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June 15, 2025 • 57 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
For cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated,
outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery Pioneer's goal too.
Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York,
First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your
cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades
of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers

(00:32):
from head to toe. Cancer treatment with possibly a second
chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't
work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and
quality of life. Meet doctor Liderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices to

(00:54):
meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted free with DVD two super convenient Broadway in
thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer.
Call two one two choices two one two choices.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
Prostate cancer very common. Men's cancer worldwide will double by
twenty forty Thirty five thousand men die here annually from
prostate cancer.

Speaker 4 (01:19):
What to do?

Speaker 3 (01:20):
It's doctor Liederman with new news. New data reveals testing
reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent. Men's skipping testing
have forty five percent more death from prostate cancer. What
to do? Come for prostate cancer screening at Radio Surgery,
New York with doctor Liederman. Easy to save lives, reduce

(01:41):
prostate cancer death, possibly yours or your loved one. How
visit Doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four Broadway Call two and
two choices. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. It's easy with
doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified
Radiation on college. Call doctor Leederman two and two choices.

(02:03):
It's easy with doctor Liederman. Trying to save lives Call
doctor Leederman two and two choices.

Speaker 5 (02:17):
Welcome everybody. It's the Radio Surgery Show with doctor Gil Leiderman, MD,
New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified radiation oncologist
who brings you the latest cancer treatment news, interviewing world
renowned cancer experts, delving to special cases, and of course
answering your questions. I'm Rob Redstone, broadcasting from the WR

(02:41):
Studios in the heart of New York City, and now
please welcome doctor Leaderman.

Speaker 3 (02:48):
Thank you Rob, and thank you no and thank you
for tuning in today and every day, every day we're
in the radio and every day we're here to learn,
to live better, to be more knowledgeable, to be educated,
to not have bad things happened to us if we
can avoid it, and if something bad happens, to try
to make the best of it. And that's what we're
here every day talking about. We're not selling anything, we're

(03:10):
not asking for your money, we're not asking for anything
other than maybe your time if you want to sit
and learn, and we think that it would be in
your interest to learn together. And that's why we're here
today and every day. And we've been on for many,
many years. And I can tell you how many thousands
of people we've helped because they learned about treatment options
they weren't told about elsewhere. So the last few days,

(03:33):
some people have notified us after thousands, actually tens of
thousands of people have been made aware of the Joe
Biden issue with Joe Biden, the President of America, the
forty six president, being diagnosed with prostate cancer. As you
probably know, he had a PSA done in two thousand
and fourteen years ago and then went more than a

(03:56):
decade without any PSA and now has stayed for cancer.
Now I know he got up and he's had a
few days ago. It's a good prognosis. Well it's not
good prognosis, and that's a spin. And everyone, of course
can love Joe Biden or not. I'm not a political person.
I'm trying to be a helpful person so that what

(04:17):
happened to him doesn't happen to you or your loved ones,
or your friends, or your neighbors or others. And we're
not talking only about prostate cancer. We're talking about brain
cancers and skin cancers, and breast cancers, and lung cancers,
and pancers cancers, and liver and gastruin testino and bladder
and got ecologic cancers, and prostate and bone cancers and

(04:38):
primary cancers and metastatic cancers. So we're not focused only
on one disease where cancer doctors, in fact I'm New
York's only Harvard trained triple boards or the fight radiation
doctor treating cancers. I've treated forty thousand patients, probably more
than anyone else. We're located at thirtyty four Broadway in Manhattan,
and we see patients three categories who want to get

(05:01):
checked out. And so many people have wanted to get
checked out since they heard about the Joe Biden issue.
So many people, and we're gonna talk about them in
just a minute. And then, of course we treat people
with newly diagnosed cancer who want to know about all
options before they lose their breast or the kidney, either
lung or the pancreas, or their bladder or the prostate
or whatever. They want to hear about non invasive treatment

(05:23):
with no cutting and no bleeding and no surgery options.
And so many people with cancer, they often go to doctors,
and doctors often act as if there's only one treatment,
the doctor's treatment, and not all the treatments. And I'm
growing up in a different era, I guess, a different
way where we always believe that the doctor is destined

(05:43):
or should be educating the patient and forming the patient
about all the options. And that's what we do every
day here at thirteen eighty four Broadway to educate, and
we're doing that today also. So yes, we see people
who don't have cancer but want to get checked out.
So many men and women recently and in fact always

(06:03):
want to get checked out. Recently, there's been more men
because of the Joe Biden affairs. All of a sudden,
people understand that if the president and we spend we taxpayers,
you and I spend billions of dollars. If you think
about it, Joe Biden just on Air Force one and
Air Force two traveled one point eight million miles and

(06:24):
we know, I think it cost something like one hundred
thousand dollars an hour to fly on Air Force one
or Air Force two that we pay. So we spend
billions of dollars to protect him and house him and
take care of him and Secret Service and all the
other expenses of having a president. And yet a simple
test it was I don't know five or ten dollars

(06:45):
wasn't done, and he well, he had super convenience. There's
a medical office in the White House and the president
can certainly go there. The president does go there and
checked anyone in the White House can go there. You
and I can't go there. So as far as convenience,
you can have the medical office in your own workplace

(07:05):
and go down and get a PSA anytime you want.
Is super convenient. So it wasn't a matter of convenience,
and it certainly wasn't a matter of cost, because we
already talked about the government spends billions of dollars taking
care of the president and his family. So what was it, Well,
was it whoops, the words that most patients don't want

(07:27):
to hear. Whoops, whoops, whoops. No one thought about it.
He's surely saw presidents get physical exams and tests on
a regular basis. He's had care. We know he had
skin cancer treatment, so he was seeing doctors. And yet
apparently there was no PSA done for more than a decade.

