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Suwarni’s Notes as the First ECCT User: 10 Years Free from Stage-4 Breast Cancer

In 2010, Mrs. Suwarni, an ordinary housewife and mother of three, was diagnosed with stage-4 breast cancer—a diagnosis that changed not only her life but also the course of cancer research in Indonesia. Despite undergoing surgery, she refused chemotherapy after learning of its high cost and uncertain results. Her doctor warned she might live only one or two more years without it.

With little hope left, Suwarni’s younger brother, Warsito Purwo Taruno, sent her a prototype medical device he had developed—later known as ECCT (Electro-Capacitive Cancer Therapy). She began using it for 24 hours a day. Within two months, lab and ultrasound tests showed the impossible: the cancer had completely cleared. Even her doctor, who had expected the worst, was stunned.
Suwarni continued using ECCT and became the first patient in the world to recover from stage-4 breast cancer through this method. Over the next decade, she remained cancer-free. She often shared her story as a testimony of faith, patience, and emotional healing—reminding others that sincere acceptance and a calm heart are as vital to recovery as any therapy.

More than 10 years later, Mrs. Suwarni lives healthily, her journey inspiring countless others fighting cancer through ECCT.

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A New Hope in Cancer Treatment: Harnessing Positive Electrostatic Charge Therapy

Key Findings: Electric field therapy represents a groundbreaking advancement in cancer treatment, offering hope to patients with advanced-stage cancers. This non-invasive approach uses positively charged patches applied near tumors to selectively target cancer cells while sparing healthy tissues. By exploiting the unique electrical properties of cancer cells, such as their abnormal surface charges and membrane

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A Long Struggle to See and Walk Again After 10 Years of Paralysis and Blindness Due to Brain Stem Cancer

After 10 long years, Mrs. Risna can finally walk and see independently—without surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation. Once unable to lift her chin or even chew food due to a 6 cm tumor pressing on her brain stem, she now walks through markets alone, balancing her goods with confidence and joy.

Her tumor—classified as E1 or “Error type”, wrapped in a membrane of mixed cystic and solid masses—was considered untreatable by medical standards and even by early ECCT technology. Yet, with faith stronger than fear, Mrs. Risna and her mother decided to try ECCT, surrendering the outcome to God’s will.

Over eight years, the tumors gradually shrank; by the tenth year, her vision and motor function had significantly improved. Science once said her case was impossible—but ECCT’s evolving modulation technology, which can now subtly influence cell and tumor membranes, offered a path where none existed. Today, she lives proof that faith and perseverance can turn impossibility into reality. May she continue to grow stronger, and may her prayer for children soon be answered.

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Fighting Cancer While Pregnant Until Giving Birth and Being Cancer-Free Without Surgery

After years of longing for a child, Mrs. Ani Nuraeni faced one of life’s hardest crossroads — battling breast cancer while undergoing a pregnancy program. In 2018, doctors discovered a 1.5 cm malignant lump and advised her to stop fertility treatments, undergo a mastectomy, and possibly a hysterectomy, ending her dream of becoming a mother.

Choosing faith and innovation, Mrs. Ani discontinued her hormone injections and began using ECCT, which allows safe therapy for women without surgery — even during pregnancy. For nearly a year, her tumor size remained unchanged, possibly due to residual hormone effects, but she persisted.

By early 2022, the lump had shrunk to 0.5 cm, and by mid-2022, she conceived naturally after years of waiting.
She delivered her baby safely and naturally, marking five cancer-free years in September 2023 — a celebration of both motherhood and survival. Today, Mrs. Ani stands as a living testament that hope, patience, and unwavering belief can triumph over even the toughest battles.

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Not Enough That Only My Wife? His Wife Died from Breast Cancer, Then His Child Was Diagnosed with Deadly Bone Cancer

In early 2012, Arbi was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a rare and aggressive bone cancer, when he was already a teenager. Doctors gave his father a grim prognosis — Arbi would not survive more than six months, even with surgery or chemotherapy. The diagnosis was devastating, especially since his mother had passed away from breast cancer years earlier.

With no other options left, Arbi began ECCT therapy in mid-2012. The treatment managed to stop the cancer from spreading, but the dead tumor tissue hardened inside his arm and could not be expelled naturally. Determined to survive without surgery, he continued the therapy for years until the decaying mass began to detach and exit his arm through a small opening — a process that was painful yet bloodless, resembling coral-like fragments.

