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The US Food and Drug Administration is taking action to protect
consumers from fake cancer treatments. The agency issued 25 letters
this week to 23 US-based companies and 2 foreign individuals warning
them to stop promoting and selling products that fraudulently claim to
prevent and cure cancer. The agency also posted a list of crackpot
“cures” on its Web site, warning consumers to avoid 125 tablets,
creams, teas, black salves, and tonics known to be scams.
“Although promotions of bogus cancer 'cures' have always been
a problem, the Internet has provided a mechanism for them to flourish,”
said Margaret O'K. Glavin, the FDA's associate commissioner for
regulatory affairs. “These warning letters are an important step to
ensure that consumers do not become the victim of false 'cures' that
may cause greater harm to their health.”
The companies were hawking products made with ingredients as
varied as bloodroot, Cat's Claw, and shark cartilage, and touting them
as magic elixirs for treating everything from melanoma to bladder
cancer. Some companies went so far as to claim their products caused
"cancer cells to disappear," "malignant tumors to shrink," and could
"target cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone."
The FDA says these products are not approved to prevent or
treat cancer because they have not been shown to be safe or effective
for this purpose. Some of these products are even harmful.
The crackdown was spurred by consumer complaints, which then
led to an investigation conducted by the FDA, Federal Trade Commission,
and members of the Mexico-United States-Canada Health Fraud Working
Group. The warning letters, which are also posted on the FDA's Web site,
threaten seizure of the illegal products, injunction, and possible
criminal prosecution should the companies fail to correct their
violations.
Earlier this year, the FDA sent 112 similar warnings to
Web-based companies who were falsely promoting cancer treatments.
For more information on this topic, see our guide to Complementary
and Alternative Therapies.
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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