(07:48):
So what is PSA. Well, PSA is a blood test
that gives us an idea of the possibility of prostate cancer.
It's not a perfect test. There's no perfect test in
that way to one simple test tells you yes, no,
you have cancer. It's a series of tests that should
be done for someone who wants to be checked, and
for every man and for every woman, and more and

(08:09):
more people were getting cancers, and more and more people
getting prostate cancer. In fact, it's even estimated that the
number of prostate cancers is going to double worldwide in
the next fifteen years. So right now in America, there's
about three hundred thousand many year with prostate cancer and
about thirty thousand to forty thousand die each year. It's
one of the most lethal cancers for men in America.

(08:33):
So can you imagine you go to the doctor. And
remember he wasn't only a vice president, he only wasn't
a president, but he was also a private citizen. So
from two thousand and nine to twenty seventeen he was
vice president and he had a PSA that was said
to be normal during that period of time. And then
he was a private citizen from two and seventeen to

(08:54):
twenty twenty one. And I know he had an office
at one of the biggest universities in America. So he
lives in Bault in Delaware, and he had an office
in one of the most prestigious universities in Philadelphia in Pennsylvania.
And then twenty twenty one he became president again for
four more years, and he had access to White House

(09:18):
doctors and any doctor that he wants, and yet for
those more than a decade, apparently there was no PSA done,
and it's not clear there was no there was any
recto exam done. What does a recto exam, well, recto
exam for prostate cancer or evaluation of the possibilities to
place a finger in the prostate area and examine it

(09:38):
look for nodules or enlargement or suspicion. And it's not
clear that anyone did that either. Now maybe the doctors
at all, he's the president, we can't do a recto
exam on the patient. Or maybe he declined it, or
maybe doctor Biden, missus Biden declined it. In my view,
having treated I've treated nine one thousand men for cure

(10:02):
with prostate cancer curative intent, I can tell you that
most everyone with prostate cancer wants to get checked out.
There's only a few men. There are a few men
who don't want to get a PSA, don't want to
get any testing, even though PSA is a simple test. PSA,
by the way, stands for prosthetic specific antigen, So it's

(10:24):
a simple test and usually you get a blood count
and you check on the kidneys and the liver and
the electrolytes. You can get drug levels. We do all
kinds of things with blood tests, and you can just
check a box and say, hey, I want to get APSA.
And so it's so simple to do if you think
about it. So did all his doctors never think about it?

(10:47):
Did all his doctors? And there's twenty people who work
in the White House Medical Office, or not all doctors,
but there's also nurses and there's other people who certainly
could think about it and could say, hey, we didn't
do a PSA last year or the year before, maybe
it's time to get a PSA, or did anyone think
about it? Or maybe mister Biden knew other people. And

(11:10):
now there's many, many people with hundreds of thousands of
men having prostay cancer. It's well known. And even for example,
John Kerry, John Carey ran for president, he was a
fellow Democrat, he was a senator in the Senate with
Joe Biden. He had prostay cancer and he got checked
and he was found to have cancer and he was treated.

(11:32):
So you think, hey, mister Biden may say, hey, if
John Kerry, who's tall, handsome, strapping man, he goes surfing
or windsurfing can get prosta cancer, or anyone can get
prostay cancer, maybe I should get a PSA. Two. You'd
think that mister Biden would say, hey, I wanted one
of those tests. I want to know if I have
prostay cancer. And probably all we have to say is
about two words like have you checked me for prostay cancer?

(11:55):
Done a PSA? Or missus doctor Biden? His wife who
not a medical doctor, by the way, she got a PhD.
I think in transportation of high school students traveling to
her school where she was a teacher. She's not a
medical doctor, but she's a wife and a woman, and
I'm sure she has friends who's who have had prostate cancer,

(12:17):
whose husbands have had prostate cancer. Did any of them
ask to get a PSA? And it appears that they
were never asked. There was never any inquiry about getting
a PSA for more than a decade, and now we
find out that he has stage four prostate cancer just
one hundred and twenty days after leaving the presidency. So

(12:40):
if he has the prostate cancer detected stage four one
hundred and twenty days after leaving the presidency, I would
bet dollars to donuts. As my father would say, dollars
to donuts. That he had that prostate cancer while he
was president, So that means that most likely it was
missed while he was president. It probably was missed when

(13:02):
he was a private citizen. Most people with prosty cancer,
not most, not all can be detected early before the
cancer spreads. Cancer is more curable when it is detected early.
And why am I explaining this. I'm explaining it because
some people have said to me, oh, why are you
beating up on Joe Biden. Well, I'm not beating up

(13:23):
on Joe Biden. I actually met him. I met him
on the street outside my office. I met him. He
was walking to the Russian tea room. He was on
forty sixth Street going north, and I was going home
for the day and I met him. If I had
more than two seconds, I would have probably said other
than thank you, mister Biden and nice to meet you,
mister Biden, I would have said, hey, maybe you need

(13:45):
to check I want to check and see what your
PSA is. And most of my friends that I see
you know, I'll get around and talking to him about
have you had mammograms? Have you had colonoscopy, Have you
had PAP smears? Have you had the PSA? Have you
seeing a doctor? And I'll get around and ask them,
and certainly patients, patients always always will ask a patient

(14:07):
about getting checked up. So I'm not beating up about
mister Biden, but I'm using him as an example to
educate people in the listening world. And everyone can listen
to the show actually, because not only is it on
the radio, but it's on broadcasts, it's on the computer.
So I have people that I know about people that
come to me China and India and Bangladesh and Africa

