Patients’assessments of the therapy:
 
 
A patient with a malignant melanoma
 
I underwent surgery in January 1997 for a malignant melanoma on my right leg. Inasmuch as the cancer had spread to the lymph nodes in my groin, they were removed during the surgery and sent to the histology lab for analysis.I was then supposed to undergo therapy with medication that would have provoked acute side effects, and was also informed that this therapy would not cure my cancer. In fact, my physician at the university hospital told me that I did not have long to live and that in the meantime I should undergo surgery to have my leg amputated, my pelvic organs removed and that the peripheral veins should be stripped. I was also told that this procedure would not cure my cancer either, which placed me under tremendous psychological and emotional stress owing to the fact that I was to undergo a dismembering and radical surgery and then take medication that would have acute side effects –all without any prospect of being cured. As I had heard about Dr. Klehr from other patients whose tumors had been eradicated by his therapy, I decided in 1997 to undergo treatment with him. Since that time, I have been in good health, have experienced no clinical symptoms and have been leading a normal life. I have also heard the sad stories of other patients who underwent the therapy that was recommended for me, and I am very glad that I neither allowed myself to be dismembered in this fashion nor consented to undergo medical therapy that would have provoked acute side effects.I have experienced no recurrence of my tumor for the past six years and have undergone no therapy apart from that which I underwent with Dr. Klehr. October, 2003
 
 
A patient with a malignant fibrous histiocytoma
 
In 1996, I was diagnosed with a malignant fibrous histiocytoma of the sacral bone. Because the tumor was inoperable, I underwent six courses of radiation therapy and two courses of chemotherapy. I could not undergo any more radiation therapy than this because I had undergone radiation therapy in 1985 for a previous illness and it had provoked paralytic symptoms. Meanwhile, my chemotherapy was stopped. There were two reasons for this: first, I was told that the chemotherapy would be ineffective without radiation therapy; and above all because the chemotherapy had provoked acute polyneuropathy (nerve damage) from which I still suffer today. At the time, my oncologist gave me no more than twelve months to live.I have been in Dr. Klehr’s care since 1996 and have been steadily improving. The debris from the tumor tissue that was killed during Dr. Klehr’s therapy was removed via a fistula. I now regularly work out at a fitness center.October, 2003
 
 
A patient with carcinoma of the ovaries and uterus
 
I was diagnosed in November 2001 with ovarian and uterine cancer. I subsequently underwent surgery and several courses of chemotherapy, whereupon the lymph nodes in my neck became greatly enlarged. In February 2002, following the chemotherapy (which lasted several months) and lymph node enlargement, multiple metastases were detected in both of my lungs.
My husband and I were then sent to see a professor of medicine who told us that I had no more than two months to live. The professor also talked to us about cost of my death and fully prepared me for the eventuality of my death. He also spoke about inexpensive ways of dealing with this situation. I cried constantly after this and was extremely anxious about my impending death.
At this point, my family told me that a treatment was available from Dr. Klehr, and so I went to see him and underwent his therapy. As a result, my lung metastases resolved completely. I am now free of tumors in my lungs and abdomen (which is where the oncological disorder originated), nor do have I any tumor tissue in my body. This fact has been documented with computer tomography.
I was able to go back to work after having taken early retirement due to my disease.October, 2003A patient with jaw cancer
In 1996, I was diagnosed with a recurrence of jaw cancer. My attending physician told me there was no hope of my recovering from this illness.Consequently, my family physician sent me to see Dr. Klehr, who began treating me in 1997. As a result of his therapy, I was cured of my cancer, which has not recurred.October, 2003
 
 
A patient with Sjögren syndrome
 
In 1989 I developed Sjögren syndrome, whose symptoms in my case were joint inflammation, polymyositis and acute dryness of the mucous membranes. My muscles were also increasingly affected and began to degenerate, particularly in the shoulder girdle region. As a result, I had to undergo pain therapy and developed acute tenderness to pressure as well as a series of muscle and joint inflammations throughout my body.
I went to see a number of doctors, none of whom were able to prevent my disease from progressing. As a result, in 1991 I decided to undergo therapy with Dr. Klehr. My symptoms began improving progressively after only four months of treatment. I was able to go back to work (owing to my illness, I had been forced to take sick leave at various times) and only stopped working upon my retirement. I have been leading a normal life since then.October, 2003
 
 
A pediatric patient with a neuroblastoma
 
In 2000 our son Jan was diagnosed with a stage III retroperitoneal neuroblastoma and subsequently underwent chemotherapy and various courses of immunotherapy. However, these treatments had to be stopped as they provoked catastrophic side effects, among them (after the fourth course of chemotherapy) a life threatening episode of septic shock.
Upon the advice of our family physician, we went to see Dr. Klehr and had Jan undergo the immunotherapy developed by him. As a result, Jan’s condition improved greatly. He gained weight, was able to live a normal life and, thanks to this therapy, soon grew to the normal height for his age.
According to the imaging studies that have been performed, Jan’s tumor has completely resolved. The computer tomography studies likewise show no sign of any tumor.October, 2003
 
 
A patient with renal cell carcinoma
 
I underwent surgery in December 1993 for renal cell carcinoma in a renal duplication (double kidney). It was necessary to remove 40 percent of my kidney in order to ensure that all malignant material had been resected.
In June 1994, a recurrence was diagnosed in the same place from which the first tumor had been removed. By September, this new tumor had increased in size and I was therefore advised to undergo a second surgery in order to have it removed.
In October of the same year, I met a woman whose breast cancer Dr. Klehr had cured. I therefore decided not to undergo the second surgery because the doctors intended to remove the entire residual kidney –a fact I was not very happy about since I then would have been tied to an artificial kidney. According to the dialysis specialist, hemodialysis was not an option for me owing to the presence of surgical scars. A kidney transplant was not an option either owing to the tumor symptoms and the anatomical disposition of the kidney. Instead of this therapy, I elected to undergo treatment with Dr. Klehr. The tumor completely resolved after nine months of treatment and no sign of it could be detected. I have been free of clinical symptoms ever since.
A professor of medicine at the university hospital certified in writing that the tumor had resolved owing to Dr. Klehr’s therapy. As a result, my health insurance plan reimbursed me for the cost of the 21 days that I would have spent in the hospital had my kidney been resected.October, 2003
drklehrinstitut
de
us
uk
hr
si
bg
ru
   Home
 Information for Patients
 Information for Oncologists
 About Us
 Contact Us
 Links