After five years of perseverance, Arbi finally chose to amputate his arm to end the burden he had carried for so long. Today, more than 12 years later, he remains healthy, active, and cancer-free, continuing to use the ECCT device as protection against recurrence or metastasis — a true symbol of endurance and hope.

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10 Years of Finding a Life Blanket and a Cancer Blanket

Diagnosed with invasive ductal carcinoma grade 2, Mrs. Yuni relied solely on ECCT therapy. Within four months, her tumor and abnormal electrical activity disappeared, and scans showed her breasts were clear.

Years later, cysts began appearing and fading due to hormonal stress, lasting more than seven years. During the pandemic, a new lump formed, and she switched to an updated ECCT blanket that softened it slowly.

In the midst of treatment, she met the man who would become her husband. Before their wedding, she confessed about her “black blanket.” His calm acceptance finally gave her the warmth and peace she had long sought.

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Brainstem Cancer: From Being Sent Home from the Hospital in a Bed, to Recovering and Performing Umrah in 2 Months Without Surgery

At the end of 2012, Bu Ninuk was diagnosed with brainstem cancer and given only six months to live. Bedridden and in constant pain, she could no longer move half her body. Her husband, Pak Edi, cared for her tirelessly—feeding, bathing, and comforting her as she endured each day. In desperation, he sought alternative treatments and found ECCT, a device he knew little about but believed was a sign of hope from God.

Within weeks of using the ECCT device, small miracles appeared—her eyes straightened, her limbs regained strength, and her laughter returned. Defying all warnings, she insisted on fulfilling her dream of performing Umrah with her family. Though still weak, she traveled to Mecca, wearing her “black cancer helmet” throughout the pilgrimage, pouring Zamzam water over herself as she prayed for healing.

When she returned home, she walked out of the airport on her own, stunning her waiting husband who could only cry with gratitude. A week later, even Pak Warsito, the inventor of the ECCT device, was astonished to see her alive and well. More than ten years later, Bu Ninuk continues to live—a symbol of faith, love, and the power of hope that endures beyond every medical prediction.

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Second Chance at Life: 10 Years After a Deadly Lung Cancer Diagnosis

When Toni was diagnosed with advanced-stage lung cancer in 2012, the doctor told him he had only two months to live. A 10-centimeter tumor clung to his heart, and fluid filled his lungs. Once a man lost in drugs, alcohol, and reckless living, he now faced death with deep regret—haunted by guilt toward his wife and children, yet unable to change the past. As despair consumed him, he began to pray, seeking forgiveness and a reason to keep living.

A glimmer of hope appeared when his brother introduced him to Dr. Warsito’s ECCT device. Though skeptical, Toni tried the therapy and soon saw signs of recovery. The fluid in his lungs stopped accumulating, and the tumor began to shrink. Months turned into years, and by 2018, he was declared cancer-free. The deadly tumor had transformed into harmless scar tissue—proof of life’s second chances.

Grateful for the miracle that saved him, Toni devoted himself to doing good and cherishing every moment. He often shared his food with others at hospitals, remembering how selfish he once was. Of the nine friends he had from his wild past, eight died of cancer—he was the only survivor. “I’m still searching for why God chose to let me live,” he said softly. For Toni, every breath became a reminder that redemption and kindness are the truest forms of healing.

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Cancer Cell Permeability Induced by Alternating Electric Fields as a Physical Approach to Improve Chemotherapy Uptake and Overcome Multidrug Resistance

Key Findings: ​Researchers have discovered that a non-invasive electric field treatment can help chemotherapy work better against cancer—even in cases where the cancer has become resistant to drugs. The study showed that electric fields make cancer cells more “leaky” during cell division, allowing more chemotherapy medicine to enter the cells. This effect was seen in

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Enhancing Immunotherapy in Glioblastoma: New Hope Through Electric Field Therapy

Key Findings: ​In a recent study published in Cell Medicine, researchers explored the potential of combining electric field therapy with the immunotherapy drug pembrolizumab to improve treatment outcomes for patients with glioblastoma—an aggressive and treatment-resistant form of brain cancer. The study found that patients who received both electric field therapy and pembrolizumab experienced a significantly

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