(14:29):
who listen to this radio show and they get diagnosed
and they say, hey, you're talking about someone like me.
I want to come. And they often will buy a
ticket and show up here and say, hey, you talked
about me or a case like mine on the radio,
and I'm here from China to get treated or to
be evaluated for the possibility of treatment. So that's why

(14:49):
we talk about him. We talk about him to educate
you and your loved ones. Even though we're all created
perfectly in God's image, and that's how we want to
believe that God couldn't give us a cancer wouldn't purposely
give us a cancer, but people do get cancer and
do we need to diagnose it. And sometimes some people
are difficult to give that message to. Even though you

(15:13):
don't have to feel something. So many people say, hey, doctor,
I don't have a lump, I don't have bleeding, I
don't have pain, I haven't lost weight. How can I
have cancer? And the answer is really easy. You can
have a nodule of cancer I say, the size of
a little green bean in your prostate or your breast,
or your lung or your pancreas or your liver or wherever,
and not know about it. That's the whole point of screening.

(15:37):
The screening process is to look for things that you
don't know about, and that's what we do every day
here at Radio STIR in New York, if you wish.
And as they talked about a minute ago, the categories
of people come one categories people that want to get
checked out. That they come to a cancer doctor not
because they know they have cancer, but they want to
be reassured they've done all the proper testing that they

(16:00):
don't have cancer. And we're trying to educate to save lives.
And I can tell you. Since I've been speaking about
mister Biden, many many people have come to me and say, Hey,
what do I have? Do I have cancer? Check me out.
I don't want to be like mister Biden. It's not
because we're disparaging him or attacking him or whatever. We

(16:23):
all respect He was a senator, and he was a
vice president, he was president, and he's a human being.
So it's all because of respect to him and respect
to you that we're trying to educate you to get
the best possible care that even you or I could
have cancer. And that's why I talk about it all
the time. I talk about getting PSAs, I talk about

(16:44):
kolonoscopies and all the tests, mammograms, paps, mirrors, skin checks,
that any one of us, as a human being is susceptible.
So it's how to respect to mister Biden, in respect
of his office and respect of you, that we're using
his case as an example that even the president who
has billions of dollars of money spent on them can

(17:06):
have a diagnosis that's missed, that's gone astray. And so
it's respect to him, respect to you, in respect to
all human beings that we're talking about his case and
trying to extrapolate it so that you get the best
possible care. And you're welcome to come here if you wish.
My name is doctor Liederman, new York's only Harvard trained
Triple Board certified doctor, at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway

(17:28):
in thirty eighth Street and in the heart of New
York City. We do accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. These
are things people want to know about. People can call
us if they want. You can call us a two
and two choices two and two, two four, six, forty,
two thirty seven in digits two and two choices is
easy to remember two and two because we're in the
heart of New York City. And choices because people have choices,

(17:51):
just like mister Biden had choices. You too have choices.
And you can choose to try to get the best
possible care, and you can choose to get checked up,
and you can choose to get care. And you also
say no, I don't want it, and that's your right
if that's your right, right your body, and you get
to say no also, so we don't impose anything on anybody.

(18:11):
And even if you don't want to hear this message.
You can turn off the radio. So it's your right.
We believe that you have the right of your body.
You are the president of your body. And you'll see
signs in the art of radio surgery. If you happen
to have the pleasure of coming to thirty dy four Broadway,
you'll see signs on the wall talking about you are
the president of your body. Doctor Liederman believes. So there's

(18:33):
lots of information for you. My name is doctor Liederman.
Will be right back.

Speaker 6 (18:36):
Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery
didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain.
Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when their
caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing
innovative cancer care for decades. When the next cancer drug
is not as promised, when surgery was the fail to pass,

(18:59):
we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options.
We treat new and recurrent cancers small or large, most
anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or
surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices
two and two choices for a free booklet DVD. Thirty
eighth and Broadway, Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained,

(19:23):
triple board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices, two
and two choices for innovative cancer treatment. Best is to
meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices
two on two choices.

Speaker 3 (19:37):
World's most protected man's prostate cancer missed in and out
of White House for sixteen years. No recent PSA now
stage four Gleason nine prostate cancer spread to his bones.
No expense spared yet missed. Data shows men's screened for
prostay cancer have twenty percent better survival. Missing screening means

(19:58):
forty five percent hied death rate. White House doctors versus
doctor Liederman. Nine thousand prostate cancers treated for cure over decades.
High success rate for cures, high quality of life, generally
avoiding surgeries, failures, and complications. Presidential care versus doctor Liederman,
Harvard train, triple board certified, most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted,

(20:23):
called two and two choices two on two choices. Meet
doctor Liederman. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight, conveniently
located just hours north of the White House. Get well,
mister President.

Speaker 5 (20:37):
Welcome back to the radio. Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the WR Studios
in the hearts of New York City for just a
few steps from the radiosurgery in New York Cancer Treatment
Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the
leading cancer expert treat prostate cancer not invasively. He was
the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery,

(20:57):
and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor
Liederman at two and two Choices for a free informative
booklet and DBD. Hey doctor Liederman, We're back.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
We're back. I was just talking about President Biden and
how his case is an educational moment for Americans to
get better healthcare, not to be negligent, not to forget
that all of us are mortal. As Leonard Bernstein and
the music conductor said, were the conflict of man is
that we're mortal in an immortal, eternal world. So we're

(21:32):
trying to diagnose and treat people to have a better
life and a longer life. And this is what we
do every day at thirteen andy four Broadway and some
people were offended. I talked about mister Biden and his characteristics.
But everything I've talked about is in the public domain.
There's nothing private. It's not Hippa. He's not my patient.
If he was my patient, I believe his story would

(21:53):
be a lot different than it is right now. Who's
diagnosed with stage four glease and nine cancer's traveled to
his bones. So I suspect he would have liked that
we had more time together on the corner of forty
sixth Street. Anyway, I want to talk about a gentleman
who called me yesterday. This man is one of New
York's top businessman. He's well known personalities, known to pretty

(22:18):
much everyone in this country, actually, and he called me
yesterday about his own personal issue and his own personal issue.
He's about seventy years old, and a few months ago
he had a PSA of four and a half. He
had an MRI done, and his urologists told him not

(22:41):
to worry. Don't worry, it's only four and a half.
Don't worry. Nothing bad can happen to you. And he
didn't tell me that until yesterday. But that was last year,
so a year ago or eight months ago. He said hey,
his geurologists checked him out, He did all the right things.
He went to his primary doctor. He had a psa.

