Diagnosis Ainscough was diagnosed with
epithelioid sarcoma on 24 April 2008, following a
biopsy of lumps removed from her left arm and hand. Ainscough recalled being informed that epithelioid sarcoma was an extremely rare cancer and difficult to treat. The
incidence of epithelioid sarcoma was reported as 0.4 cases per million population in 2005. It is twice as likely to occur in men, and three-quarters of those diagnosed are between the age of 10 and 39 years. Although epithelioid sarcoma is less common in women, the prognosis has been reported to be more favourable. It is difficult to determine survival rates of epithelioid sarcoma because the tumors are slow growing and generally painless, so diagnosis often happens after metastasis, skewing statistics.
Surgical oncologist David Gorski has written that, without treatment, most succumb to the disease within 10 years. With surgical resection, however, the 10-year
survival rate is estimated to be 49–72%, and higher survival rates are reported in younger patients such as Ainscough. Ainscough died six years after switching from chemotherapy to non-scientific cancer "treatment" methods.
Initial treatment Initially, the only treatment offered to Ainscough was an amputation of the affected arm at the shoulder, known as a
forequarter amputation. Ainscough reluctantly agreed. Shortly before the scheduled surgery, though, her medical team offered an alternative treatment that was to involve an
isolated limb perfusion. Ainscough consented to
chemotherapy and had the procedure in June 2008. The initial scans following chemotherapy indicated that the cancer was in
remission. However, by November of the following year, the cancer had returned. The only treatment option available was a forequarter amputation. Ainscough refused to undergo the amputation and, instead, turned to alternative cancer treatments.
Alternative cancer treatment Following the return of her cancer, Ainscough began using
Gerson Therapy, an alternative cancer treatment from the 1920s. Her condition was monitored by her "Gerson doctor" in Mexico who would receive Ainscough's blood tests, along with results from
live blood analysis and
iridology, two alternative diagnostic techniques, and conduct analysis using a machine called an "Indigo" that was claimed to be a "quantum biofeedback device". ==Influencers and supporters==