Proven Cancer Killer Being Blacklisted in America?
It may be one of the most powerful natural cancer killers ever discovered.
It’s a compound from a strange mountain mushroom… and scientists have watched it destroy cancer cells and shrink tumors right before their eyes.
It didn’t matter what type of cancer they tested it on… it worked over and over again.
But this natural cancer destroyer is being actively blacklisted in America.
And if Big Pharma and mainstream medicine have their way, you’re never going to hear a word about it (we’ll show you the proof).
But we’re going to share the facts – and the science – that they won’t…
Including one way you can start putting this natural cancer destroyer to work for you.
In the mountains of Asia, an odd-looking mushroom grows on mulberry trees.
It resembles a horse’s hoof – and has been given the nickname black hoof mushroom (Phellinus linteus).
Scientists have discovered within that mushroom a powerful compound called hispolon that is like Kryptonite to cancer. It fights cancer cells in at least four different ways, by:
- Creating oxidative stress within the cells.
- Disrupting pathways cancer needs to grow and survive.
- Damaging mitochondrial function, starving cancer cells of the energy they need.
- And activating enzymes that force cancer cells to kill themselves through a process known as apoptosis.
Sounds pretty good, right?
Chinese researchers certainly thought so back in 2014, when they tested hispolon on two different types of lung cancer cells – and watched it destroy them both.
But that was just the beginning of hispolon’s anti-cancer journey.
In 2017, a Taiwanese research team found that hispolon kept cervical cancer cells from spreading…
Then, in 2019, a different research team watched hispolon kill prostate cancer cells…
In 2021, scientists found hispolon killed cancer cells and shrunk tumors in mice with brain cancer…
And in 2023, researchers discovered that hispolon forces oral cancer cells to commit suicide.
Really, I could go on… like I said, it has worked against every cancer scientists have tested.
We’ve known that hispolon kills cancer for more than a decade. You’d think the drug companies or health authorities would be chomping at the bit to bring it to the American public.
Not so fast…
There is not a single clinical trial registered in the United States right now to study hispolon as a cancer treatment.
It’s being blacklisted… shut out… because it can’t be patented and sold for huge profits.
If a synthetic prescription drug was delivering the types of results hispolon has delivered in lab and animal studies, Big Pharma would be pumping billions into it.
Instead, hispolon is practically unknown in America… and we’re never told about it.
Because hispolon is not available as a stand-alone drug or supplement in America, the best way to try it is through black hoof mushroom.
You won’t get the same concentrated dose. But companies like Ampext and Nootropics Depot both sell black hoof mushroom in a supplement form.
Black hoof mushroom has been shown to be incredibly safe – but especially if you’re being treated for cancer, always discuss your supplements with your doctor.
To taking the fight to cancer,
Ray Thatcher
Research Director, Health Sciences Institute
Sources:
- Hsin MC, Hsieh YH, Wang PH, Ko JL, Hsin IL, Yang SF. Hispolon suppresses metastasis via autophagic degradation of cathepsin S in cervical cancer cells. Cell Death Dis. 2017 Oct 5;8(10):e3089. doi: 10.1038/cddis.2017.459. PMID: 28981104; PMCID: PMC5680581.
- Liao KF, Chiu TL, Chang SF, Wang MJ, Chiu SC. Hispolon Induces Apoptosis, Suppresses Migration and Invasion of Glioblastoma Cells and Inhibits GBM Xenograft Tumor Growth In Vivo. Molecules. 2021 Jul 26;26(15):4497. doi: 10.3390/molecules26154497. PMID: 34361649; PMCID: PMC8348445.
- Masood M, Rasul A, Sarfraz I, Jabeen F, Liu S, Liu X, Wei W, Li J, Li X. Hispolon induces apoptosis against prostate DU145 cancer cells via modulation of mitochondrial and STAT3 pathways. Pak J Pharm Sci. 2019 Sep;32(5(Supplementary)):2237-2243. PMID: 31894049.
- Qiuge Wu, Yan Kang, Hui Zhang, Hongmin Wang, Yuanhua Liu, Jing Wang (2014). The anticancer effects of hispolon on lung cancer cells. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. Volume 453, Issue 3.
- Yang WE, Chen YT, Su CW, Chen MK, Yeh CM, Chen YL, Tsai MY, Yang SF, Lin CW. Hispolon induces apoptosis in oral squamous cell carcinoma cells through JNK/HO-1 pathway activation. J Cell Mol Med. 2023 May;27(9):1250-1260. doi: 10.1111/jcmm.17729. Epub 2023 Mar 27. PMID: 36967712; PMCID: PMC10148051.


