1PM Dr. Lederman discusses various treatments for cancer - podcast episode cover

1PM Dr. Lederman discusses various treatments for cancer

Apr 14, 202457 min
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The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed for cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated, outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your

cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and quality of life. Meet doctor Liderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation

oncologist. Call two one two choices two one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Free Boko DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer. Called two one two choices, two one two choices. It's doctor Leederman with Carrie Stubbs, who sings and writes about his cancer treatment. Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight cataplane hop a train, don't has

a tait. Call to on two choices for an appointment. Mate, so cancer, Candy said straight my cancer. It was twenty two centimeteras now I am cancer free. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospital stay, no chemo therapy. I'm grateful to Doc taleder Man at New York Radio Surgery. No cutting, no bleeding, no hospitals. Day made me very happy. Thirteen eighty four Broadway and thirty eight. If the address my cancer had been set straight? Called to on two choices for an appointments Mate, dot toleeder

Men's top rights. For more information about innovator of cancer treatment, called doctor Leiderman two and two choices, two and two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway. Most insurance is accepted for newer recurrent cancers. Call Doctor Leederman two and

two choices. Welcome everybody. It's the Radio Surgery Show with Doctor Gil Leiderman, MD, New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified radiation oncologist who brings you the latest cancer treatment news, interviewing world renowned cancer experts, delving to special cases, and of course answering your questions. I'm Rob Redstone, broadcasting from the WR Studios in the heart of New York City, and now

please welcome doctor Leaderman. Good day and great to talk to you. Thank you so much, Rob, thank you Noah, and thank you for tuning in. We're here every day on the radio day. We're actually on every day and every night on the radio y to educate so that you hopefully can learn things about life. And we're going to talk about things that obviously need

a lot of attention. So I'm going to jump right in. My name is doctor Liederman, and I'll introduce myself in a few minutes, but let's just say I'm a cancer doctor, Board certified, Triple Board certified, Harvard trained, been in New York for forty years. Probably I've treated some of

your friends and neighbors. If you're listening from the New York area, and we have patients from around the world tuning in and flying in for treatment, so probably you're very close to a previously treated and hopefully successfully treated and hopefully happy patient. That's the work we aim for every day here at thirteen eighty four Broadway Cancer Center. I want to jump in. There's this an article that's came to my attention that was published in a journal called The Oncologist.

It's from several academic centers, published by Kimberly Kopecki and Toby Campbell. I want to talk about this because it's so dramatic. One of the major problems people have or misunderstanding, let's say it's more of a misunderstanding that creates a problem is that when people get treatment, they often think treatment for cancer, like chemo for cancer, is curative, the purpose of the treatment for cancer is curative, when in fact, most chemotherapy, in my view, is

not curative at all. And I've always wondered why people will spend of their money or insurance money. Someone pays, most likely you and me and your neighbors and friends one hundred or two hundred thousand dollars for treatment that doesn't result

and even a chance of cure. And what am I talking about? Well, people that have had treatment cancer comes back and they have recurrent cancer or stage four cancer and they go to a super duper pooper place and they think, oh, if that's super duper place and they've been offered treatment, it obviously is to cure them. Well, the truth of the matter, and we discussed this pretty much every day, is that most chemotherapy doesn't cure anybody.

It may work for a few weeks or months at the beginning, and chemotherapy usually works better at the beginning before the cancer mutates. Cancer can mutate, and it does mutate. Cancer is not like a table or a chair. Cancer is like a living organism. And if you expose cancer to chemotherapy most commonly, and I'm talking mainly about recurrent or metastatic cancer, which is why most people get chemotherapy, the cancer then mutates and makes it resist the

chemotherapy. And that means that the chemotherapy basically has a basically zero chance of curing the patient. So why are people racing and spending so much money. I've seen articles in the paper, Oh, please help poor Jim. He's got this terrible, rare cancer. But if he goes to a super duper place, the law firm some experimental treatment for eight hundred thousand dollars, which has zero chance of curing the patient. I remember vividly it was an overseas

patient they had sarcomo. As a young man in the army, he was twenty five years old. He was raising money from those friends and neighbors to get eight hundred thousand dollars to give to a super duper place here in New York City that already has billions of dollars, knowing that he has metastatic sarcoma, knowing that that chemo or treatment will never in a million years cure him.

And yet he's going and his family's going to all their friends and neighbors and loved ones and religious people and government to get eight hundred thousand dollars to

give a treatment that has zero chance of cure. And in fact, I wrote the periodical in which this plea was made to say, Hey, you can come here to Radio Sart to New York for your metastatic cancer, and we can treat your cancer and the lung or the liver, or the bone marrow or the bone or the lymphanode wherever it might be, with a high

degree of controlling the cancer. Where we aim to be, which is totally different than chemo chemo for metastatic cancer usually always fails, whereas with us ninety percent chance of the treatment working where we aim to beam is about ninety ninety percent chance where we am to being, whether it's through pancreas or liver or lymphanote or lung, ninety percent chance that cancer that we aim to beam and treat most likely will stay controlled, will stop or shrink or go away for

the rest of the life of the patient, which is so different than chemotherapy.