(23:04):
His primary doctor sent him to gerrologist. Eurologist said, hey,
it's four and a half your psa. It's nothing to
worry about. And like we talk about on the radio
all the time, usually the warning sign is a PSA
of four four point zero, or it's psa velocity how
fast the PSA is rising. And the PSA of it

(23:26):
goes from one to two to three to four. That's quadrupled,
which is a worrisome sign. And as eurologist told him,
don't worry about it. And we have examples of PSA
being low. For example, Ralph who's on our video. He
calls in off and Ralph is also known as seven.
Ralph went to his doctor and he had a PSA
that went one to two to three, and his doctor

(23:48):
told him, hey, don't worry about it's only three. And
Ralph is super methodical, and he said, doctor, my PSA
went from one to two to three. The PSA velocity
is bad, and I want to get a biopsy. And
he got a biopsy. And he came to me twenty
years ago with prosday cancer. So there's a case where
the patient, Luckily he was smarter. He was a radio listener,

(24:11):
he knew about our work, and he outsmarted the doctor
who tried to placate him when he should have been placated.
It should have been the doctor said, hey, your PSA
is tripled. No, the patient found it. The patient was diagnosed,
and then the doctor wanted him to do radical surgery.
He said, no, I don't want to do radical surgery

(24:33):
because radical surgery will take away my sex life. It
will cause me to leak urine. It was shortened my penis.
It's surgery in the hospital, and there's better treatment. And
I listened to doctor Liederman and what did Ralph do well?
He came to me twenty years ago with prostay cancer
from the story, and we see each other on a
regular basis. Twenty years later as PSA went down to

(24:55):
seven and in fact he is pictured in on our
walls with a picture of his wearing a double seven
shirt and he's so happy twenty years later. So you
don't have to have a high PSA to have prostate cancer,
but a high PSA is more worrisome. And then the
PSA that's changing is more worrisome. So let's just get

(25:17):
back to this seventy year old businessman. He's a very
well known personality nationally internationally, travels the world. And he
called me up yesterday and say, hey, my doctor told
me my PSA is nine. I shouldn't worry about it.
And so I immediately repeated the PSA this is all

(25:37):
in the last couple of days, and repeated the PSA
it's even higher, it's nine point eight. And I said
that we need to get an MRI, and we've got
an MRI the same day. And the same day we've
got an MRI, and the MRI shows why do we
do MRIs for prostate evaluation? You might ask, we do
MRIs for prostate evaluation to look at the size and
shape of the prostate. And so we got an MRI

(25:59):
and showed that there was not only a nodule in
the prostate, but there's two nodules in the prostate. And
now one of these nodules is pushing against the capsule
of the prostate. And furthermore, it appears as if the
prostate tumor is invading the semino vesico. So it appears
to be a very very aggressive cancer that has traveled

(26:22):
to the semino vesico and there were even some lesions
on the bone seen on this MRII. The MRI the
prostate will include a few bones in the adjacent area.
It doesn't look at all the bones. There's better tests
for bones, like a bone scan or a pet scan
called PSMA test. Those are the best tests to see

(26:43):
if the cancer has traveled in the bone area or
other areas. And so this man has not had a biopsy.
He was seen, remember by eurologists who said, oh, you're
in good shape, you don't have to do a biopsy.
And now this man wants desperately to get a biopsy immediately,
and we can, of course accommodate him if that's what
he wants. But we did repeat the PSA. Not only

(27:05):
was it equal to what was found elsewhere, but it
had increased further. So it's gone from four and a
half to nine to now nine point eight. And he
has a nodule in the prospect in fact, two nodules
in the prostate, and you have tumor pressing against the
capsule and tumor going into seminovessicle and possible cancer in
the bone. So it's almost a mirror image of President Biden.

(27:28):
And why did he call me? Why did this well
known personality, businessman, internationally acclaimed person called me what he
called me because of Joe Biden. And so people say, well,
we shouldn't disparage Joe Biden. I'm the last one to
disparage anybody, including Joe Biden, especially Joe Biden. But Joe

(27:48):
Biden is a learning point for Americans that anyone can
have cancer, even the President the United States can have cancer.
And if you remember back, Jimmy Carter also had cancer.
In fact, Jimmy Carter was the first president ever and
the only president ever to have radio surgery. He had
a cancer traveled to his bones at age ninety one

(28:10):
and was treated with radio surgery, which is non invasive treatment.
Radio Curty were the first in America with non invasive
body radio surgery and we've treated forty thousand patients. President
Carter was the first president and the only president the
best of my knowledge, who had radio surgery. I had
radio surgery for cancer in the brain and lived years,

(28:31):
when the average person who has cancer the brain doesn't
live that long. So he certainly benefited from radio surgery.
President Biden, He's not my patient, so I'm free to
talk about him and all the information that I gleaned
from the newspaper, like you you know about him, and
what do you learn even on the show. And now

