27/01/2026
ROLE OF CELL THERAPY IN INTEGRATIVE CANCER CARE
Saw this news today & it troubled us deeply.
Not because cancer exists— we have always known it does— but because it is accelerating among people who are meant to be in the prime of their lives. The numbers are no longer abstract. They point to a quiet crisis unfolding among those under 50, even under 40. Careers just beginning. Families just forming. Futures still being imagined.
What troubles me most is that this rise isn’t confined to one cancer, one gender, or one lifestyle. It suggests something broader and more systemic— an accumulation of stress, environmental exposure, poor modern lifestyle habits, and biological strain that medicine is still trying to fully understand.
While conventional medicine remains essential, this reality makes one thing clear: waiting until illness appears is no longer enough.
That’s why I feel a responsibility to speak up— to encourage conversations around preventive awareness, cellular health, and supportive approaches like Celergen. Not as a cure. Not as a replacement for medical care. But as part of a broader effort to help people strengthen their bodies earlier, support recovery better, and think more proactively about long-term wellbeing.
If people are getting sick younger, then conversations about health must also start younger. Silence helps no one. Thoughtful sharing of information and options just might.
And this isn’t just theory for me.
It reminds us of our good friend, Edmund.
When Edmund was diagnosed with colon cancer, his world came to a sudden halt. Anyone who has witnessed that moment knows the fear, the uncertainty, the helplessness. Yet through chemotherapy and surgery, Edmund made a conscious decision—not only to fight the disease, but to support his body at its foundation: the cellular level.
He turned to Swiss cellular therapy— Celergen.
During chemotherapy, while many patients struggled with drastic weight loss and fatigue, Edmund steadily regained strength and even gained weight. After surgery, his recovery surprised the doctors. His energy, resilience, and overall condition told a different story. One sentence he shared with me still lingers:
“The body collapses because the cells get hurt first.”
That line changed how I see health these days.
Cancer, at its core, is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells— driven by a complex interplay of genetics, stress, lifestyle, environment, and modern living. Long before organs fail or symptoms scream, cells are already under attack.
This is where Celergen enters the conversation—not as a cure, not as an alternative to treatment, but as a complementary support focused on cellular health.
Celergen is a marine-derived nutraceutical that has been studied in laboratory settings:
👉 Studies on the HepG2 human liver cancer cell line showed inhibition of cancer cell proliferation in a dose-dependent manner, cell-cycle arrest at the G1 phase, and induction of apoptosis (programmed cell death).
👉 Research on human pancreatic cancer cell lines demonstrated reduced tumour cell invasiveness, associated with modulation of IL-6 and its receptor—factors linked to cancer progression.
👉 Its strong antioxidant properties have also shown potential in protecting cells from damage caused by ionising radiation, suggesting possible benefits in mitigating side effects during radiation and chemotherapy.
Conventional treatments— surgery, chemotherapy, radiation— remain critical. But stories like Edmund’s remind me that supporting the body while it fights matters too.
Quality of life matters. Recovery matters.
Strength matters.
With cancer affecting people younger than ever, waiting until something breaks feels like a risk we can no longer afford.
If this resonates with you—if you or someone you love is navigating health challenges, or if you simply want to understand the importance of protecting cellular health—maybe it’s time for a conversation.
Message us below or in private.
Just a human conversation— about awareness, options, and whether Celergen might be something worth considering.
Sometimes, one conversation is all it takes to change how you care for your future.❤️
Diona Reina Jacoba Mabus