Dear Terry Beth and friends,
I have looked around on the Internet for research concerning mistletoe and the treatment of cancer and everything seems pretty sketchy. There seems evidence that it may be an immune booster and there's also evidence that it may encourage the growth of some lymphomas. The other problem I see from a quality control standpoint is because mistletoe is a parasite the properties the extract has would have would resemble those of the host . That is to say an extract from something growing on a pine tree would be different from that coming from something that grew out of walnut tree. Any targeted therapy on certain cancer lines seems to be missing, the type we find with curcumin, mushrooms, and IP-6.
I remember years ago when the editor of Longevity magazine, Kathy Keeton, was advocating the use of hydrazine sulfate. Before that we had laetrile. These two chemicals are still in wide-spread use today with questionable medical action.
The reservation I would have about is Isacor is the same I have about hydrazine sulfate and laetrile is that although there appears to be widespread use the documented science behind it seems to be missing.
It seems easy to get from Europe and I've attached the link.
http://www.aids.org/atn/a-092-03.html
Good luck,
Al