So I want to talk about this article by Kopecki and Campbell was in a journal called The Oncologists published this year, and they start out the article, I want to read exactly this a staggering sixty nine percent of patients receiving non curative chemotherapy for metastatic lung cancer and fifty percent of people receiving chemotherapy for advanced gastron testino hipatobilary or pancreas cancer, the patients report the goal of the

treatment was to cure the cancer. The author's going to say similarly, eighty one percent of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer believe the chemotherapy they're receiving has a curative potential. The authors then say, why does this disconnect exist and what might we do to do about it? So they're saying here patients think, most commonly they're getting chemotherapy to cure them, when the doctors and of course the authors know that's not the case at all. So are doctors misleading the

patient or they not stating the facts? And I can tell you so often I see patients that are come to me from super duper places. They think, Oh, if you're at super duper place and you pay two hundred thousand dollars, it must be to cure the patient. No, most commonly it's not. And I would encourage you, if you're interested in chemotherapy for advance to recurrent cancer, to read this article. It's in the Oncologists this year. In fact, it's on page I think one and two. It's just

just published then, just by Kopeck and Campbell. And they ask what can be done about it? And why does it matter? Well, it matters a lot if a patient is giving up their body and getting a poison in their body. That's what chemo is as a kind of poison right all over the body. It's like putting your body in a bathtub a poison and knowing that it's not going to cure you, you may not be so eager to

go rush out and have this chemo put in your body. Would you if you knew that you weren't exactly being told the truth, if the doctors weren't straight up and say, hey, this chemo is not going to cure you. What did that change your mind about taking it or not? And why do they lead you on to think, oh, it's going to help you when in fact it's not going to cure you. And maybe you'll give you a remission for a few weeks or months. But most chemotherapy doesn't cure the

patient with advanced or metastatic cancer. So I just urge you to think about it. If you have friends and neighbors who are getting chemotherapy, they don't understand why they're getting it, they may want to come here Doctor Liederman, thirty eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. Call us to and two choices to and two choices where we accept most insurances Medicare, Medicaid and will set you on a straight path. So

if you think your doctors are not being straight with you. It's probably time to give us a call and come in. You can get a fresh second opinion to understand why you're getting treatment. And it seems like it's so many other super duper places. They're not really telling the patient why they're giving you the treatment. Now, sometimes people say, oh, I'm so lucky, I'm in a clinical protocol. Well, clinical protocol or clinical trial really is

not designed to cure the patient. And yet I have patients come and say, oh, I'm in a clinical protocol. I was selected to be in a clinical protocol. Understand the clinical protocol or clinical trial is designed to test a treatment designed by the hospital or the doctors or the drug company, not to cure the patient, but to see what happens to a human being who

gets these drugs. And there's different phases of testing one, two, three, stage one, say two to three clinical trials, and well, you have to understand why it is. At the first level, it's never been given to a human being at all, maybe a month ago was given to chimpanzees and dogs. Clinical stage one or trial at the first level has no basis. It's using your body or your loved one's body or your neighbor's body as a guinea pig, and these things should be clarified. We have lots

of information to send you. You can call us even now at two two choices and get a package in the mail, or check our website which is r SNY dot org. R SNY dot org. So, just to reiterate, the authors are telling you that eighty one percent of patients with metastatic cancer don't even know why they're getting the treatment. Eighty one percent think where metastatic colorectal cancer thinks they're getting treatment to cure the patient, when in fact that's

not the possibility at all. So why aren't all doctors being straight? Why aren't all doctors being clear? And is it maybe the patients have wishful thinking? Well, the patient should know, hey, if you have a limited time on earth, maybe you don't want to spend it in the doctor's office getting chemo and getting sick and getting complications, and then the cancer grows anyway. So there's lots of reasons to seek a fresh second opinion that's really fresh

and different, and that's why people come here. Thirteen eighty four Broadway, Doctor Leederman Board certified accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid, with forty five years experience as a Triple Board certified, the only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York, one of the few in the world. Here for you, So I would urge you if you wish to learn more, give us a call, make a dating, come in, get our information,

check our website. The only way really to learn is to come and make an appointment. That way we can see the patient, and the patient can see us. We review the patient and the documents and talk about all the options that really make sense, and that should be a breeze, fresh breeze of fresh air for the patient and their loved ones who need it.

And it seems like, according to my experience and according to this article, so many people are being misled about chemotherapy and the goal of chemotherapy, not for all patients, but for so many patients who are getting chemotherapy today at the biggest and most famous places around. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. My name is doctor Liederman.

