Integrative Cancer Care
You don’t have to choose between natural medicine and conventional treatment. The evidence increasingly supports that using both together (when appropriate and safe) can help lower your risk, improve how your body responds to treatment, and restore your health after it ends.
Integrative oncology doesn't replace your oncology team. It works alongside them - with a different set of tools and a wider view of what's possible.
The Best of Both Worlds
I practice within the internationally recognized framework of integrative oncology, as defined by the Society for Integrative Oncology (SIO):
"Integrative oncology is a patient-centered, evidence-informed field of cancer care that utilizes mind and body practices, natural products, and/or lifestyle modifications from different traditions alongside conventional cancer treatments.
Integrative oncology aims to optimize health, quality of life, and clinical outcomes across the cancer care continuum and to empower people to prevent cancer and become active participants before, during, and beyond cancer treatment."
— Witt et al., JNCI Monographs (2017)
In other words, my job is to help your body tolerate treatment better, and come through the other side stronger. Nothing I do is meant to talk you out of chemo, radiation, surgery, or any medication your oncologist recommends.
Naturopathic Oncology
Naturopathic oncology is a specialized branch of naturopathic medicine focused on cancer care. Practitioners in this field use nutrition, botanical medicine, and other natural therapies to support the body through treatment, ease side effects, and lower the risk of recurrence. I'm a professional member of the Oncology Association of Naturopathic Physicians (OncANP), the organization that sets the standard for this kind of collaborative, evidence-based care
This is Not Alternative Medicine
Alternative medicine refers to non-conventional treatments or systems used in place of mainstream medical care, as opposed to complementary or integrative approaches, which are used alongside it.
Alternative medicine has its place, and I respect people's right to choose their own path. It's just not what I offer here. If you're looking for someone to treat your cancer naturally instead of conventionally, I'm not the right fit.
The one exception is active surveillance: if you and your oncology team have chosen watch-and-wait, or treatment isn’t appropriate for you, I can absolutely use the hallmarks framework to work against your cancer's specific drivers and help improve your quality of life.
"The earlier integrative support begins, the more useful it tends to be. But there's no wrong time to start."
— Camille Hoffman, Integrative oncology naturopath
My Approach
Whole person, evidence informed, backed by gold standard testing.
Integrative oncology addresses the whole person, not just the diagnosis. In other words, your oncology team is managing the tumor, and one of my roles is to evaluate the person carrying that diagnosis, and build a protocol designed to strengthen you through whatever comes next. I assess your health history, your terrain, your current physiology, and how your body is responding to treatment
My approach is also informed by the hallmarks of cancer framework. This is a set of defining traits shared by cancer cells, which include genome instability, resisting cell death and many others. Not every cancer expresses every hallmark equally, some tumors lean heavily on angiogenesis, others on immune evasion or metabolic reprogramming. These are the specific mechanisms your oncology team is targeting with treatment.
Fortunately natural options can also influence these same mechanisms, and can be used during or between treatment to optimize your outcomes. This is only used where indicated and safe alongside your specific diagnosis, treatment plan, and medications. I use botanicals, targeted supplementation, and food as medicine to work against the particular hallmarks most relevant to your cancer.
Another tool I use is testing, both regular bloods and functional testing, to identify imbalances (e.g. nutrient deficiencies, shifts in hormone metabolism, inflammatory patterns, microbiome imbalances, elevated toxic load) that could have been present before diagnosis or caused or worsened by treatment itself. This allows us to monitor changes as they happen and adjust your protocol accordingly.
For those currently in treatment, this usually means monitoring a fuller panel of bloods than your oncology team routinely orders, to track and support your resilience without adding unnecessary burden. If you're working on risk reduction or rebuilding after treatment, we go deeper with a fuller functional workup. Either way, the tools shift depending on where you are, but the approach doesn't.
Before, During, and After: How Integrative Care Helps at Every Stage
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Risk reduction isn't only for people who've never had a cancer diagnosis, it's also central to survivorship, where the goal shifts toward lowering the risk of recurrence or a second primary cancer. Either way, the foundation is the same: understanding your modifiable risk factors and addressing them with evidence-based lifestyle and functional medicine.
Body weight, physical activity, dietary pattern, and alcohol intake are the most consistently evidence-backed modifiable factors associated with cancer risk, and they're also the factors most within your control.
This is also where testing earns its keep. Blood work and functional testing can provide profound information regarding your metabolic health, hormone patterns, and inflammatory markers, to help build a practical evidence-based plan.
Testing & Monitoring walks through what that baseline actually involves.
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Active surveillance (also called watchful waiting) is a legitimate, evidence-based approach for certain slow-growing or low-risk cancers, where monitoring rather than immediate treatment is often the right clinical call. But knowing that doesn't make the waiting any easier!
The uncertainty of watchful waiting carries its own well-documented anxiety and emotional burden, regardless of how favorable the prognosis is, because you are living with a diagnosis without doing anything from a conventional treatment standpoint.
This is one area where integrative care and naturopathic oncology really shine.
This window between diagnosis and treatment is full of opportunity. This pause before conventional treatment means we have full access to a variety of tools that can help strengthen your overall health and address the hallmarks of cancer without the interaction concerns that come with active cancer treatments.
We can spend this time building your metabolic and immune resilience and addressing whatever your testing reveals, so that if treatment does eventually become necessary, you're meeting it from a stronger starting point rather than a depleted one.
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A well-supported body responds differently to cancer treatment than a depleted one. Some people arrive at treatment already running low (on nutrients, sleep, or metabolic reserve) for reasons entirely unrelated to their cancer. Treatment itself depletes further, creating measurable, addressable gaps in energy, immune function, nerve health, and mood.
