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Glossary of Terms 

Unconventional Cancer Treatments
Appendix B: Glossary of Terms

Acupuncture: A treatment that involves piercing the skin with very fine needles at certain key "acupoints" on the body. Acupuncture is based on the theory that energy flows along specific pathways or "meridians" connecting the organs deep in the bodywith the acupoints on the surface of the body. The flow of energy is believed to be disrupted by disease, and may be restored to equilibrium by acupuncture.

Adjuvant: A substance added to a medical drug that enhances the effect of the active ingredient. In immunology, a substance added to a vaccine that non-specifically enhances its antigenicity. In cancer treatment, "adjuvant chemotherapy" refers to drug therapy used tocomplement surgical removal of the tumor.

Allopathy/allopathic practitioner: Terms used to refer to mainstream medicine its practitioners. The term was coined by Samuel Hahnemann, the founder of homeopathy, originally as a pejorative term, though it has largely lost that connotation.

Anthroposophy: A spiritual tradition encompassing all aspects of life, including medicine, founded by the Austrian-born clairvoyant Rudolf Steiner in the early 20th century.

Autogenous: Self-generated; originated within the body. As applied to bacterial vaccines, the term denotes those vaccines that are made for each specific patient from cultures originating from that patient, as opposed to stock vaccines which are made from standard cultures.

Autoimmune: Referring to a response of the immune system directed against the body's own tissue, an abnormal state (the immune system is designed to response foreign tissue) believed to contribute to a number of chronic diseases (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes mellitus).

Behavioral treatments: Referring to treatments based on physical and mental activities, e.g., exercise, relaxation, qi gong.

Benign: Not malignant; in reference to tumors, lacking the capacity to invade normal tissue and metastasize to distant sites.

Biofeedback: A technique based on the theory that one can learn to regulate one's own internal state, including the autonomic nervous system, which had been thought to be beyond conscious control.

Biopsy: The removal and examination, usually microscopic, of tissue from the living body, performed to establish precise diagnosis.

Blinding: In randomized clinical trials, keeping secret which treatment is assigned to participants. When only the patient is kept unaware of his or her treatment assignment, the study is "single-blind." When the person administering treatment (e.g., the physician) alsois unaware, the study is "double-blind." Additional layers of blinding can be added, as, for example, when a third individual (usually the evaluator of outcomes) also is unaware of treatment assignments.

Brucellosis: A generalized infection involving the reticuloendothelial system caused by species of microorganism genus Brucella, that is contracted through contact with goats, cattle, pigs, and dogs.

Cachexia: In cancer, the progressive wasting that occurs in the late stages of disease, resulting from derangements in various metabolic processes.

Cancer: A tumor with the potential for invading neighboring tissue and/or metastasizing to distant sites, or one that has already done so. Cancers are categorized into major classes by their cell types. See also carcinoma, sarcoma, lymphoma, and leukemia.

Carcinogen: An agent that causes cancer.

Carcinoma: A cancer arising from epithelial cells, including the external epithelia (mainly skin and linings of the gastrointestinal tract, lungs, and cervix) and the internal epithelia that line various glands (e.g., breast, pancreas, thyroid). See cancer.

Chemotherapy: The use of specific chemical agents to arrest the progress of, or eradicate, disease in the body.

Chiropractic: A system of treatment based on the theory that disease is produced by disruptions in the normal flow of a natural life force termed "Innate Intelligence." This life force flows through the nervous system and is disrupted by displacements of the spinalvertebrae called subluxations. Chiropractic manipulation is intended to correct the subluxations allowing the uninterrupted flow of Innate Intelligence to return the body to full health. As practiced currently in the United States, most chiropractic is limited to treating skeletalabnormalities.

Chiropractor: A practitioner of chiropractic.

Chronic: Lingering, lasting, as opposed to acute. A term used to describe persistent disease.

Clinical trial: A scientific research activity undertaken to define prospectively the effect and value of prophylactic, diagnostic, or therapeutic agents, devices, regimens, procedures, etc., applied to human subjects.

Control group: In a randomized clinical trial, the group receiving no treatment or some treatment with which the group receiving experimental treatment is compared. The control treatment is generally a standard treatment, a placebo, or no treatment. Compare experimental group.