I want to talk about a man who comes to us. He's seventy years old, he had a mass on his left tempo as a squamous carcinoma. He was treated years ago and he had this mass by the eye. And well, there's three million skin cancers, squamous cell and basos cell and charactery canthoma cancers, and mainly they're biopsied by a dermatologist who's a surgeon dermatologist. There's a Latin word derm means the skin and ologist someone who studies. But

really a dermatologist is a surgeon who operates on the skin. And there's three million skin cancers a year, and sad to say, most people end up with surgery, which is often very expensive like Moe's mohs Mo surgery, and often very deforming. And it seems like to me the doctor should be telling the patient all the options rather than say, oh, you need to have

surgery. And I can tell you I see thousands of people. We probably see more people with skin cancer probably than anywhere else, certainly in the radiation

world. And it seems like to me, most patients, again like the chemotherapy and cancer, like the skin cancer and treatment, so many people are told, oh, you have to have surgery, you have to have mos and often MOS leads to a big hole because it's an excavation to the skin, and so many skin cancers around critical structures in the face, around the

forehead or eyes or nose, or ears or mouth. And I've seen so many people deformed by radical Moe's surgery when they could have easily learned about non deforming, non invasive, no cutting, no bleeding options here at Radio Surgery, New York. And this man who's seventy years old came to us years ago with a left temporal squamous carcinoma. Is surgainly wanted to do biops.

He surgainly wanted to do surgery. Surgeon wanted to cut this out and leave a defect in the head which would then be plastered in with a patch from his botox or someplace else. And he just didn't want that. He refused the surgery. He heard about us, he came here, and he is so happy. I saw him years after treatment. I saw him this week and he told me he used his word. He said, it's a miracle.

What you did is a miracle to get rid of the cancer without deforming me or my face, or my eye, or my tempo or my skin. And this is the work we do. And sad to say, very sad to say, most people with skin cancers never learn about all the options until they tune in to doctor Liederman's radio surgery show here every day. So give us a shout out if you wish. If you want a booklet a

DVD about our work, call us at two and two choices. If you have a skin cancer or suspected skin cancer, you're welcome to come in and learn about all the options. Thirteen eighty four Broader. My name is doctor Liederman. This man called our work a miracle. That was his word. I don't think it's a miracle when ninety five percent of our patients with skin cancers are successfully treated. That's what happens most every day here at Radio Surgery,

New York. Doctor Liederman, my name, doctor Liderman, will be right back. People with cancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain. Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when their caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing innovative cancer care for decades, when the next cancer drug is not as promised, When surgery was to fail to pass, We may be able to

offer you new cancer treatment options. We treat new and recurrent cancers small or large, most anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices for a free booklet, DVD thirty eighth and Broadway. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained, Triple Board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to meet

doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices two on two choices. Medico surgeries deform beautiful bodies. Doctor Liederman treats cancer non invasively. Woman afraid to cancel mystectomy. Afraid to offend doctors more than deforming her own body. Woman lost her face, vision, hearing and smell by doctor she felt walked on water. Water is gone, cancer is back. Woman lost her entire

arm cancer relapsed with vengeance. Here for second chance after not wanting to wait minutes to see doctor Liederman, a visit that might have saved her arm and life. Prostate cancer surgery elsewhere deforms leaks impairs shortens. Right. Moment to meet doctor Liederman for cancer treatment is now. Doctor Leederman might save your life. Doctor Leederman, most experienced body radio surgery, accepts most insurances, Medicare,

Medicaid, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth First in America. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices, two and two choices. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor gil Liiedderman at the WR Studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just a few steps from the radio Surgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth street. Doctor Liederman, the

leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liderman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman, we're back. We're back. And here's a great example. A fifty five year old woman from Jamaica married with three children. Came with her

husband. She has pain from thyroid cancer traveled to the spine and the shoulder. She was diagnosed years ago. She's been on narcotics for pain. She's been in pain. She's been at the biggest hospitals in New York City. She went to one big hospital, another big hospital, or thyroid was removed. They removed part of her thyroid at the third biggest hospital, and she had standard she had radioactive iodine treatment. She had systemic treatment and nothing worked.

The pain was getting worse, and she was at three big hospitals and they left her in pain, on narcotics, getting worse and worse and worse and worse. And she came to us and we found the mass in the spine. There was a cancer of the thyroid getting worse. She was on narcotics which was making her constipated and dizzy and oozy, and just didn't like that. She liked the idea of treating the cancer and making the cancer go away. Where we aimed the beam and this is exactly what we do,

and we did it five years ago. In her spine. She had stage four cancer. So it it traveled from the thyroid to the spine. We treated it. Stage four means it's in the bloodstream. It means it can come back, but it means that she doesn't have to have chemo or other treatments every day, every week for the rest of her life. No, So, five years ago we treated her the spine and she'd been doing great, and that cancer has been controlled. Now she has a new spot.

Years later, she has a spot in her femur and the cancer's eating at the femur, causing pain and weakening the femur. It could break, and she just doesn't want to have surgery and she doesn't want to be left in pain, and she doesn't want to be on narcotics. And so we're treating that spot. And our success rate is more than ninety percent for thyroid cancer in the bones where it's traveled, or other sites for metastatic thyroid cancer.