Debilitating side effects aren't an inevitable price to pay, either. Lifestyle factors now carry guideline-level evidence for managing cancer-related fatigue, and pain.
Botanical medicine has a role here too, with evidence supporting its use for treatment-related nausea and oral mucositis, to name a few. Some herbs interact with chemotherapy agents or increase bleeding risk, so this is applied carefully and only where safe.
For patients preparing for surgery, targeted supplement and nutritional support in the weeks beforehand has also been associated with shorter hospital stays and better functional recovery.
Additionally, gut microbiome composition has even been linked to immunotherapy response - one more example of how your internal terrain shapes how treatment performs.
Testing & Monitoring can pinpoint which of these gaps actually apply to you.
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Treatment ending doesn't mean you're back to where you started. Many people are surprised by how unwell they still feel once active treatment stops — fatigue, brain fog, a body that doesn't quite feel like their own — even when scans are clear. This is where the test-and-correct approach matters most: identifying what treatment has left behind, rather than assuming it will resolve on its own.
This is also where recurrence risk reduction becomes the focus. Post-treatment physical activity has been associated with lower breast cancer recurrence and mortality, and the American Cancer Society's nutrition and physical activity guideline for cancer survivors reflects this same evidence base. Body weight, movement, diet quality, and bone health — particularly for anyone on an aromatase inhibitor — all become active levers again in this phase, not just side notes to "getting back to normal." Mind-body therapies in particular have a growing evidence base as effective supportive care for breast cancer survivors, even as other integrative practices in this space remain understudied.
Rebuilding isn't only physical. Identity, energy, and a sense of trust in your own body often take longer to recover than lab values do.
This is where understanding your terrain and Testing tend to do the most work, identifying the specific imbalances treatment left behind, whether that's depleted nutrients, shifted hormone metabolism, or a gut microbiome that hasn't recovered, and correcting them so you feel better now and stay more resilient long term.
Getting Started
Ready to begin? Start by either booking a clarity call with me, or complete the new patient enquiry. If you already know you're ready, or want to get started sooner, book your first appointment HERE.
Once your first appointment is booked, you'll receive intake forms and you will be directed to share your oncology reports and recent bloodwork with me ahead of time.
Our first session together is a full hour. By then, I'll have reviewed your history and health reports, so we can spend that time discussing you, your goals, and any further testing that makes sense. The next day, you'll receive your health plan. We then meet again for a shorter, 20-minute video call to walk through the plan together and make sure it fits your life.
From there, care continues with regular touchpoints and progress reports, so we can track how you're responding (side effects, energy, bloodwork, and overall resilience) and adjust as we go.
My two main programs, Beyond Breast Cancer and COMPASS Care, are built around this process. You can learn more about both on the Work With Me page.
Questions I'm Often Asked
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No. I see patients across the full spectrum: those in active treatment, those between treatments, those in watchful waiting, those in survivorship rebuilding their health, and those focused on proactive risk reduction who have never had a cancer diagnosis. The approach and priorities shift depending on where you are, but integrative oncology is relevant at every stage.
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It depends on your clinical picture, and what we're trying to find out.
But broadly, we might look at your hormone metabolism, nutrient status, inflammatory markers, or gut microbiome composition.
Sometimes it's as simple as blood tests you haven't had run before, or functional testing might include urine, hair, or stool testing you can do from home, no extra appointment required. Testing & Monitoring covers this in detail.
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Body weight, physical activity, and nutrition have real, evidence-backed associations with lower recurrence risk in survivorship.
These areas are integrative practitioners wheelhouse, it’s where we make meaningful change.
Add to that the functional testing, and we can see where your individual risk actually sits, then build a specific, sustainable plan around that.
No single intervention can promise to prevent recurrence, and I won't tell you otherwise, but the cumulative effect of these factors is real and worth taking seriously.
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You don't need to wait at all. Some people start during active treatment and continue through recovery; others come to me only once treatment ends, which is completely fine too.
What changes is the focus. During treatment, we're managing tolerance and side effects; afterward, we shift toward rebuilding and recurrence risk reduction. There's no expiration date on when this work is useful. I see survivors years out from treatment who still benefit from establishing a plan.
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Oncologists vary. Many are increasingly familiar with integrative oncology and supportive of patients working with a practitioner who understands both the evidence and the interactions.
Some are neutral and some are skeptical, which is reasonable considering the volume of unsubstantiated claims in this space.
What I can tell you is that I work collaboratively, stay within my scope, and communicate clearly. If your oncologist has concerns, I'm happy to be part of that conversation.
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Some are perfectly safe during treatment, but most get paused. Partly that's about interactions: certain supplements affect drug metabolism or interfere with specific chemotherapy agents, and need to be timed carefully around treatment phases. Partly it's simpler than that — your body, and your routine, can only handle so much at once, and a long list of supplements on top of treatment is often more burden than benefit.
Between cycles, we can usually reintroduce some supplementation, with the focus on supporting how you're tolerating treatment and easing side effects. This is exactly why integrative support during treatment requires clinical oversight, not self-directed supplementation.
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Integrative oncology naturopathy is a specialized clinical focus. It requires detailed knowledge of cancer biology, oncology treatment protocols, drug-nutrient and drug-botanical interactions, and the evidence base specific to cancer care. A general naturopath may be excellent within their scope, but cancer care has specific considerations that require specific training and experience. This is my sole clinical focus.
This information is educational only and does not replace advice from your oncology or medical team. | Last reviewed by Camille Hoffman, July 2026
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