Conventional: As used in this report, referring to "mainstream" or "orthodox" medical treatment. These terms are used interchangeably, with no intended distinctions among them.

Cure: (n.) A medical treatment that reliably relieves the patient of the disease. (v.) To heal, to make well, a restoration to health.

Device, medical: Any instrument, apparatus, or similar or related article that is intended to prevent, diagnose, mitigate, or treat disease or to affect the structure or function of the body.

Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO): An alkyl sulfoxide, C2H6OS, a powerful solvent that can dissolve aromatic and unsaturated hydrocarbons, organic compounds, and many other substances. Its biological activities include the ability to penetrate plant and animal tissues and to preserveliving cells during freezing. In mainstream medical treatment, it has been shown efficacious for one condition, interstitial cystitis. It is used in a number of unconventional cancer treatment, applied topically in conjunction with other agents.

Drug: Any chemical or biological substance that may be applied to, ingested by, or injected into humans in order to prevent, treat, or diagnose disease or other medical conditions.

Effectiveness: Same as efficacy (see below) except that it refers to "...average or actual conditions of use."

Efficacy: The probability of benefit to individuals in a defined population from a medical technology applied for a given medical problem under ideal conditions of use.

Encephalomyelitis: An inflammation of the brain and spinal cord that is caused by infection with any of a number of viruses.

Endogenous: Developing or originating within the organism, or arising from causes within the organism.

Enema: A rectal injection for the purpose of clearing out the bowel, or administering drugs or food.

Etiology: The cause or origin (of disease).

Experimental group: In a randomized clinical trial, the group receiving the treatment being evaluated for safety and efficacy. The experimental treatment may be a new technology, an existing technology applied to a new problem, or an accepted treatment about whose safety orefficacy there is doubt. Compare control group.

Health fraud: False or unsupported claims for a medical treatment's effectiveness.

Health: The state of optimal physical, mental, and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity.

Herbalist: A practitioner who prescribes medicaments of herbal compounds; also, one versed in herbal lore.

Herbal treatments: Treatments based on the therapeutic use of plant products.

Homeopathy: A philosophy of treatment founded by Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843), in which micro-doses of medicines are believed to stimulate the body's vital force. Some of these medicines are not known to contain even one molecule of the original compound per dose, but areconsidered by the homeopath to be extremely powerful. The power of these doses is enhanced by "succussion" (violent shaking) performed at various stages in their preparation.

Immune system: A specialized group of body cells and cell products that respond to foreign organisms and substances in the body. The cell products are largely immunoglobulins (antibodies), produced by specialized white blood cells known as lymphocytes. Some lymphocytes andvarious other cells of the immune system directly attack foreign organisms.

Immunity: The condition of being immune; an organism's capacity to resist disease. Immunity may be either innate or acquired. Innate immunity is natural or inherited. Acquired immunity may be active (resulting from either previous exposure to the disease-causing agent orvaccination) or passive (resulting from the transfer of preformed antibodies in immune serum or from mother to fetus).

Immunotherapy: Cancer treatment that produces antitumor effects primarily through the action of natural host defense mechanisms or by the administration of natural mammalian substances. Also called biotherapy and biological therapy.

In vitro: Literally, "in glass," pertaining to a biological process or reaction taking place in an artificial environment, usually a laboratory. Sometimes used to include the growth of cells from multicellular organisms under cell culture conditions.

In vivo: Literally, "in the living," pertaining to a biological process or reaction taking place in a living organism. In biomedical research, used to describe experiments or processes in whole animals (e.g., mice, rats, humans), as opposed to those in a test tube orother experimental system.

IND application (Investigational New Drug application): An application submitted to FDA by any person or company for permission to conduct clinical research on an unapproved drug. If approved, the IND exempts the sponsor from the FDCA prohibition against shipping unapproved drugsin interstate commerce for the study or studies specifically described in the IND application.

Injunction: A prohibitive order issued by a court at the request of one party forbidding another party from committing some act.

Insurance fraud: Intentional misrepresentation of the facts in order to obtain reimbursement from an insurer.

Interstate commerce: Traffic, commercial trading, or the transportation of persons or property between States.