And she is so happy she has a place to go. When three of the biggest hospitals in New York City couldn't offer a treatment to get rid of the pain and suffering, she came to register to New York. She learned about all the options and this is the work that we do every day. At thirteen eighty four Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York

City. I have a huge experience forty thousand patients treated with high success where we attack the cancer, even thyroid cancer, which is usually considered a radio resistant cancer. That's another big thing about our way. There's many cancers that are so called radio resistant. That's true with standard radiation, which is what most places do, we generally do not do that. Our specialty is focused radiation to hit the cancer. We can escalate the dose, give fewer treatments,

and have higher success. And this is what we do daily. We have a whole team that's worked on this project for decades, first in America, first in the Western Hemisphere, and obviously first in New York. And I can tell you this woman and her family are so happy she has a place to turn when three of the biggest hospitals in New York had nothing to offer her but narcotics, something that she just did not want. On the tip of a man who's sixty years old, he came to us years ago.

He had had a Gleason seven with seven of twelve cores positive. PSA was nine. So gleases how the cancer looks under the microscope. The Gleason score goes from two to ten. To is the best, ten is the worst. He had Gleason seven, which more aggressive cancer. His doctor put twelve little needles in the prostate. Seven of those showed cancer. The PSA which is normally considered up to four, and this man was nine. He had a PSMA test, an MRI test, and bone skin showing no spread

of the cancer. Had a forty two cc prostate. He was treated here and now he's in remission. His PSA's down to zero. He's very happy. Unlike surgery, when radical surgery robotic surgery is done, about ninety seven

percent of the men end up impotent, unable to have erections. About eighty percent leak urine because the nerves are damaged during that radical or robotic surgery, and it shortens a penis because just like a plumber, when a plumber cuts out part of a pipe, they have to bring the ends together make the pipe work. When the urologist cuts out the prostate and urethra, it shortens the urethra just like the plumber cuts the pipe, shortening the pipe and ends

up shortening the penis. Most men, if they know better, don't take surgery. With surgery success rate for Gleason seven cancers about forty six percent in the best hands in America, whereas here the majority of the men up to ninety percent or cancer free with Gleason seven cancer. With us, the majority of the men keep their sexual life with us, ninety nine percent of men keep their urinary control, and there's no shortening with us because we're not cutting

out anything. This is the work we do AND's why so many men with prostate cancer come here. I can tell you this man is very happy and very grateful. He's here, had treatment and is now in remission with a PSA of zero. About another man, This is a man who came from Haiti. He came ten years ago. He's a black man and shoudo. In the Caribbean, there's lots of prostate cancer in black men. One in six black men get prostate cancer. One in twenty three will die of prostate

cancer. This man came with his twin sister. He came years ago, ten years ago with a glease in seven PSA five point seven prostate cancer. He went to his doctors. He was urinating poorly. He had a high PSA. He had a biopsy, he had a bone scan and cat scan and MRI showed no spread of the cancer. Ten years ago. He was treated when he was one hundred and seventy two pounds five foot ten doing well. He had an enlarged prostate. He was nodular, so his nodular stage

t to C and now ten years later his PSA's down to zero. Ten years later shows the durability and the success of our program. Not only is he cancer free, his sex life works, his urinary life works, and there's no shortening, which is so different, so different than other methods of treatment, so higher success, higher quality of life. That's why men come here for treatment. There's been so much talk recently about OJ Simpson, who

died of prostate cancer. I know months ago he was seen limping. People have asked me, well, how do you die? What do you feel like? I was interviewed for TV and radio shows. Well, unfortunately, prostate cancer likes to go to lymph nodes and even worse, to bones, where it weakens the bones. Often causes damage to the bones, pain in

the bones, and even breaks the bones. So I would suspect that I don't know the case exactly because I was not involved in Ojay's case in any sense, but most likely the cancer traveled to the bones and that's probably why he was limping and walking with a cane. He was on hospice. Hospice means terminal care, no treatment. He could have easily come and had treatment to the bones where most likely the cancer was residing and get rid of the

pain and suffering and try to avoid fracture. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. Men are welcome to come in to get checked out. Most prostate cancers can be successfully treated if only the men would come for a checkup on a regular basis. Don't wait till it's too late, So it's always best advice. Come in, get checked up, get a physical exam, get a blood test, see where you stand, and then learn about your options. Learn if there's nothing to worry about,

or learn if there's something to do. If there's something to do, you might save your life just by hearing these few words. And that's what we really want for you to get checked out, know what's going on. If you have an early cancer, you have a very high success rate. Even for Glease and seven, Like I just talked about our success rate's ninety percent. So there's many, many reasons for men and their loved ones to come

here. Women also come for checkup, whether it's for colonoscopy or breast exam, skin exam. This is the work we do every day in the world word of cancer diagnosis and cancer treatment. So don't be like Ojay. He had plenty of resources, he had plenty of knowledge, and now he has died, sad to say, of metastatic, painful prostate cancer. Now we talk about a woman who came to me born and also in Haiti. She is sixty nine years old. Came with breast cancer. She had doctor carsnomen