(28:52):
this personality who was diagnosed with a rapidly rising PSA,
a nodule in the prostate. So what is this man do?
And he asked me exactly what does he do? Well?
Number one, he needs to get a biopsy and he
wants to do it immediately, and we can arrange that
as well if he wishes have a biopsy immediately. Biopsies
to put a needle in the prostate and to do

(29:13):
it actually in a few different spots, and that usually
will give a diagnosis. He has a PSA of nine
point eight. So we take the typical person with a
PSA of nine point eight, about thirty five percent of
them we have prostate cancer. He's a little bit different
because he has his MRI showing a nodule in the
prostate and bulging of the capsule, and he has also

(29:34):
a tumor that goes up against a into the seminovesico.
So it's a more likely case of having cancer. So
if he gets a biopsy tomorrow. He had the MRI yesterday,
the biopsy tomorrow, and then staging to see if the
cancers travel to the bones, bone skin or psma test
or both would be great ways to start, and then

(29:55):
we would talk about the treatment based upon the extent
of the cancer. With cancer needs to know whether you
have cancer, what type it is, number one and number
two has the cancer traveled? So that's the stage. And
one more thing about this personality. We also did other
testing on him because he came here and we've got

(30:15):
other cancer markers, including cancer markers first pancreas, and he
actually has an elevated CAA ninety nine, which is worrisome
for a second cancer or cancer possibly in the pancreas.
So this is a man who's now facing several new possibilities.
He asked me, why didn't my doctors do the things
you do, doctor Liederman, And that, quite frankly, is why

(30:39):
people come here, Why people come here and get checked out.
We do do things differently here at Radios forty, New York.
We like to be thorough and compulsive as best as
possible and as best as the patient wishes. So this
man has a high possibility of prostate cancer that was
not diagnosed elsewhere said to say, and now is the

(30:59):
possibility of a second tumor in the pancreas, and that
was the CAA ninety nine. So it's a double diagnosis
for this man, just within the last twenty four hours.
And this is the work that we do every day
at thirteen eighty four Broadway. I want to give you
our phone number. Another secret about today is that is
you can call us. We're at one eight hundred three

(31:20):
to one zero seven ten. One eight hundred three two
one zero seven ten. This is the number during the
radio show from now till two o'clock, one eight hundred
and three two one zero seven ten. So you can
ask your cancer questions, whether it's about President Biden or
yourself or your loved ones, or other cancer questions things
we talk about on the radio show. You're welcome to

(31:42):
call from now till two. And I should tell you
other secret news, and that is that we're here every
every Saturday from eleven to twelve on WR from one
to two in the afternoon, WR from three to four
and five to six on every Saturday. Every Sunday, we're
here from eleven o'clock am until noon and from one

(32:07):
to two pm, and every night at midnight. A lot
of people like to go to sleep with doctor Liederman
or work with doctor Liederman, wake up with doctor Liederman.
So you're welcome to listen. But every night at midnight
and the Saturday night into Sunday, we have actually had
more shows, often from midnight till four am, so we
have a lot of time to learn together, so you

(32:27):
get the best possible learning. And I do want to
introduce myself so you know who's on the other side
of this radio or smartphone or computer. My name is
doctor gil Leederman. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa.
I went to public school, University medical school, was MD
at twenty five, just like my illustrious brother doctor Ted
Liederman MD at twenty five and my wonderful son Ariel

(32:50):
Leaderman MD at twenty five. Aril Leaderman is here cancer doctor,
board certified, trained at the most prestigious hospitals across America
from the Atlantic to the Pacific. His board certified is
super compulsive, super caring, super thoughtful, and he's here for
you if you wish we take care of people with cancer,

(33:14):
take care of people who want to know about cancer,
whether they have a diagnosis, and if you have a diagnosis,
best possible treatment for your cancer type and your cancer stage.
This is the work that we do every day at
thirty or four Broadway. Our l Leaderman is board certified MD,
radiational on coologist here to take care of you or
your loved ones or the person down the street. And

(33:36):
you learning all this information can pass on the information.
You're an ambassador listeners save lives. And if you hear
about someone talking about cancer at the restaurant or at
work or grocery store, you might tap him on the
shoulder and say, hey, you might want to see doctor Liederman.
Maybe he can help you more ways than you know about.
Maybe you can learn about options that are often hidden

(33:59):
from you elsewhere, just like the examples I've given today
and every day, and that's the work we do. I
at after age twenty five. All three of us doctor Liederman's,
my brother, my son, and I are all mds. At
twenty five, I went on to University of Chicago Michael
Reese trained internal medicine for three years, board certified. They
went onto Harvard Medical School trained in trained in medical

(34:23):
college at the prestigious Dana Farber three years or stayed
on the staff there, treated thousands of patients, and then
at Harvard Medical School went on trained more at the
Joint Center for Edition Therapy three more years, treated thousands
of patients. The only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation
doctor in New York, one of the few in the world.

(34:44):
Here for you at thirty dy four Broadway Broadway in
thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City.
When I was after Liederman, call us if you wanted
two and two choices, cause now calls, tonight, calls never,
whatever suits you, We'll be right back.

Speaker 4 (34:58):
It's Johnny Bragg's talking prostate cancer. Twenty years ago, I
came to doctor Leederman with prostate cancer. It was serious.
My stepfather died days after prostate surgery. My uncle never
recovered from prostate surgery. I came to doctor Leederman with
prostate cancer and high PSA. Doctor Leederman explained all options,

(35:19):
shared his and comparison results. I trusted doctor Leederman twenty
years ago. Today, I trust doctor Leederman even more. My
prostate cancer is gone, my PSA is zero, my quality
of life is great. You can trust doctor Leederman too,
like me for over twenty years. Call doctor Leederman for

(35:40):
prostate cancer two one two choices. That's two one two choices.
Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Street in Manhattan.
Most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and
two choices.

