Member:
Professor Xu, I remember you said after the operation: It may be a good thing for doctors to have cancer, because they can know what treatment is the best, which treatment is harmless but not necessarily useful, and which treatment is not beneficial but harmful. Did you receive chemotherapy after the operation?
Xu Kecheng:
I did not receive chemotherapy after the operation. It is not that chemotherapy is not good, but the cancer cells of my cancer are naturally not willing to accept chemotherapy. Whether a treatment method is effective or not depends on whether the patient survives. One month after I received combined immunotherapy, in May 2008, I went to Shanghai with Dr. Kong. I rented a taxi and visited 38 families for 3 days. The result surprised me: 38 patients were all advanced patients who were "trying to save a dying horse". After 10 or 20 years, only 5 patients died of "cancer recurrence". The amazing thing is that we followed up with two gastric cancer patients, both of whom underwent surgery in Shanghai Renji Hospital, both of whom had metastasis, both of whom did not receive chemotherapy, and both of whom only received combined immunotherapy, and both of them have survived for more than 15 years.
Member:
You are doing a great service to us cancer patients by visiting patients so hard!
Xu Kecheng:
This is the duty of doctors. In fact, to visit patients, one must visit them “thoroughly”. That day, we went to the home of one of the patients with gastric cancer mentioned above. When we entered the house, the patient was very unhappy and ignored us. What should we do? We found out that her husband had a car accident a week ago. I immediately offered a stick of incense and a gift money in front of her husband’s portrait. She was happy and showed us all the information. She had abdominal lymph node metastasis, but now she has completely recovered. It’s amazing. We were all happy and took pictures together.


Visiting cancer patients receiving combined immunization in Shanghai and Zhejiang
(To be continued)