Satu. So doctor carsnoman situ is an early breast cancer. It's when the breast cancers in the milk ducts themselves and not spread to the substance of the breast, the fatty part of the breast. So she came with doctor carsnomen Sato. She had multiple biopsies, she was worked up at two of the biggest hospitals in town. And yet he just did not want to have removal of the breast or lumpectomy, and she probably would have had a very big

lumpectomy because of the size of tumor. She came here for treatment with no chemo and no surgery and no misdeck to me and no lumpectomy. And now it's years later, cancer free. Her exam is normal, mammograms are normal, ultrasounds are normal, MRIs are normal, blood tests are normal. And this is the work we do. And I can tell she's very happy about having her breast cancer treated with no cutting and no bleeding and no deformity.

This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, and just I said I would introduce myself. I want to do that. My name is doctor Gilt Liederman, so you know who you're talking to or from. And I said that because there's so many people giving advice and often you don't know who it is. So many people give medical advice because uncle Harry had this, So that's such a good idea. Now, that's not how it works. To be a doctor means you study the literature and you see

what happens to thousands of people over decades. You learned about all the options and give advice to explain to the patient and their loved ones whether the option, what are all the options, not just to sell a person to have surgery or chemo or radiation. A doctor's role is not to be a salesman. A doctor's role is to inform, to adjucate, to offer all the options and explain what each option means, side effects and possible benefits. So

that's what we do every day. My name's doctor Gil Liederman, born in Waterlooiva, went to public school University MD Real MD at twenty five years old, just like my brother Ted, illustrious doctor doctor Ted Liederman MD at twenty five and my son doctor Ario Liederman MD at twenty five to three. Doctor Liederman's all MDS at twenty five years of age, Real MDS. Doctor Ario Liederman is here, board certified, trained at the most illustrious hospitals and universities

in America. Here seeing patients with new and recurrent cancers. Patients are lucky to have him. He's loved by the patient and their family and the staff. And because he's so thorough and thoughtful and caring, patients are very lucky to have such a compassionate doctor Ario Leaderman, MD, board certified. Here for you accepting most insurances Medicare, Medicaid, I went on after MDA twenty five to University of Chicago Michael Reese, trained in internal medicine three years,

board certified, having treated thousands of people with medical conditions in Chicago. Then moved on to Boston Harvard Medical School at the prestigious Dana Farber Cancers Too, where I trained in oncology, treated thousands of patients in Boston Harvard Medical School Dana Farber, and then board certified. Stayed on the staff there, and then moved on to the prestigious Harvard Medical School Joint Center for Radiation Therapy,

trained for years three years board certified. The only Harvard trained triple Board certified radiation cancer doctor in New York, one of the few in America. Here for you accepting most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid at thirty eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street. We have lots of information to send you. You can check our website which is RSNY dot org. You can call us at

two and two Choices. Two and two means New York City. Choices means you have choices like all the choices I've been explaining to you about people with breast cancer and prostact cancer, primary cancer, diybraid cancers and other pancreas and liver bladder. This is the work we do. At thirty eighty four Broadway. My name's doctor Liederman. We'll be right back. When doctor Leederman came to New York from Harvard, ninety seven percent of women in New York were

losing their breasts as breast cancer treatment. But ninety percent of doctor Leederman's patients with breast cancer we're keeping their breasts. Doctor Leederman, an outspoken advocate of breast saving therapy, educated women about choices. To arm every woman about breast cancer choices, breast saving whenever possible and desired. When every hospital thought standard radiation is okay, doctor Liederman had a better idea innovative. Doctor Liederman first

brought brain radio surgery to New York and body radio surgery to America. Meet doctor Leederman, Breast conserving therapy over decades. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth call two on two choices, two and two choices about breast cancer treatment. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted for a fresh second opinion, called doctor Liederman, breast cancer treatment called two and two choices. Two and two choices.

Call doctor Leederman today, two and two choices. It's doctor Liederman with Calvin West singing and writing about his cancer treatment. I had cancer and my home subsoda the Radio Surgery reader choices. I'm so bad to thank Dot and you Eliot Katzer. It's not counting. Two three, Well up, No read your band that is sent too free for cancer treatment, called doctor Leederman. Two and two choices, two and two choices, Call doctor Liederman.

Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the w o R Studios in the hearts of New York City. For just a few steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere

with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman, We're back we're back wan to talk on patient I saw a year ago. She's eighty five years old. She looks like she's fifty five. She came with her brother in law. She had six children. One child died and she came with her loved ones. And she had a lesion on her right little finger. She was seen by a dermatologist. Dermatologists did not get the diagnosis,

and ultimately they had a biopsy. The biopsy was melanoma of the finger. She went to the most super duper poopers hospitals in New York and they did a pet scan. They did a pet scan, a super duperous hospital did a pet scan, but they forgot to include her hand. They forgot to include her arm in the pet scan. I mean, why would you get a scan for a cancer of the finger and you forget the hand and the

arm. Why would you do that at the super pooper's place. Well, and then she had a biopsy and the biopsy showed melanoma of the hand. ARX level four was invading the particular eras pathologic stage T one B. And she had a shoulder in m eye. She had a tendon perforation. But the doctors wanted to amputate part of her finger and hand for this finger melanoma,

and she was just adamant against it. She came to me with melanoma of the hand, a skin cancer, very severe skin cancer the finger, and we talked about all the options and she just did not want part of her hand and finger amputated. He's eighty five years old and she wants her hand, she wants her body, and this is the work we do every day. And we explained all the options to her and she chose to have radiosurgery. We've treated many, many melanomas, both local and metastatic, and

she was treated melanoma of the small finger. And now she came in this week with the most beautiful finger you could imagine. She was seen by a dermatage, you're seen by other doctors you've seen here, and she's doing great. And this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four our Broadway for some of the most difficult complex cases. Because people come here.

People come here, We have a huge experience. They come here when the other places just don't offer options that patients want, whether it's for the woman who's declining mestectomy or the man who doesn't want radical surgery on his prostate, doesn't want to be deformed, doesn't want to be impotent, doesn't want to be leaking. This woman had a melanoma of her small finger on the right side. Just did not want part of her hand and finger amputated.

Was treated here with no cutting, no bleeding, and she's doing great and she's so happy. She came with her sister. She often comes on Wednesdays and so she has the opportunity to go to matinee just down the street on Broadway. We're very close to Times Square. Many of our patients do come on Wednesdays so they can go to the matinees in the afternoon on Wednesdays in Manhattan. This woman is so happy having a melanoma treated with no cutting,

no bleeding. This is the work we do every day and talk about man also with a skin cancer. This is a man seventy one years old. Came to his years ago. He had a base of cell carcinoma on the tip of the nose and his doctors wanted to remove the right side, the right tip of his nose, and he didn't want to go around life without the tip of his nose. He didn't want to go with a patch on the tip of the nose. He didn't want to have radical surgery on the

tip of the nose. He didn't want to have mo surgery on the tip of the nose. He didn't want to go out without the tip of his nose. He didn't want everyone to be looking at him. He wanted a treatment that was successful. And sad to say, the dermatologist and the plastic surgeons and the most surgeons never told him about all the options. They could have said, Hey, we can remove that nose, we can remove the tip of the nose, or he can go see doctor Liederman, who's got

a nine twenty five percent success rate with no cutting and no bleeding. And that's the work that he does, probably the most popular doctor in treating skin cancers in New York and probably in America, because we've expressed our interests and people know about it. And I can tell you that radio listeners help other people, and radio listeners like you help save lives and help save nose, and help save fingers, and help save prostate and help save quality of life.

And this man came to us and he's so happy. He was born in New Jersey. He's a trucker who lives by himself, and he was treated for this cancer was pretty big on the tip of the nose, almost two centimeters alterative, it was deep, it was discolored, and he was treated here and now he's cancer free and he's so happy. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City. And I we talk about a man

I saw also actually eleven years ago. Now he's fifty eight years old. He's single, has no children, very nice man. His PSA had gone from six to twenty six. He had a biopsy fourteen years ago. His doctors wanted to repeat a biopsy, but they didn't do it because he was an aspirin. Then a year later he had a biopsy and it was positive for cancer. Gleason seven. He didn't have a cat scan, didn't have a bone scan, and he had no pain. He was waking up three

times a nineteen year and eight. He was one hundred forty three pounds. He goes to the gym, he's in good shape. He takes stool softeners. And it's a man who came to us eleven and a half years ago, and I examined him and he had a large prostate gleason seven. When we got to him finally were so many delays. His PSA was forty six PSA forty six gleas and seven. We staged him up, there was no spread of the cancer. And now eleven plus years later, for a very

high risks psa forty six gleas and seven, he is cancer free. And he's so happy. He's active, he still goes to the gym. He's fully active. He's got a good weight, he's got normal heart function and lungs, and his abdomen's fine. And his quality of life is good. His sexual life works, his bowels work, his jurinary life works. He is intact. After having a PSA forty six gleas in seven cancer more than a decade ago, came to us only with our treatment. Now is cancer

free, has had no other treatment. I'm talking about a man who comes to us also with prostate cancer, seventy two years old, born in New Jersey, had high blood pressure, is seen by his doctor. His PSA went up to nine. He never had a biopsy, never had a biops he came to me with a PSA of nine, and well, you all know that if your PSA is more than four, or even if it's lower than four. If you look at our video, you'll see double seven. Double O seven had a PSA that went from one to two to three.

