on social media. But I don't look at that. What I look at is what are the targets and what are the markers that this drug has been working on? Then I look at the side effects and I look to see, wait a minute, what other drugs, natural agents, combinations actually can work on those same targets without the side effects? What are the minimal doses to get that benefit without the side effects? And I reverse engineer. That's the way I've always thought about it over 25 years. But when you know what the right targets are for patients, there's many ways to approach care. You're not stuck with one thing. So there's a lot going on in the world. And here's the uncomfortable truth Russia needs soft power wins with NATO tensions rising, sanctions continuing, the geopolitical isolation. So we we hope there's a cure to cancer and it's easy and everybody can access it, but it's usually not the case. And so we want to get to the science and we don't want to just put out some data because I believe Russians do phenomenal work and they have a lot of good science, and we need to connect with that science more about how to use those immunotherapies with patients. In the US, we had Moderna that partnered with Merck. Now, Merck has all the money and international connections in the world on this new mRNA vaccine, V940. Now, you can watch my other episode on that, which I went into in great detail. But it's an immunotherapy. It takes like a 34-picture snapshot of the neo antigens and tries to train that to your body. Several things can go wrong. Moderna has lost trust in the United States after the last large global virus epidemic that occurred. So they're trying to win that back and they're moving their studies outside. And they partnered with Merck that sells Keytruda, one of the top immunotherapy drugs in the world, to try to move into phase three and really advance that. You had a number of different things. So Moderna kind of flexed its muscles. And if you notice, they just came out on the news recently and it was covered in all major news outlets. It sounds amazing, right? But there's other things going on here that we need to pay attention to. The customization for the patient, the fact that the therapy is not a one-hit wonder and isn't going to work on everybody. They're starting in one area in melanoma with the goal of expanding it to other cancers, but there's a lot of little faulties in it. And I've actually built a podcast on that that you can watch specifically on the Moderna vaccine, because this is what I mean is they're pushing out the media with the excitement. There is some promising data, but more important than that is how is that going to work on an individual? What are the right targets for each person? This doesn't mean that the science is bad. I'm not saying Moderna's approach is wrong, but I'm saying they have a drug and it needs to be seen through the filter of what a patient needs and what its weaknesses are. And then we can custom build it if it is even part of a treatment plan for a patient in the future. Because there could be other problems with that, as I've mentioned in my other podcast. So we want to look at everybody's full genomics, transcriptomics, immune spatial biology, and then do adaptive monitoring to see if the treatment is working or not. And this is called N of one. It's not a one size fits all. And so a lot of these hype cycles, they can really move fast on the internet. And patients get really excited. They reach out to us and say, can you get this? Do you have this? If we looked at the Spain study, which you can watch my other podcast I did on the Spain pancreatic cancer piece, the real brilliance wasn't that they just used a three drug approach, a triple combination, but it was a strategy. And when you have testing, you can do more than that. You can see all of the escape routes affect them. And so this moves us to precision oncology with the idea that targeting is better than the one size fits all. You see, the world has understood something. The standard cancer treatments aren't working so well for late-stage cancers. And if anything, they manage people, but not with good quality of life. And as we have seen, 90% of these drugs aren't even a good match for patients when we do in-depth testing. So people are looking elsewhere to try to find something to help them. And what they really need is precision targeting. And so when you see the social media splash out with cures and easy results, a new treatment, a new this, what you have to realize most of it is centered around the immune system, which I've told you, the first and last defense against cancer is your immune system and how to target that. And there are many ways to build cancer cell vaccines, use on and off label drugs, the right targets, diet and lifestyle, and many things to help us rebuild our immune system. It's not a miracle cure, it's about getting out of dogma and getting into data, letting the data of what your cancer blueprint is guide the treatment and not just a few tests. We're talking about a thousand plus markers, not like 24 and maybe a biomarker test. So the more data you have, the more you can treat with precision. So yes, there's a war going on right now to win the social media, the brilliance of new scientific research. And I'm really excited. But don't fall for it because until you know what your targets are, you might need a simple off-label drug. You might need an integrative combination. You may need an on-label drug that wasn't even prescribed for you at the right dose. You might need to go straight to tumor to create an immune system reaction so your body can treat the cancer. See, there's so many tools that we use in precision oncology that already address a lot of these. And these technologies are so new and being developed, they could be exciting in the future, but it's not going to be a one size fits all because, again, we use targeting and testing to link the person to the right treatment. So I thought I'd do an episode on this to talk again about the importance of precision oncology, deep multi-omics mapping, deep immunotherapy mapping, and helping patients finally win. And this is what we see in our clinical work. When people have better testing and better targets, they do far better. And some of this new technology that's emerging, we'll keep our eyes open on it because as it comes out, we know what their mechanisms are and we see where they fit on our patients. That's why we've been way ahead of the curve in care. By the time you see standard of care pick up treatments that are latest and breaking, can take seven or ten or plus more years. We saw that with PD1 inhibitors. We were using it for a decade before it even became popular. And the key is testing. Not everybody's a candidate. And you need to know which of the therapies, which combinations that already exist that patients don't have. So you know what the real headline is for me? The real headline is precision oncology uses a thousand plus data points and has a huge toolbox of treatment you're not getting. You're not getting the immune system care you need, you're not getting the tumor shrinkage you need, you're not getting the blocking of resistance you need because you don't have the right detailed testing. That's where we need to start. Not just the propaganda of a brand new drug or a brand new technology, because it's not just a technology, it's matching the current treatments we have on, off label, integrative, repurposed drugs that are combined for patients to help them heal and be well that they're not accessing. So I hope you like this episode and share this with others because as you subscribe, we get to change the world's understanding of oncology to precision, not just a one size fits all model that everybody's using, like the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Guidelines, but custom care that's built just for each individual. So I hope you found this episode helpful and may the Lord bless you on your journey to healing.