Speaker 3 (35:56):
It's doctor Leederman with Calvin West singing and writing about
his care. Answer treatment.

Speaker 7 (36:03):
Rock had cancer and my home was upside at the
radio Sarger you read that.

Speaker 4 (36:19):
We got chances.

Speaker 5 (36:21):
I'm so glad that we do.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Want to thank doctor leadhamn.

Speaker 7 (36:29):
Photo choices for me and you helio Ja Katzer. It's
not counting two on two three, Well, Sa Mopang is
read your granddaddy is such a.

Speaker 3 (36:48):
Free can't your treatment called doctor Leederman two and two choices,
two and two choices called doctor Liederman.

Speaker 5 (36:55):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at WR Studios in
the hearts of New York City were just a few
steps from the Radio Surgery New York Cancer Treatment Center
on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman, the leading
cancer expert treats prostate cancer not invasively. He was the
first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and

(37:15):
he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere
with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liederman
at two and two choices for a free informative booklet
and DVD. Hey doctor Liederman, we're back.

Speaker 3 (37:28):
We are back. I wan. I talk about a gentleman
who's fifty seven. He came from Guyana. He's married, has
three children. He came to me nearly a decade ago.
He came to me his mother had cancer, and he
came with high blood pressure and cholester on diabetes, and
he was in a motor vehicle accident. He had a
cat scan because of the car accident. He was found

(37:48):
to have a mass in the kidney two years before
he came to see me. So for two years he
knew about the cancer. For two years, he did nothing
about it. That's another case, a little bit like mister Biden.
And he saw eurologist. Eurologist is a surgeon who specializes
in the urinary system cutting on the urinary system, and

(38:12):
the Eurologists told him, well, you have to have your
kidney removed. The eurologist, didn't offer staging, didn't do testing,
didn't do a biopsy. This man was a smoker and
his father also was a smoker at home when he
was a child. The surgeon wanted to remove the kidney
without knowing if it had traveled, without knowing exactly what

(38:33):
it is. The mask when he came to me was
two point four centimeters. And I should tell you he
came to me almost a decade ago. And while we're
talking about him now, well, he came for a follow up.
Like our patients, they come for follow up. We urge
our patients to come for follow up for the rest
of our lives. Some people have success, some people don't.
Some people will have other cancers. Some people want to

(38:55):
know what's going on. It's always best to show up.
So a decade ago he was in a car accident.
He had a mass in the kidney seen by X
ray's cat scan done at that time. He knew about it.
He waited two years and he came to me. And
what did we do. Well, we offered a biopsy. We
proved that it was cancer number one. We like proof.
A biopsy is easy to do as a tiny little

(39:16):
needle in the kidney. We were able to prove he
had cancer, and we treated him a decade ago, and
now he has cancer free. He has his kidney, his
kidneys worked perfectly fine, He's had no side effects, he
has no metastasis, he's in remission. He's ten years later

(39:36):
with kidney cancer proven. The eurologists wanted to cut out
his kidney and throw it in the you know where
they throw it. With us, we were able to keep
his kidneys, which is better in my view, you avoid
the big surgery. Also something called a field defect. So
often many people with kidney and urinary cancers have more
than one. Many people come with a kidney cancer and

(39:57):
they get a kidney cancer on the other side a
year or two later. Sometimes you'll come they lost one kidney,
now they got the kidney cancer on the other side,
and they don't want to lose the other kidney, and
they come to us. So there's lots of reasons why
people come to us with kidney cancer. This man's ten
years out, doing great, new scans, no cancer, no bleeding,

(40:19):
no side effects, no cutting, he has both kidneys, he's
cancer free. He's doing great. And this is the work
that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway
in thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City,
and we talk about a woman who came also ten
years ago. Ten years ago, she came for a checkout.
She had some decreased hearing. She actually had scans of

(40:42):
her head elsewhere, and the scans were read by doctors
elsewhere as normal, but she had decreased hearing. We got
those scans, we got new scans, and we diagnosed her
with an acoustic neuroma, which is a benign tumor on
the hearing nerve. The usual side effects symptoms of the
tumor called acoustic neuroma or vestibulus shwanomas decreased hearing or

(41:06):
ringing in the ears, or dizziness. Sometimes people have facial symptoms,
electrical feelings in the face or numbness. She actually also
was diagnosed two years earlier, but it was not diagnosed.
The radiologists did not just see it. The radiologists weren't,
I guess looking for it. This was a tumor on
the hearing nerve. We saw her and we treated her

(41:28):
ten years ago, and now she's back for a checkup.
And this is the work we do. She's had checkups
and she's been doing great. We have a huge experience,
probably one of the largest in the world, treating acoustic
neromas with fractionated brain radiosurgery. This is non invasive treatment.
As you may well know, we're the first in New
York with brain radiosurgery. When all the other hospitals were

(41:50):
doing standard radiation to large parts of the brain are
doing surgery. People were coming here for first in New York,
one of the first and the world brain radiosurgery, non
invasive treatment with no cutting, no bleeding, no pain, and
we're able to attack benign tumors like acoustic neuromas and
pituitary tumors and men ingiomas, as well as cancers in

(42:13):
the brain like metastasis or glioblastomas or astrocytomas or other
malignancies of the brain. So acoustic neroma is a benign condition.
We have a huge experience with high success or. Success
rate is ninety seven percent with us. Most people keep
their facial function and hearing. People go through surgery often

(42:33):
will be deaf after surgery for the damage to the
acoustic nerve. The eighth cranial nerve and many people lose
facial function. You might have seen people who one side
of their face is perfect and the other side of
their face is weak. They can't close their mouth or
smile or close their eye. So that's often the damage
done by surgery for acoustic neuromas. It's easy to understand