Intravenous: Within a vein or veins.

Laetrile: Trademark name for l-mandelonitrile-B-glucuronic acid.

Leukemia: Cancers of the blood-forming organs, characterized by abnormal proliferation and development of leukocytes (white blood cells) and their precursors in the blood and bone marrow. (See cancer.)

Lymphomas: Cancers of cells of the immune system (i.e., the various types of lymphocytes). See cancer.

Macrobiotics: A lifestyle and diet adapted from the Far East and popularized in America by Michio Kushi and others. Macrobiotics is not primarily a treatment for cancer, but it is adopted by some cancer patients. The principles of the diet consist of balancing the "yin"and "yang" energies of foods. Different types of cancer are considered either yin or yang and the macrobiotic program must be adapted to the particular type of cancer and to individual traits.

Malignant: Referring to tumors that are able to invade neighboring tissue and metastasize to distant sites in the body.

Medical malpractice: Professional misconduct or unreasonable lack of skill by a physician or other health care provider.

Metabolic treatment: A non-specific term used by many unconventional practitioners to refer to a combination of unconventional approaches aimed at improving the physical and mental condition of cancer patients, sometimes including the concept of "detoxification."

Metastasis: The spread of a malignancy to distant body sites by cancer cells transported in blood or lymph circulation.

Microbe: A minute living organism, especially applied to those minute forms of life that are capable of causing disease in animals, including bacteria, protozoa, and fungi.

Microorganism: A minute living organism, usually microscopic, such as bacteria, viruses, molds, yeasts, rickettsiae, and protozoa.

Naprapathy: A system of treatment employing manipulation of connective tissue (ligaments, muscles, and joints) and dietary measures; said to facilitate the recuperative and regenerative processes of the body.

Naturopathy: The healing of disease through natural methods, making use of physical forces such as air, light, water, heat, massage, etc.

Neoplasm: A new growth of tissue in which the growth is abnormal, uncontrolled, and progressive. Malignant neoplasms are also called "tumors" or "cancer."

New Drug: According to the FDA standard it is defined in part as: "any drug...the composition of which is such that such drug is not generally recognized, among experts qualified by scientific training and experience to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of drugs, as safeand effective for use under the conditions prescribed, recommended, or suggested in the labeling thereof." (21 U.S.C. 321(p)(1)).

Nontoxic: In general medical use, referring to treatments without adverse effects.

Nostrum: A medicine of secret composition recommended by its preparer but usually without scientific proof of its effectiveness.

Oncogene: A gene of which one or more mutant forms is associated with cancer formation.

Oncologist: A physician who specializes in the treatment of cancer, usually referring to medical oncology, which is a subspecialty of internal medicine.

Oral: Pertaining to the mouth, taken through of applied in the mouth as an oral medication.

Osteopathy: A system of treatment founded by Andrew Taylor Still (1828-1917) and based on the theory that the body is capable of making its own remedies against disease and other toxic conditions when it is in normal structural relationship and has favorable environmentalconditions and adequate nutrition. It utilizes generally accepted physical, medicinal, and surgical methods of diagnosis and therapy, while placing chief emphasis on the importance of normal body mechanics and manipulative methods of detecting and correcting faulty structure.

Palliative treatment: Treatment designed to provide relief from a disease or condition (e.g., to provide comfort or reduce pain), but not to cure the disease or condition.

Pathogen: A specific causative agent (e.g., a virus or bacterium) of a disease.

Pathogenesis: The mode of origin and development of a disease process.

Pathology: The scientific study of the cause of disease and of the associated structural and functional changes that are the result of disease.

Peptide: Compounds consisting of two or more amino acids linked together by a chemical process that produces one molecule of water for each joining of one amino acid to another. Peptides are the building blocks of proteins.

Pharmacologic treatments: Treatments based on the administration of chemical agents (other than biological chemicals).

Physician: An authorized practitioner of medicine, as one graduated from a college of medicine or osteopathy and licensed by the appropriate board.

Placebo effect: A beneficial effect of a medical technology that cannot be attributed to properties of the technology itself. Often considered psychologically-engendered well-being or improvement in a condition brought on by the belief of the patient that the technology itself isbeneficial.

