Skip to content
Home » The WORST Food That Feeds Cancer Cells: Tom Seyfried (Transcript)

The WORST Food That Feeds Cancer Cells: Tom Seyfried (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Thomas Seyfried’s conversation titled “The WORST Food That Feeds Cancer Cells”.

In this conversation, Professor Tom Seyfried discusses his belief that cancer is a metabolic disease rather than a genetic one. He emphasizes the importance of recognizing cancer as a metabolic dysfunction in the mitochondria and highlights the role of lifestyle factors, such as diet and inflammation, in cancer development. He also discusses the limitations of standard cancer treatments and introduces metabolic therapy, which involves pressuring substances essential for tumor cell survival, as a way to eradicate cancer cells without causing toxicity.

TRANSCRIPT:

RINA AHLUWALIA: Professor Seyfried, welcome.

TOM SEYFRIED: Oh, it’s nice to be here, Rina. Thank you very much.

RINA AHLUWALIA: Well, the one thing from researching every part of the work that you do is that you really understand the biology of cancer, how cancer starts. And even you say that cancer is overtaking heart disease as the number one killer.

So today, Professor Seyfried is going to discuss how cancer starts and the worst foods that feed cancer cells. And the big question that we all want to know, is cancer preventable? But before we get into all that, Professor Seyfried, I would love to know, why are you on a mission to fight cancer?

Cancer Research: The Journey and Discoveries

TOM SEYFRIED: Yeah, well, I don’t know. Maybe it is a mission, but we’ve been doing research on cancer for more than 30 years. And like many, many, many people who do research on cancer, oftentimes it’s completely disconnected from what goes on in the clinic. So we do what we call basic research with little, if any, translatable connection to the guys, to folks that are actually dealing with the disorder themselves.

But we do in vivo work models, natural models of cancer, not these genetically engineered kinds of things that aren’t really representative of what happens in the clinic.