(42:56):
why so many people thousands have come to us for
brain radio surgery. The doctor in New York with the
most experienced the longest experience. This is the work that
we do every day. We have a booklet about brain tumors,
brain cancers, acoustic romas for you. If you wish, you
can call us at two and two choices two and

(43:16):
two two four six forty two thirty seven. Many people
come into our office. We're centrally located. There's about half
a million people every day in our neighborhood between Times
Square and Macy's and Port Authority and Penn Station and
Grand Central, so it's easy to come in and get information.
If you are your loved ones are in the area,

(43:37):
you're welcome to get information. There's no charge for that.
We can also send it to you. You can call
us at two and two two four six forty two
thirty seven. Two and two, two four six, forty two
thirty seven mirm, Doctor Liederman will be right back.

Speaker 8 (43:53):
Did you know that you've got choices?

Speaker 6 (43:57):
That there can be a bad way?

Speaker 8 (44:01):
Did you know that you've got choices?

Speaker 6 (44:06):
Conductor?

Speaker 8 (44:06):
THEA don't mean today. You want your choicy is a
much bad way, too want too choices? Conductor, THEA doer
mean today? Did you know that you've got choices that
there can be a bad way? Did you know that

(44:31):
you've got choices?

Speaker 6 (44:34):
Conductor?

Speaker 8 (44:35):
THEA don't mean today? You want your choice is a
much bad way, too want too Choicay, Conductor, they don't
mean today.

Speaker 3 (44:50):
Doctor Leiderman, Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four, Broadway, Hard to believe.
President Biden, now diagnosed with aggressive gleas in nine stage
four press cancer spread to his bones, met with doctors repeatedly.
While VP private citizen, President would decline simple tests to
diagnose early prostate cancer where a risk explain, makes no

(45:13):
sense to decline easy tests to try to save one's life.
Care so different with doctor Liederman. We try to anticipate
screening saves lives. A different experience, whether for prostate, long
breast colorecto, newer recurrent cancer, at thirteen eighty four Broadway
with doctor Liederman. Worthwhile for the President. Likely you two

(45:35):
meet doctor Liederman, new York's only Harvard Train Triple Board
certified radiation oncologist. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Doctor Liederman
two and two choices, two and two choices. Simple tests
may save lives yours too. Call doctor Liederman two and
two choices.

Speaker 5 (45:54):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the w O
Studios in the hearts of New York City. Were just
a few steps from the radio Surgery in New York
Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman,
the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer, not in Basically,
he was the first in New York with fractionated brain
radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in

(46:17):
the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also
call doctor Liederman at two and two choices for a
free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.

Speaker 3 (46:27):
We're back. We're talking about a man who's seventy seven
years old. He's a black man, and I said, because
in the black community there's more prostate cancer and it's
more lethal cancer. No one knows why, but in fact,
for example, the death rate in black men having prostate cancer.
One in twenty three black men will die of prostate cancer.
One in six black men get prostate cancer. This man's

(46:50):
from Nigeria, Africa. He's seventy seven years old, he's married
with three children, and he came to me. He came
to me a year ago with stage four cancer. So
I almost had exactly what the President had. He was
diagnosed with a PSA of a thousand. Normal PSA is four.
His PSA was a thousand. He had what was called
a super scan. He had bone metastasis, He had extensive disease.

(47:14):
His biopsy showed Gleason nine cancer. Gleason has say it
was a doctor who tried to tell us how aggressive
cancers would be, and he made a scale from two
to ten, and you can have Gleason nine either it's
four plus five. The first number is a dominant, so
four plus five is a little bit better than five
plus four. He had both. He had Gleason four plus

(47:36):
five and five plus four. You should know, Biden, we
don't know whether it was five plus four or four
point five, it doesn't really make much difference because it's
a very aggressive cancer with bone metastasis. Just like this man.
He started on hormone therapy. He started on loopron cassidex.
He was seen by doctors elsewhere he was diagnosed. He
had nodules in the lung. He didn't tolerate the treatment well.

(47:59):
His blood counts collapse and could well be because the
cancer traveled to the bone and the bone marrow he had.
He had six needles in the prostate and six of
the six showed four plus five and on the other
side he had five plus four in three cores and
it was tracking along the nerves. And he came to

(48:21):
me with anemia and cancer in the bone and terrible pain.
He had lost weight, and it often happens with advanced
cancer losing weight. So he had pain and weight loss.
He was urinating ten times a night, and he came
to me suffering terribly with stage four cancer like mister President,

(48:42):
stage four Gleason nine prostate cancer and had hormone treatments
which didn't work. And he came to me and actually
is one of the most dramatic stories we were able
to treat him and get him out of pain. And
our treatment only takes care of the pain, but it
actually kills the cancer cells, which is totally different than
chemo or hormones for prosty cancer, which only temporarily relieves

(49:04):
the cancer. When we treat a particular area where we
aim to beam, ninety percent chance that cancer will never
come back. And we treated him in the spine area
in pelvic area, we had terrible pain and now that
pain is all gone. And then he came to me
one day and I was speaking to him. I saw
him walking down the hallway and I said hey, and
he didn't speak back to me. I thought, well, i'd

(49:27):
say something wrong to have bad breath.

Speaker 5 (49:29):
No.