Placebo: A drug or procedure with no intrinsic therapeutic value. In a randomized clinical trial, a placebo is given to patients in control groups as a means to blind investigators and patients as to whether an individual is receiving the experimental or control treatment.

Pleomorphic: A term used in microbiology to refer to bacteria that change in size and shape during their life cycle (also called "cell wall deficient" bacteria).

Prognosis: A forecast as to the probable outcome of an attack of disease; the prospect as to recovery from a disease as indicated by the nature and symptoms of the case.

Prophylaxis: The prevention of disease and preservation of health.

Quackery: A slang term used to describe medical treatments that are falsely described to be effective.

Radiotherapy: The treatment of disease by ionizing radiation.

Random allocation: In a randomized clinical trial, allocation of individuals to treatment groups such that each individual has an equal probability of being assigned to any group.

Randomized clinical trial (RCT): An experiment designed to test the safety and efficacy of a medical technology in which people are randomly allocated to experimental or control groups, and outcomes are compared.

Recurrence: In cancer, the regrowth of tumor tissue after all evidence of it had apparently been eradicated either by surgery or other means (e.g., radiotherapy). A recurrence may occur at the site of the original tumor or elsewhere in the body, as metastatic disease.

Regression (or remission): In relation to cancer, regression refers generally to the shrinking of a tumor by other than surgical means. A complete regression occurs when a tumor that was at one time measurable disappears completely. Partial regression describes the conditionwhere the measurable tumor is reduced by at least 50 percent in size.

Safety: A judgment of the acceptability of risk in a specified situation.

Sarcoma: A cancer of supporting tissue of the body (e.g., bone, blood vessels, fibrous tissue, muscle). See cancer.

Spontaneous Regression (or remission): In cancer, the disappearance (complete regression) or diminishing by at least 50 percent in size (partial regression) of a tumor without any identifiable cause (i.e., without medical intervention).

Staging: In oncology, an attempt to define the true extent of cancer in its three compartments, TNM. These refer to the primary tumor (T), regional nodes (N), and metastasis (M). Subscripts ranging from 0 to 4 are used to denote size and degree of involvement; 0 indicatesundetectable, and 1,2,3, and 4 a progressive increase in size or involvement.

Subcutaneous: Beneath the skin.

Systemic: Pertaining to or affecting the body as a whole.

Terminal: In cancer prognosis, forecasting death due to the growth and progression of the cancer.

Third-party payer: Private insurers or government insurance programs that pay providers for medical care given to patients they insure, either directly or by reimbursing patients for payments they make.

Toxicity: Referring to medical treatments, the degree to which they produce unwanted, adverse effects.

Treatment IND: A provision of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act that allows patients with life-threatening or serious diseases to obtain certain drugs that are in late stages of clinical testing, but have not yet been approved by FDA for marketing.

Tumor: A new growth of tissue in which the multiplication of cells is uncontrolled and progressive. Also called neoplasm.

Unapproved drug: A drug that has not been approved by the FDA for marketing in the United States.

Unconventional Cancer Treatment: As used in this report, unconventional cancer treatments include the wide variety of treatments that fall outside the bounds of mainstream medicine. Other terms used by proponents to describe all or some of these treatments include: alternative,complementary, non-toxic, holistic, natural, and non-invasive. Those used by the sharpest of critics include: unproven, questionable, dubious, quackery, and fraudulent. The term unorthodox is used at times by both proponents and critics.

Vaccine: A preparation of living, attenuated, or killed bacteria or viruses, fractions thereof, or synthesized antigens identical or similar to those found in the disease-causing organisms, that is administered to produce or increase immunity to a particular disease.

Visualization: The use of mental imagery to create positive beliefs that will activate the body's defenses against disease. In one type of visualization, patients are taught to see their cancer cells as vulnerable and disorganized, and their treatment as powerful and directedonly at the cancer cells, sparing the healthy cells. They are also instructed to see their immune systems flushing away the cancer cells.

