OutSmart Cancer - Precision Oncology. Less Guess Work. More Life!
OutSmart Cancer is the podcast for people who refuse to settle for one-size-fits-all cancer care. Hosted by Dr. Dino Prato, founder of Envita Medical Centers, this show offers expert insight into the world of precision oncology, integrative treatments, and the hidden factors that make cancer so hard to treat â and what to do about them.
For the last 25 years, Dr. Prato and his team have helped thousands of patients that have failed the largest hospitals utilizing the techniques and technology discussed in this series. Whether youâve been newly diagnosed, are navigating treatment resistance, or want a second opinion grounded in science and compassion, youâll hear empowering discussions on: DNA, RNA, and immune-based targeting, the truth behind standard protocols, what most doctors miss in treatment planning, stories of hope from patients whoâve been told âthereâs nothing more we can doâ
We believe in personalized, data-driven medicine â not protocol-based guessing.
You donât have to fight cancer blindly. You can OutSmart it.
Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before making medical decisions. Results vary and no specific outcomes are guaranteed. Some treatments may not be FDA-approved or available in all locations. Testimonials reflect individual experiences and may not represent typical outcomes. Certain therapies may be offered only at Envitaâs international clinic in Hermosillo, Mexico.
OutSmart Cancer - Precision Oncology. Less Guess Work. More Life!
Cancer Survival Rates Are Misleading | Here's Why
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In January 2026, the American Cancer Society announced a 70% cancer survival rate, a statistic that can be misleading to a cancer patient.
Dr. Prato clarifies the nuances behind this data, emphasizing that while there's progress, it largely reflects early-stage disease and not late-stage cancers. Understanding the true incidence and context of these statistics is vital for public health and effective cancer treatment.
đŻ What Youâll Learn in This Episode
⢠What the 70% cancer survival statistic represents
⢠Why early-stage cancers influence overall survival numbers
⢠How metastatic cancer differs biologically
⢠Why survival rates vary by cancer type and stage
⢠The role of early detection in improving outcomes
⢠How deeper testing may guide treatment decisions
⢠Why individualized approaches are gaining attention
⢠Questions to ask when reviewing cancer statistics
đ Envita Medical Centers â Scottsdale, AZ
đ Learn more: www.envita.com
đ Speak with a care coordinator: 866-830-4576
âStatistics describe populations â but your treatment should be based on your biology.â
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 Envitaâs 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
In January 2026, the American Cancer Society dropped a headline that sounds like victory. Cancer survival just hit 70%. But here's a problem. Yes, there's real progress. But behind that, we're really not talking about late-stage cancers. It can be very misleading. But here's what I want you to understand because this is where patients get misled by the numbers that are technically true but skewed, because that's what they do. They skew the numbers. All cancers combined, yes, 70% improved. But most of that is early stage disease. Because once cancer is metastatic, distant, and more complex, the American Cancer Society will tell you, yes, the results are not going to be 70% across every late-stage cancer. In that community, they tried to say the combined success was around 35%. And for some of the deadliest cancers, I'm going to give you the real number. It's more like 3 to 5% with late-stage cancers. And the reason I tell you this is because the American Cancer Society gets money from Pfizer, like 15 million. They're involved in their own investment funds. I've done other episodes on that. But today, I'm going to unpack the real story behind these headlines. What's the 70% really mean? Why survival numbers can look better without anyone really feeling like they're getting well with late-stage disease? Why early stage cancers can win? Because we found them early, and mainly surgery is doing the job. But late stage cancers still can be brutal and need good targeting. And how precision oncology changes the game with a strategy and targeting, especially for advanced disease. So stay with me to the end because I'm going to give you a short list of questions that can help change your plan when you're working with your doctor. I'm Dr. Dino Prado, founder of the NVITA Medical Center. So for the last 25 years, my team and I have worked with late-stage complex cancers using technology from all over the world to help our patients. And I'm going to go over with you today in this episode why these numbers are skewed and how to really improve on them. Make sure you're working with a doctor before you change anything. So let's get started. The American Cancer Society reported that the five-year relative survival rate for all cancers combined reached 70% for people diagnosed between 2015 and 2021. That's a milestone. But here's the hidden truth: the number is an average