A row has broken out over a controversial new cancer treatment in the Czech
Republic.
Bowing to pressure from patients, Horska Hospital in Vrchlabi, east Bohemia,
has agreed to perform, from next month, the "devitalisation" treatment, which
"suffocates" tumours by tying them up and cutting off the blood supply but
leaves them in the body.
The hospitals unprecedented move comes despite a lack of official approval.
The health ministry suspended trials of the treatment at four hospitals,
including Horska, late last year, six months after launching them.
Health ministry spokesman Otakar Cerny told the BMJ that the trials
had shown "no significant benefit to human health" but that the results were
still being evaluated. Of the 200 patients in the final stages of cancer on whom
the treatment was tested, 80% died, although Cerny conceded that they had been
seriously ill and might have died anyway.
But the ministry says it is powerless to stop any hospital offering a
treatment if it wants to.
"I am surprised that the hospital is offering this operation," Cerny said.
"It is a very risky move. If a patient dies after undergoing devitalisation the
hospital faces the risk of being sued by their family."
The Czech Doctors Association opposes the method and has vowed to report any
cases of Horska using the treatment to the police.
"The vast majority of doctors do not believe devitalisation can play a
significant role in treating cancer," David Rath, head of the association, said.
"If the police discover that a patients health suffered after having this
operation the doctor responsible would risk punishment."
Dr Vladimir Dryml, director of Horska Hospital, told the BMJ that he
did not fear legal action. "No doctor who performed an operation in trying to
help a patient could be found guilty by a court," he said.
On the basis of interest expressed by dozens of patients with cancer, Dr
Dryml expects his hospital to carry out up to 10 devitalisation operations a
month. "In our trials the operation prolonged life in 10-15% of patients," Dryml
said.
The method was discovered by Czech surgeon Karel Fortyn, who died last year,
but who dedicated his working life to developing and testing the procedure on
animals. "Strangling" the tumour, Dr Fortyn said, caused it to die and
decompose, without the need for chemotherapy or radiotherapy.
Although most of his tests were on melanomas, he said the treatment could be
effective in most cancers. But his method is controversial because it involves
leaving dead tissue inside the body and so risking infectiona risk Dr Fortyn
denied.
The Czech Association of Patients is campaigning for the method to be tested
more widely, complaining that trials were limited to seriously ill patients who
had already undergone chemotherapy or radiotherapy, against Dr Fortyns
recommendations. The Czech Doctors Association agrees that the trials should
have included patients in earlier stages of cancer and points out that the
trials did not include a control group.
Dr Fortyn discovered the technique in 1957, shortly after he graduated from
medical school. During a routine operation he found that a patients stomach was
infested with tumours and, acting on impulse and assuming that the patient could
not be saved, tied off half of it with surgical string. The patient lived for
some time.
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