And his doctor said, oh, don't worry, your PSA is only three. And Double seven said, hey, my PSA has gone from one to two to three. It's tripled. And the patient demanded a PSA based biopsy because of the PSA going up. You got a biopsy, had cancer. And almost twenty years ago, Double seven came to me, and why do we call him double seven? Well, because his PSA went all the way

down to double seven and that's where he is. Cancer is in remission twenty years later, only with our treatment, and you can watch him on video. We have a prostate cancer video in factor. We have lots of videos

about multiple diseases and multiple booklets. Many people come to our office and pick up information for themselves and their loved ones because they know that you can spread information that's probably new and it may be that your doctor's not telling you about all the options, just like that person with the thirel cancer travel to the bone. Are the women with melanoma in the finger or the man who's going to have surgery in his prostate and didn't want to lose his quality of life.

Many people come here to learn about all the options. And I have one more little secret to tell you, and that is that we're live on the radio. And that means you can call us at one eight hundred three to one zero seven ten. We're live from now till two o'clock, one eight hundred three to one zero seven hundred, one eight hundred three to one zero seven ten, one eight hundred three to one zero seven ten. We're

live now. One will pick up your call from now till two, then we back at three until four and five until six, all here on wr And then tonight Saturday Night will be on from midnight to four thirty am. And then Tomorrow Sunday we'll be here from eleven am to noon, from one to two and three to four all on WOR. And then one of the most famous popular show this is at midnight every night at midnight on WOR from midnight till one. Many people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman.

Many people like to wake up with doctor Liederman. Many people work with doctor Liederman worldwide. Actually, because you get this show not only on the radio, but on your smartphone or your computer. You can punch in, and this show is broadcast worldwide either on your phone, your radio, or on your computer. So it's so easy. Again, we are live on the radio. Call us if you wish. If you have questions that you've always been wanting to know an answer for, call us at one eight hundred three

to one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. This is doctor Liederman. We'll be right back. Numbers mean much to me because of prostate cancer. I'm Johnny Bragg's. The number two from my stepfather who died of prostate cancer and my uncle who suffered so much after prostate cancer surgery. The number fifteen fifteen years since doctor Liederman's successful treatment of my prostate cancer. The number zero, which is my PSA zero after doctor Liederman's

successful prostate cancer treatment. What every man wants? The numbers one, two, three, four important for every man with prostate cancer. One getting the most successful treatment, two avoiding radical robotic surgery, three keeping sexual functions. Four maintaining urinary control. Call my doctor Liderman two and two choices two and two choices to consider his prostate cancer treatment for you most insurances Medicare, Medicaid

accepted. Thirteen eighty four, Broadway at thirty eighth Call two on two choices for prostate cancer treatment. Called doctor Liederman two one two choices. I'm glad I did You'll be number one with doctor Leaderman. Speedy recovery for Defense chiefs secret prostate cancer surgery on Christmas Eve, not informing even the President returned an ambulance with pain absess bow obstruction, secret turn disaster sadly believed is urologists.

Like many with prostate cancer, radical prostate surgery has many complications, leakage, impotence, shortening, inferior results, death. Thousands come to doctor Liederman to learn all prostate cancer options from New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Defense chief sadly believed Pie and Sky promises another reason to meet doctor Liederman about highly effective prostate cancer treatment avoiding radical surgery. Best is to meet

doctor Liederman. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices two and two choices, thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices. Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the w R Studios in the hearts of New York City for just a few steps from the

radiosurgery in New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Leiderman the leading cancer expert tree prostate cancer not invasively. He was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back, We are back. I want to talk

about a fifty six year old man. He's from Guiana, South America. He's married, he has two children, a handsome man, nice man, beautiful family. Had some prostate issues. He came in a year ago to his doctor. He had a perforated colon cancer. So he never had colonoscopy. It's a big warning and we talk about it every week. If you haven't had colonoscopy, you may well save your life. He might have saved his life. He went to one of the super Pooper hospitals in New York

City. He had pain. He never had colonoscopy. He had a terrible pain a year ago. He had blood in the stool prior to that time, which is a warning sign. He stopped drinking, he stopped smoking. He had terrible pain. He went to urgent care. He was transferred to one of the super Pooper Big hospitals in New York City. He was found to have stage four cancer colon cancer with liver metastasis. He had surgery two weeks later. His call and perforated, and they made him wait two weeks

to offer treatment for that. He had a biopos of the liver. He had surgery on the colon. They remove part of his colon, They remove part of his liver, and he's been on chemo therapy ever since. And he's come to me because he just can't take the chemo. He's fifty six years old. He's a well developed, well nourished, man. You look at him, he's like mister Musselman. But he just can't take the chemo.

He doesn't want the chemo. And we talked to him, just like we talked to the top of the hour about all these patients who are getting chemo thinking that it's going to cure him, but actually they're never told the truth by their doctor that the purpose of chemo is palliation. It's to slow down the cancer for a while. It's not to cure the patient. This sent man has metaicite cancer from the colon to liver in other spots, and

he's just adamant against any other surgery. He's adamant against chemotherapy. He's had surgery on his colon, he's had surgery on his liver, which he's upset about. He's had chemo for nearly a year, and he's upset about that too because it's not helping him and it's making him feel miserable. And he knows his time on earth is limited. All of our time is limited for

everybody, especially if you have stage four cancer. And he doesn't want to be incapacitated by chemo which is not designed to cure him, and sad to say his doctor's over super pooper didn't tell him that. And he learned that, well, he can learn that from the radio show we talked about it, from that famous article we talked about at the top of the hour that so many people, up to eighty percent of people are misled about chemotherapy.