across everything. Cancers that are very curable because of early diagnosis and really surgery to the ones that are really late stage and distant. So they're extremely different, with some of them having a survival rate of less than 3%. And that's the problem with the American Cancer Society. I believe they get paid by the big groups and they basically push big pharma, chemotherapy. They're invested in it and they get money from groups like Pfizer. So it's really not this independent body helping people. I've been around for many years. That's my opinion. Doesn't mean they're not doing good things, they're a non-for-profit, but in my opinion, they're really just promoting standard of care, which I believe is not the best care. In our clinical opinion, best care is precision, not just a one size fits all. That's what they tend to push. And the inside to that is that metastatic cancers do not have these great responses. But when you use precision oncology, I believe they can improve tremendously, way above and beyond the averages because you have targeting. And when you have targeting, you really do change the statistics for yourself because two people are not the same. Two patients with the same type and stage of cancer will have totally different markers when you do deep testing. Standard of care, which is promoted by the American Cancer Society, will give you 24 markers, biopsies, tumor markers, and imaging. That's it. And if you're lucky, maybe a DNA test and you got a few hundred markers. I'm talking about a thousand plus markers with RNA transcriptomics, immune spatial biology, immune profiling, and next generation sequencing for DNA and custom building each treatment for each patient, which is precision, not a one size fits all. So here's what people don't realize. These headlines are survival. But what people think they're hearing is we're curing late-stage cancer. And that's absolutely not true in the standard of care. Those are not the same statement. And the American Cancer Society uses these relative survival data to kind of essentially confuse people into thinking everything's getting better. Now here's the trap. When you detect cancer early, survival rates can rise because you found it early. And I've done episodes on early detection. You do screening, it's fantastic. You catch it early, take it out, it's a cure. Fantastic. But when it's metastasized, it's moved throughout the body, or you already failed a round of chemotherapy. Now you're dealing with a very different cancer. So yes, if we're saving lives in early stage, American Cancer Society is right. But in late stage, we have a whole different ball game. And so the headlines can be very misleading. Early stage cancers are more really successful with surgical removal because you got rid of it all. Late stage cancers are a whole nother thing. So let me say this in a simple way early stage cancers, the biggest lifesaver is surgery, not a fantasy drug. And in late stage cancers, things change tremendously. So if you find it early, remove it, clear margins, great. You still need to change diet lifestyle, find causative factors. I think all those things are going to be important for long-term quality of life. But that's where the American Cancer Society is getting these great numbers. And I'm grateful for those. We need them. We want to see people getting well. But in late stage, like stage four, complex cancers, those numbers are not happening. And we can change that. So here's what the public rarely sees: the split between a localized tumor and one that's distant and metastatic. So we can take a choline cancer that's localized and removed, and it's like a 90 plus percent survival and cure rate. Distant, it goes all the way down to 16. Lung is the same thing. If it's localized and you remove it, it could be very high. But then if it's metastatic, it's very low. To the point where many cancers like pancreatic and really complex cancers can be like esophageal and others, bile duct and and all these stomach cancers can be down to 3%, 4%, 5%, 8%. It's very low. So this is why I'm trying to explain the difference between that 70% number is really more like 3 to 5% in late stage cancers. And here's the reason: the headline is dealing with early stage cancers. And with early cancer detection tests, I hope those numbers continue to get better for many patients. But with late stage cancers, those that have spread to organs or have distances and dip more difficult stages, more complexity, those success rates really haven't improved as much as we'd like them to. And the main reason is we're not customizing care. I believe the technology already exists. We're just not customizing it for the patient like we do in precision oncology. You're being stuck in a one size fits all model of the national comprehensive cancer network that is not reviewing all the resistant pathways, immune landscape, microenvironments like things I've talked about. So when people say cancer is being cured now, when they often mean more early stage cancers are being detected and removed, that's the correct statement. So why that matters is because we don't want people to stop treatment thinking their treatment is fantastic. We