Glenn Sabin's Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) was declared incurable

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07/08/23

Glenn simply didn't believe that in 1991, at the age of 28, he could only have six months to live. He began a multi-faceted regimen to make his body as inhospitable to cancer as possible, even though his oncology team "saw zero value in the behavioral change I planned to investigate. Their response was unanimous: leukemia was a genetic malfunction -- the condition would not respond to diet or exercise." He had surgery to remove his spleen, where the leukemia cells clustered, but refused chemotherapy. "Relying on evidence-based approaches to affect the biology of my disease" Glenn did what he calls "proactive observation". For a dozen years he embraced this new way of life, eventually feeling that "I was in the best shape of my life."

In 2003 he had a major recurrence. Though drugs had improved since his diagnosis, CLL was still considered an incurable disease. He again decided to try and improve his health without standard of care drugs. Two months later his blood was clear of leukemia. In 2009 he had another relapse. He recalibrated his approach and changed up some of his regimen. Again he was able to resolve the leukemia in his blood and bones. Since 2012 there has been no evidence of disease. His Harvard-documented case is in the medical literature.

You can learn more about Glenn and his amazing story at his website www.glennsabin.com

The "Glenn Sabin Cancer Story" is used by permission of Glenn Sabin.

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