Unconventional Cancer Treatments
Appendix B: Glossary of Abbreviations

AAM: Alliance for Alternative Medicine
ACCC: Association of Community Cancer Centers
ACS: American Cancer Society
ACSH: American Council on Science and Health
ADS: Agua del Sol
AIDS: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
AMA: American Medical Association
AQA: American Quack Association
ASCO: American Society for Clinical Oncology
BC/BS: Blue Cross/Blue Shield
BCBSA: Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
BCBSNJ: Blue Cross/Blue Shield of New Jersey
BCG: bacillus Calmette-Guerin
BP: Blocking Protein
BPF: Blocking Protein Factor
CACR: Center for Alternative Cancer Research
CAG: Clinical Appraisal Group
Caltech: California Institute of Technology
CANAH: Coalition for Alternatives in Nutrition and Healthcare
CCS: Cancer Control Society
CDC: Centers for Disease Control (Public Health Service, DHHS)
CFCM: Committee for Freedom of Choice in Medicine
CHAMPUS: Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services
CIS: Cancer Information Service (NCI)
CPT: Current Procedural Terminology (4th edition)
CRS: Cancer Response System (ACS)
CT: computed tomography
DATTA: Diagnostic and Therapeutic Technology Assessment program (AMA)
DHHS: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
DMF: Drug Master File
DMSO: dimethyl sulfoxide
DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid
DNCP: Diet, Nutrition, and Cancer Program (NCI)
DO: doctor of osteopathy
DP: Deblocking Protein
DPF: Deblocking Protein Factor
ECaP: Exceptional Cancer Patients
ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
ERISA: Employee Retirement Income Security Act
FACT: Foundation for Advancement in Cancer Therapies
FAM: Foundation for Alternative Medicine
FDA: Food and Drug Administration (DHHS)
FDCA: Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
FTC: Federal Trade Commission
FTCA: Federal Trade Commission Act
GAO: General Accounting Office (U.S. Congress)
GRAS: generally recognized as safe
HCFA: Health Care Financing Administration (DHHS)
HCG: human chorionic gonadotropin
HIV: human immunodeficiency virus
HNF: Hans Nieper Foundation
HPB: Health Protection Branch, Health and Welfare Canada
HTLV-III: human T-cell lymphotropic virus, type III (formerly, human T-cell leukemia virus, type III) (see HIV)
IACVF: International Association of Cancer Victors and Friends
IAT: Immuno-Augmentative Therapy
IATPA: IAT Patients' Association
ICD: International Classification of Diseases (9th revision)
IL-2: interleukin-2
IND: Investigational New Drug
IRB: Institutional Review Board
IRC: Immunology Researching Centre, Inc. (Bahamas)
IRF: Immunology Research Foundation (Great Neck, NY)
JCAHO: Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations
LAV: lymphadenopathy-associated virus
MAC: Multispecialty Advisory Committee (BCBSNJ)
MCHSF: Medicare Continuous History Sample File
MD: medical doctor
MNP: Medical Necessity Program (BCBSA)
MSKCC: Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
NACAA: National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators
NAPRALERT: Natural Product Data Base
NCAHF: National Council Against Health Fraud
NCI: National Cancer Institute (NIH)
NDA: new drug application
NDGA: nordihydroguaiarectic acid
NHCAA: National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association
NHF: National Health Federation
NHL: non-Hodgkins lymphoma
NIH: National Institutes of Health (DHHS)
NK: natural killer (cells)
NRC: National Research Council (National Academy of Sciences)
OPMC: Office of Professional Medical Conduct (State of New York)
OTA: Office of Technology Assessment (U.S. Congress)
PAC: Pharmaceutical Advertising Council
PAHO: Pan American Health Organization
PC: Progenitor cryptocides
PDQ: Physician Data Query (NCI)
PDT: photodynamic therapy
PNI: psychoneuroimmunology
PRO: utilization and quality control peer review organization
RCT: randomized clinical trial
RDA: recommended daily allowance
RICO: Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act
SEER: Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (NCI)
TA1: Tumor Antibody 1
TA2: Tumor Antibody 2
TC: Tumour Complement
TEC: Technology Evaluation and Coverage Program (BCBSA)
TIF: tumor induction factor
TNF: tumor necrosis factor
UCLA: University of California at Los Angeles
USCA: U.S. Court of Appeals
USP: U.S. Pharmacopeia
USP DI: U.S. Pharmacopeial Dispensing Information
USPS: U.S. Postal Service

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