What was claimed

Ivermectin (72mg), Fenbendazole (444mg), high-dose Vitamin C and hibiscus tea protocol caused significant tumor shrinkage in colon cancer after just 5 weeks per CT scan; same stack also causes health benefits like reduced cravings in healthy user

Our verdict

Inaccurate

Searches reveal no clinical trials or peer‑reviewed studies on this specific combination for colon cancer; the only instance found is an anecdotal social media report. Oncology organizations and experts explicitly state that ivermectin and fenbendazole lack human evidence for cancer treatment and caution against off‑label, high‑dose use. Multiple sources confirm there is no established safety or efficacy data for using these drugs together in humans. Safety data are sparse with hepatotoxicity signals reported.

2 of 3 AI systems agree10 sources citedChecked Jul 10, 2026

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Key findings

Fenbendazole at 444mg daily is a proven effective anticancer therapy in humans

Incorrect94%
1 AI checked

Ivermectin (72mg), Fenbendazole (444mg), high-dose Vitamin C and hibiscus tea protocol caused significant tumor shrinkage in colon cancer after just 5 weeks per CT scan.

Incorrect94%
3 of 4 AIs agree·Perplexity: Misleading

Ivermectin at the doses used in this protocol is an evidence-based treatment for colon cancer

Incorrect95%
1 AI checked

Fenbendazole and ivermectin combination has established safety and efficacy data in humans

Incorrect98%
1 AI checked

The same stack also causes health benefits like reduced cravings in a healthy user.

Can’t verify75%
All 3 AIs agree

Detailed Analysis

The core claims come from a single anecdotal Facebook post and are not supported by clinical evidence. There is no high‑quality human data showing this drug and supplement stack causes tumor shrinkage or specific health benefits, and authoritative oncology sources explicitly state ivermectin and fenbendazole are unproven for cancer. The statement is therefore misleading: it accurately reflects one person’s anecdote but implies medically established effects that current evidence does not support.

Why this verdict

  • The core claims come from a single anecdotal Facebook post and are not supported by clinical evidence.
  • There is no high‑quality human data showing this drug and supplement stack causes tumor shrinkage or specific health benefits, and authoritative oncology sources explicitly state ivermectin and fenbendazole are unproven for cancer.
  • The statement is therefore misleading: it accurately reflects one person’s anecdote but implies medically established effects that current evidence does not support.

Claims checked

Fenbendazole at 444mg daily is a proven effective anticancer therapy in humans

Incorrect94%
Current expert commentary and reviews note that fenbendazole and related benzimidazoles have only promising preclinical data and that there is currently no human clinical trial evidence demonstrating effectiveness against cancer.[4] [7] Videos and oncology resources specifically warn that claims of fenbendazole curing cancer are misinformation and that safety and efficacy are not established.[4] [7]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Ivermectin at the doses used in this protocol is an evidence-based treatment for colon cancer

Incorrect95%
Authoritative reviews state that ivermectin is an FDA‑approved antiparasitic drug and is not approved or proven to treat colorectal cancer or any cancer in humans.[3] [5] They emphasize that existing data are from lab and animal studies, with no completed randomized clinical trials showing benefit in cancer patients, and that high doses can be toxic.[3] [5] [6]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

There is clinical evidence that this exact combination (ivermectin, fenbendazole, high‑dose vitamin C, hibiscus tea) causes tumor shrinkage in colon cancer

Incorrect96%
Searches reveal no clinical trials or peer‑reviewed studies on this specific combination for colon cancer; the only instance found is an anecdotal social media report.[1] [9] Oncology organizations and experts explicitly state that ivermectin and fenbendazole lack human evidence for cancer treatment and caution against off‑label, high‑dose use.[3] [5] [6]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

What other AI think

The statement makes definitive claims about tumor shrinkage from an unproven drug combination without acknowledging the complete absence of robust clinical evidence. It presents anecdotal outcomes as established fact and adds an entirely unverified claim about "reduced cravings" in healthy users. This represents dangerous medical misinformation.

Why this verdict

  • The statement makes definitive claims about tumor shrinkage from an unproven drug combination without acknowledging the complete absence of robust clinical evidence.
  • It presents anecdotal outcomes as established fact and adds an entirely unverified claim about "reduced cravings" in healthy users.
  • This represents dangerous medical misinformation.

Claims checked

Ivermectin (72mg), Fenbendazole (444mg), high-dose Vitamin C and hibiscus tea caused significant tumor shrinkage in colon cancer after just 5 weeks per CT scan

Incorrect95%
No randomized controlled trials demonstrate ivermectin or fenbendazole improve cancer outcomes. Evidence is limited to uncontrolled anecdotal case reports. The specific 5-week timeline is not supported by peer-reviewed evidence. Fenbendazole is not approved for human use.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Fenbendazole and ivermectin combination has established safety and efficacy data in humans

Incorrect98%
Multiple sources confirm there is no established safety or efficacy data for using these drugs together in humans. Safety data are sparse with hepatotoxicity signals reported.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Same stack causes health benefits like reduced cravings in healthy users

Can’t verify85%
No evidence exists in medical literature about this combination causing reduced cravings in healthy people. This appears to be an unsupported extrapolation with no scientific basis.
There is no high-quality clinical evidence that the listed combination (ivermectin, fenbendazole, high‑dose vitamin C, hibiscus tea) causes rapid, CT‑documented tumor shrinkage in colon cancer. Claims of such causation are based on anecdote and small uncontrolled reports and conflict with current cancer‑treatment evidence and guidance.

Why this verdict

  • There is no high-quality clinical evidence that the listed combination (ivermectin, fenbendazole, high‑dose vitamin C, hibiscus tea) causes rapid, CT‑documented tumor shrinkage in colon cancer.
  • Claims of such causation are based on anecdote and small uncontrolled reports and conflict with current cancer‑treatment evidence and guidance.

Claims checked

Ivermectin (72mg), Fenbendazole (444mg), high-dose Vitamin C and hibiscus tea protocol caused significant tumor shrinkage in colon cancer after just 5 weeks per CT scan.

Incorrect92%
No controlled clinical trials or reputable case reports demonstrate that this combination reliably causes rapid CT‑documented tumor shrinkage in colon cancer. Major health authorities and recent reviews state fenbendazole and ivermectin are unproven for cancer, and high‑dose vitamin C lacks FDA approval as a standalone cancer cure.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

The same stack also causes health benefits like reduced cravings in a healthy user.

Can’t verify62%
Anecdotal reports of subjective benefits (e.g., reduced cravings) cannot be verified and lack controlled data to establish causation. Such individual effects could be placebo, diet/lifestyle changes, or unrelated and are not supported by systematic evidence.

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