Speaker 3 (49:30):
I caught up with him and pat him on the shoulder,
and it was clear that he couldn't hear. He lost
all his hearing because the cancer traveled to the skull
bones right around the ears, and it filled the bones
around the ears with cancer. And I sent them to
ear doctors and other doctors, and no one knew what
to do. His ears looked okay from the outside, but

(49:52):
his skin showed extensive bone metastasis. I've spoken to multiple
doctors radiologists, hearing doctors and others. No one it ever
s anything like that. And then we offered him treatment
to do radio surgery to his ears area where the
cancer was. It was in most of the bones, and
we're able to treat the cancer in the bones by
the ears and relieve his cancer and get his hearing back.

(50:14):
And it's actually one of the most dramatic stories of
taking someone that had no hearing, could shout at him
and scream at him. He could not hear a word,
and all of a sudden we treated him and with
just a few treatments he could hear again. So it
was a very dramatic case, one of the most dramatic
case of my life. And he is so grateful. And
now it's a year later, his pain is gone, his

(50:35):
hearing is back, and wow, is he happy that he
came to Radio Surgery New York for an advanced Gleason
nine prostate cancer that was in his bones. This is
the special work that we do for anyone who wants
to come here. This is the work we do every day.
I want to talk about a woman who came to
me about breast cancer. She was eighty four years old,

(50:57):
born in Georgia. She's a black woman, I said, because
in the black community there is more breast cancer, and
breast cancer is more lethal two and forty more death
in the black community. We are able to treat her.
She had cancer in the right breast. She was treated
years ago. She had invasive cancer with DCIS, so she
had both invasive cancer. Invasive cancers cancer leaves the ducks

(51:21):
and goes in the fatty part of the breast. And
then she also had cancer DCIS in the ducks itself,
and she had this disease. She had abnormality. Her cancer
markers twenty seven nine and see if fifty three were normal.
Her radiologist asked for a biopsy. We got to biopsy,
We proved her cancer and now she is cancer free

(51:43):
only with our treatment, no surgery, no lump acdemy, no mestectomy,
no chemotherapy, only with our treatment. And we see many
many women with breast cancer who just do not want
to lose their breast, or many many women who don't
want to even have there are a lump of cancer removed.
And this is something we talk about with every woman

(52:04):
who comes here. And this is the work that we
do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. What about
a seventy nine year old man. He's a man that's
been coming for years, been coming to me for five years.
He has frequent urination, he has heart disease. He's waking
up three times a night to urinate. In the daytime,
he's urinating every hour. He's losing weight. His father died

(52:26):
of prostate cancer. So this is a physician, and he
has a first degree relative. If you have a first
degree relative with prostate cancer, your chance of dying is
seventy two percent. He's a psychiatrist who went to some
of the most prestigious universities in America. He had a
high PSA. He was just adamant against any biopsy, so

(52:49):
I spoke to him repeatedly. Finally he got an MRI
which showed a three point nine centimeter mass in the
left prostate is growing through the capsule. It was called
py red five. Pirate is how the MRI looks of
the prostate was involving just adjacent to the rectum. He
was involving the neurovascular bundo. There was some enlarged lymph nodes.

(53:12):
So this is the man who's now biopsy positive and
he wants finally, after five years, to be treated. We've
been encouraging him for five years. And here's an example,
like we talked about before, if some people are very
high risk or just adamant against getting a biopsy, was
informed and it's all documented, but he just refused. Everyone said, oh,
you're seventy nine years old, you don't need a biopsy. Well,

(53:34):
now the cancer's traveling, and all of a sudden, he
doesn't want to die. And this is the work that
we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. If
only want to talk about a woman who comes to
me sixty three years old. She had uterine cancer and
demetrial cancer elsewhere. She went to have surgery, We lost
her uterus, had chemo, had radiation, and nothing worked. The
cancer came back in the lymph nodes. She was told

(53:56):
she had stage four cancer. She's going to die just
to have chemo. Chemo doesn't work very well for uterine cancers.
Why is it given? That's a good question. We could
talk about that. She came for other options because she
already had chemo didn't work. She had standard radiation didn't work,
she lost her uters that didn't work. She came here
five years ago and we treated her for stage four

(54:17):
cancer uterine cancer that traveled to the lymphnos. We treat
her with radio surgery, non invasive treatment, and she's been
cancer free ever since. So salvage treatment, we're able to
treat someone even though standard treatment didn't work. Surgery didn't work,
Chimo didn't work, radiation didn't work until she came here
five years later cancer free. This is the work we

(54:37):
do at Radio Sturdy, New York. Give us a call
if you want two and two choices. It's always best
to meet in person.

Speaker 5 (54:46):
Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with
doctor Gil Riderman and myself. If you have questions before
next week's show or want a free informative booklet and DVD,
just contact doctor Liederman at two on two choices. That's
two one two two four six four two three seven.
That's two one two two four six four two three seven.

Speaker 2 (55:23):
For cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated
outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too.
Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York,
First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liederman hits your
cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades
of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers

(55:46):
from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second
chance for you. Meet doctor Liderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologists.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices to
meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two super convenient Broadway in

(56:09):
thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit your cancer.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices.

Speaker 3 (56:16):
Prostate cancer very common. Men's cancer worldwide will double by
twenty forty. Thirty five thousand men die here annually from
prostate cancer.

Speaker 7 (56:25):
What to do?

Speaker 3 (56:26):
It's doctor Liderman with new news. New data reveals testing
reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent. Men's skipping testing
have forty five percent more death from prostate cancer. What
to do? Come for prostate cancer screening at Radio Surgery,
New York with doctor Liederman. Easy to save lives, reduce

(56:48):
prostate cancer death, possibly yours or your loved one. How
visit doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four Broadway Call two and
two choices. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid exits. It's easy with
doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified
radiation oncologist, called doctor Liederman. Two and two choices. It's

(57:10):
easy with doctor Liederman. Trying to save lives Call doctor Liederman,
two and two choices.

Speaker 1 (57:16):
The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed
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