They think it's curing them, when in fact it has no ability to cure the patient. So this man has decided to quit that hospital, quit the chemotherapy, and come here for treatment because he just fed up with treatment that won't cure him, and treatment that is making him feel lousy and not allowing him to enjoy a single day of his life. This is the work we

do. And I'm talking about a man. And this is a man who's one of the hero policemen in New York City's one of the heroes because he caught one of the terrorists who was going to blow up a bomb in Times Square. He's fifty six years old. He came to us with his huge mass in the neck. He went to one of the biggest hospitals in New York City. He had to work up there. He had a mass in

the neck. It was found to be Hodgkins ym foma. He lost one hundred pounds, He went from two eighty to one eighty six foot two. He's an ex smoker and a mass in the neck. They never did a pet scan, they never did any testing other than a biopsy and the most simplest of tests. And well, then they found a fistula. There was a hole between his rectum and his bladder that was not cancerous, and they refused to go many treatment because of the fistula, even though there's cancer of

the Hodgkins foma was growing and growing and growing. It was stage two. We staged him up, which should have been done elsewhere, should have been done months earlier, wasn't and we treated him after telling him about all the options, whether it's chemo, radiation, etc. Surgery is not usually considered

an important option for Hodginson foma. He was true with pinpoint treatment here and this is the work we do from one of our hero policemen who caught a terrorist who's going to blow up a bomb in Times Square and now he's in remission just with a short course of treatment focused with nearly no side effects. This is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, Hodgkin disease, one of the diseases studied sixty years ago with curative radiation therapy.

Famous doctors famously worked on this disease and were indebted for their important work curing Hodgkins lymphoma with radiation. This is the work we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway, on the shoulder of giants who have given us that information and given us that legacy, and now we can pass it on.

Unfortunate, that's super big hospital. No one told him about all the options they wanted to give chemo, and then they wouldn't give chemo because he had a fishtilla between his rectum and his bladder, so he had no treatment. Let the cancer grow months and months, Let it grow well. We're able to treat the cancer without any side effects to the rectum, without suppressing his immune system, without putting his body in a bathtub of something he doesn't want

to be put in his bathtub. This is the work that we do every day. He's now in remission, he's happy, he's fully active, and this is the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New York City, and we'll talk about a man who comes to us seventy four years old from Elizabeth, New Jersey. He came with urinary retention. He had a rock hard prostate. He came. He didn't want to buy ups, he had no records.

We checked him out. We found a urine infection, both bacteria infection and yeast. We're treating them for both double infection. His PSA was twenty four, which means that most probably he has cancer. He has residual urine. His bladder's not working. His bladder holds one hundred and seventy five CC's, but only one hundred ccs gets out seventy five ccs stays in, so

his bladder is six. He most likely has prostate cancer. So number one, we're taking care of his infections, both a double infection of bacteria and yeast. Number two, we're arranging for an MRI of the prostate. Number three, we're ranging for a biopsy of the prostate once the infection is cleared up and the course double checking the PSA. This is the work we do every day, and men and women and children come to us every day to get checked out. This man did not come with known cancer. So many

people come to us to get checked out for fear of cancer. He had urinary retention, he wasn't urinating, he had a double infection, he had a high PSA. And this is the work we do every day. There's three categories of patients who come to us. People who want to get checked out with no knowledge of cancer like him, People newly diagnosed like that hero

policeman with Hodgkins in foma now in remission. And then people with other treatment like that fifty six year old man with colon cancer who just does not want surgery and does not want chemo for his metastatic colon cancer. My name is doctor Liederman, New York's only triple boords utifed Harvard trained radiation cancer doctor. Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with doctor Gil Riderman and myself. If you have questions before next week's show, or want a free informative

booklet and DVD, just contact doctor Liederman at two one two choices. That's two one two two four six four two three seven. That's two one two two four six four two three seven. For cancer treatment most prefer effective, non invasive well tolerated outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too. Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York, First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liederman hits your cancer with no cutting,

no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second chance for you. Meet doctor Leiderman to hit the cancer. He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Call two one two choices to one two choices to meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances, Medicare,

Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two super convenient Broadway in thirty eighth and Venatan. Meet doctor Liederman to hit your cancer. Called two one two choices, two one two choices. Did you know that you've got choices? That there can be a bad way. Did you know that you've got choices? Conductor, THEA dont mean today? To want to choices is a much bad way too. Want two choices, Conductor, THEA doer mean today? Did you know that you've got choices that there can be a bad way. Did

you know that you've got choices? Conductor, they don't mean today. To want to choic is a much bad way too. Want two choices, Conductor, leader means today, Doctor Liederman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four, Broadway. The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or the ideas expressed.

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