Liu has been making the answer in his rented condominium in Beijing by mixing citric acid with sodium chlorite, in keeping with an account he shared earlier this month on his Substack that exposed {that a} “violent explosion” occurred when he made a mistake
“The blast blacked out my imaginative and prescient,” Liu wrote. “Dense clouds of chlorine dioxide burst into my face, filling my eyes, nostril, and mouth. I stumbled again into the condominium, speeding to the toilet to scrub out the fuel from my eyes and respiratory tract. My lungs have been burning. Later, I’d discover 4–5 cuts on my higher thigh—shards of glass had pierced by means of my pants.” Liu additionally revealed that his 3-year-old daughter was close by when the explosion occurred.
Liu started a preclinical research on animals in 2016, earlier than starting to make use of the highly-concentrated answer to deal with human sufferers in newer years. He claims that between China and Germany, he has handled 20 sufferers thus far.
When requested for proof to again up his claims of efficacy, Liu shared hyperlinks to various preprints, which haven’t been peer-reviewed, with WIRED. He additionally shared a pitch deck for a $5 million seed spherical in a US-focused startup that would supply the chlorine dioxide injections.
The presentation accommodates various “case research” of sufferers he has already handled—together with a canine—however quite than that includes detailed scientific knowledge, the deck accommodates disturbing pictures of the sufferers’ tumors. The deck additionally accommodates, as proof of the therapy’s efficacy, a screenshot of a WhatsApp dialog with a affected person who was apparently treating a liver tumor with chlorine dioxide.
“Screenshots of WhatsApp chats with sufferers or their medical doctors just isn’t proof of efficacy, but that’s the solely proof he supplies,” Alex Morozov, an oncologist who has overseen lots of of drug trials at a number of corporations together with Pfizer. “Evidently, till acceptable research are executed and printed in peer-reviewed journals, or offered at a good convention, no sufferers ought to be handled besides within the context of medical trials.”
WIRED spoke to a affected person of Liu’s, whose descriptions of the therapy seem to undermine his claims of efficacy and lift severe questions on its security.
“I purchased the needles on-line and made the chlorine dioxide on my own [then] I injected it into the tumor and lymph nodes on my own,” the affected person, says a Chinese language nationwide dwelling within the UK. WIRED granted her anonymity to guard her privateness.
The affected person had beforehand been taking oral options of chlorine dioxide instead therapy for most cancers, however, unhappy with the outcomes, she contacted Liu by way of WhatsApp. On a spring night final 12 months, she took her first injection of chlorine dioxide and, she says, virtually instantly suffered unfavourable negative effects.
“It was fantastic after the injection, however I used to be woken up by extreme ache [like] I had by no means skilled in my life,” she says. “The ache lasted for 3 to 4 days.”
Regardless of the ache, she says, she injected herself once more two months later and a month after that she travelled to China, the place Liu, regardless of having no medical coaching, injected her, utilizing an anesthetic cream to numb the pores and skin.