That claim is not supported by medical science.
No drink has been proven to “kill cancer” in the way that a treatment does. In oncology, cancer is treated with evidence-based methods, such as surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy—depending on the type and stage.
🧪 What science actually says
Certain foods and drinks may support overall health or slightly influence cancer risk, but they do not cure or eliminate cancer, including:
- Green tea (antioxidants like catechins)
- Pomegranate juice (anti-inflammatory compounds)
- Coffee (some studies show lower risk for certain cancers)
- Vegetables and fruits (fiber and phytochemicals)
These are supportive dietary factors, not treatments.
⚠️ Why statements like this appear
Sometimes you’ll see headlines like:
“Doctor says this drink kills cancer”
These are usually:
- Misquotes or exaggerated interpretations
- Based on early lab studies (not human cures)
- Or misleading marketing content
A substance might kill cancer cells in a lab dish, but that does not mean it works safely or effectively in the human body.
🧠 Important distinction
- Lab finding: “May affect cancer cells in vitro”
- Medical treatment: Proven to shrink tumors in patients through clinical trials
Only the second one is used in real oncology practice.
🧾 Bottom line
- No drink cures cancer
- Some drinks may support health or reduce risk slightly
- Cancer treatment must be guided by qualified medical professionals
If you want, I can explain which foods actually do show the strongest evidence for lowering cancer risk or how oncologists evaluate new treatments before approving them.