
Keeton describes how within ten weeks of taking hydrazine sulfate, a major tumor wrapped around her aorta had completely disappeared. She explains that the drug works by redirecting nutrition back to the body and starving tumors, while requiring a strict diet that excludes certain amino acids, alcohol, and sleeping pills. She notes a 65 percent cure rate across 76 studies conducted over 17 years in Russia and advocates for an intravenous form to push effectiveness even higher.
She criticizes the National Cancer Institute for suppressing information about the drug and urges listeners to seek details through Penthouse magazine or public libraries. Callers share their own experiences with alternative treatments while Keeton directs those interested to contact Dr. Joseph Gold in Syracuse for medical guidance.
Key Moments
Three to six weeks to live - chemo offered 20%: Keeton recounts the moment of diagnosis: doctors told her she had between three and six weeks to live with stage 4 breast cancer that had spread throughout her body, and that chemotherapy would give her only a 20% chance of recovery. She refused, knowing 25% of patients die from the chemo itself.
Why Keeton already trusted hydrazine - her South African friend: Ten years earlier, a friend of Keeton's was given no chance - cancer had spread to her lungs, 80% gone, after chemo and radiation failed. Bob Guccione got hydrazine sulfate to her in South Africa; six months later she was dancing at a wedding, and now has three children and has been fine for years.
Tumors melted away - and the radiation that nearly killed her: Keeton says tumors around her aorta and vena cava 'melted away' on hydrazine. One remaining tumor was blocking her bile duct, so Dr. Joe Gold suggested a small dose of radiation - hydrazine potentiates radiation. Instead the radiologists gave her more than the prescribed dose, burning away her stomach and GI tract and forcing tube feeding.
Why it's a secret: $50 nausea pills vs. $3 a week: Asked why hydrazine is suppressed, Keeton points the finger at the National Cancer Institute: they don't want people to know about a cheap drug that cures. As an example, she has a single anti-nausea pill that costs $50 - and hydrazine sulfate runs roughly three dollars a week.
How hydrazine actually works - starves cancer, feeds the body: Keeton explains the mechanism: hydrazine sulfate has been in pharmacopoeia for 55 years, costs almost nothing because it's also a rocket fuel and industrial cleaner. Cancer normally diverts all food to itself, causing cachexia; hydrazine redirects nutrition back to the body, starves the tumors, and lets the immune system rebuild - a 'double whammy.'
