Can a Glass of Water TRIPLE Cancer Survival?
Is the best weapon in your fight against cancer a simple glass of water?
It may be… but only if you drink the right kind.
If you or a loved one is fighting cancer, you only endure the grueling treatments for one reason…
To hopefully beat the disease… or at least buy yourself more time.
Now, European researchers are finding that cancer patients who have a simple water added to their treatment programs are living more than three times longer.
And here’s the best part…
If you’ve been reading my eletter, you may already be drinking it.
I’ve been talking about deuterium-depleted water (DDW) for years… and I remember well how many folks in mainstream medicine tried to dismiss it as snake oil.
Well, they were wrong… again.
In new research out of Hungary, scientists tracked how long cancer patients lived if they had DDW added to their treatment.
Turns out they had an average survival of 7.6 years – compared to just 2.4 years for a typical cancer patient in Hungary.
That’s right… patients who drank DDW lived FIVE YEARS – and more than THREE TIMES – longer than people who didn’t.
Now, I know what you’re thinking… could a simple glass of water really be that helpful against cancer?
You bet it could.
You see, deuterium is the “heavy” form of hydrogen (it has an extra neutron) and is regularly found in drinking water. The only problem – our mitochondria (the power plants of our cells) don’t like it.
It can’t pass through the energy producing “motor” in the mitochondria, and interferes with energy production.
When you drink water low in deuterium, like DDW, you help support healthy cells while creating an environment where it’s harder for cancer cells to thrive.
And this wasn’t the first study showing the cancer-fighting potential of DDW.
A 2024 review out of China looked at the results of 15 studies in DDW and found it consistently helped prevent cancer from progressing.
Now, DDW is easy enough to find online, but it can be pricey. If it’s in your budget, go for it.
If not, buy spring water that was bottled at high elevation or near the poles (think Alaska, for example). That water tends to be naturally lower in deuterium.
View Sources
Lu, Y., & Chen, H. (2024). Deuterium‑depleted water in cancer therapy: A systematic review of clinical and experimental trials. Nutrients, 16(9), 1397. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16091397
Somlyai, G., Papp, A., Somlyai, I., Kovács, B. Z., & Debrődi, M. (2025). Real‑world data confirm that the integration of deuterium depletion into conventional cancer therapy multiplies the survival probability of patients. Biomedicines, 13(4), 876. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13040876