actually want them to go deeper to get the care they need. So now late stage disease. Standard tools often do something valuable. They buy you time, but they're not necessarily curative like we want them to be because they don't usually involve the full complexity of immunotherapy. Chemo and even smart drugs slows down the growth. Targeted therapy can be powerful, but until you include immunotherapy, you don't get the response you want with long-term care. The immune system is the first and last defense against cancer, which brings us to the most important thing. Are you getting customized immunotherapy? So your results can get out of the 3 to 5% and go much higher, turning cold tumors hot with custom targeting. See, that's what I want to get to because these numbers get people's attention, but they're not really addressing the fact that we lack customized immunotherapy. We have new immunotherapy drugs, but they're not customized. That's what precision oncology focuses on in immune-centric care. Whether it's chemo, SIPI, chemoimmunoprecision injection, directed tumor, or cancer cell vaccines that we built using autoglist adoptive immunotherapies, they're all custom built for the patients and they're based on the patient's individual targets. That's the difference. You get the T cells involved, the natural killer cells, you start in getting the new neo antigens information to the immune system. You see an immunotherapy that can be durable and make a difference. So that's the key question. Are you doing immunotherapy? Are you doing customized immunotherapy? And then these statistical numbers, they don't really count for you because you're doing something that most people are not. Now, let me get this point across. Precision medicine doesn't reject surgery, radiation, and chemo, not at all. But it's customizing the right ones to make the care immune-centric so patients can have a better quality of life and a better response. If you look at studies like iPredict or Winter, they show the power of precision oncology. If you look at the published study we did in 2024, 35 times better outcomes with 43 times better quality of life because of precision oncology. And we can watch that in real time. It's called monitoring the patient in real time before the tumor returns, or to see if the treatment is working with adaptive monitoring. This makes the difference. And so that's why I want to encourage you to look beyond these numbers and start really seeing the difference with precision oncology. When we look at the winter study, it was pivotal because it showed us that you need to go beyond DNA and look at RNA. So that was fantastic because now RNA needs to be targeted. Who's testing for RNA transcriptnomics and building custom treatments? Not many. And yet that's a critical part of our precision oncology mindset. I predict was another study that showed us if you look at the right biomarker matching, you're going to get a better response and disease control because of it. So it helps you slow things down with some of these specialty drugs, which then can allow us to get immunotherapy on board so patients can have better durable responses. So when you put this all together, the answer is we need to look at more late-stage cancers with a precision oncology mindset. And then we can get these numbers to greatly improve. I'm really excited about the responses we're getting with early stage disease, and that's great. But the American Cancer Society is promoting a standard of care. And I really believe that what people need is precision care. They need it customized to their biology, not a one size fits all. So it moves the money away from big pharma and moves it into the care where your doctor can treat you with what you need. Immunal therapy is a critical part of cancer. It makes all the difference and it really helps people get durable responses. And so to get that, you have to ask your doctor the right questions, make sure you're getting the right care, and take ownership of your care. So I hope this was fruitful, give you an idea. Yes, cancer survival is hitting 70% if we catch it early, but the headlines are driven largely by early stage detection. The American Cancer Society, which in my opinion is in the pocket of big pharma, just got 15 million from Pfizer, has their own funds to make money on research and development, and it's standard of care. But if we look at precision oncology with late-stage cancer patients, it can make a world of difference. We don't want to see 3% success rate with pancreatic esophageal or 30 and breasts or whatever the numbers are. We want that to go way up. And when we get the right targeting, we can move out of fear and improve those results. Those don't have to be your statistics. Yours can be based on your specific markers and targeting with deep mapping, smarter sequencing, and a real-time strategy that's custom built for you. That's what we need to encourage. So I know that 90% of you watching haven't subscribed. Help us to get the channel out there so that we can help people learn about precision oncology and not fall into the one size fits all. I hope you found this episode helpful and may the Lord bless you on your journey to healing.