logo
CancerTok influencer's doctor reveals shock truth behind her diagnoses after critics claimed they spotted clues she was faking illness

CancerTok influencer's doctor reveals shock truth behind her diagnoses after critics claimed they spotted clues she was faking illness

Daily Mail​02-05-2025

A Yale-educated oncologist has hit out at detractors who claimed an influencer was faking her cancer diagnosis.
Sydney Towle, now 25, already had scores of online followers on TikTok when she tearfully announced in 2023 that she had a rare and aggressive form of cancer, known as cholangiocarcinoma.
As she shared her life undergoing chemotherapy and other treatments for the bile duct cancer, her fanbase grew and she now has more than 770,000 followers on the video sharing site.
But as Towle's popularity grew - so did her critics, who maliciously claimed they found evidence the CancerTok influencer was faking her diagnosis, according to the New York Times.
They pointed to her videos showing her traveling around the world and what they saw as contradictions in her treatment on an anonymous Reddit page.
The detractors even put together a 28-page timeline of medical details Towle shared online, using it to bolster their claims that Towle was lying about having cancer for public sympathy and monetary gain.
Yet Dr. Ghassan Abou-Alta, who specializes in liver and bile duct cancers and treats Towle - has now put an end to the debate.
'She has cancer,' he told the Times, categorizing her illness as Stage IV.
He described how Towle's cancer started in the bile ducts in the liver, and after an initial surgery to remove the original tumor, the cancer recurred in her liver.
Tumors were also detected in lymph nodes next to her liver, Abou-Alta said from his office at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.
The doctor then went on to commend Towle for shining a light on young people who are fighting cancer, more and more of whom are diagnosed every day.
Many of them can maintain a fairly normal schedule, even when undergoing chemotherapy, Abou-Alta explained.
'We literally have people who come to us for treatment on their lunchtime from the office and then go back to work,' he noted.
'Patients really can live with cancer. Not everybody should be looking as if they were dying.'
Of course not everyone will tolerate chemotherapy as well as Towle, but a number are, he said.
'A young patient like Sydney, or at any age really, can keep going and look very good,' the doctor said. 'But it does not undermine that she's still living with a very serious matter.'
When the oncologist was then told that skeptics on Reddit thought Towle was lying about her diagnosis, Abou-Alta reportedly hung his head and shook it in disbelief.
He then recounted how he had told Towle that the point of undergoing chemotherapy is to preserve and prolong life - something that she should cherish.
'Always what I tell her is, "We want to steal from you one day per week" for treatment,' the doctor said. '"That's when you're a sick person. We have to keep the other six days for you."'
Yet those on the so-called 'snark' Reddit page have claimed Towle's often cheerful videos are proof that she does not actually have cancer.
They started the page last fall, as Towle moved from her native California to New York City for treatment.
Its rules included: 'No defending Syd.'
At the time, the Redditors noted that Towle had planned a three-week trip to Europe ahead of her move - questioning why someone with cancer would take a break from treatment for vacation, only to return to make dramatic videos about her illness.
The backlash then intensified over the winter, when the anonymous posters argued that she was not undergoing much chemotherapy.
They noted that Towle maintained her long hair, and zoomed in on videos Towle posted to look for signs of a port - a medical device that is implanted in patients to facilitate chemo treatments and ease blood draws.
When they didn't find evidence of one, the Redditors concluded Towle must be lying about her diagnosis.
Then, when she posted a video showing a port implanted not on her upper chest - as is usual - but on the underside of her arm, they remained skeptical.
And even when Towle posted a video in which she appeared to be at a chemotherapy appointment in March, she was hit with backlash just days later, for posting another video showing her with her brother, Austin, in the Caribbean.
'This is us before going scuba diving in the ocean - for the first time,' she wrote in the TikTok video.
In the next scene, Towle and her brother were seen wearing wetsuits, which Towle said 'is us after our first dive.'
The brother-and-sister duo were in Jamaica for a friend's wedding, but on Reddit, critics saw the stark juxtaposition as evidence she was not sick.
'Syd must WANT to be ousted,' one commentator wrote.
'Don't worry, she'll be back with the fake nausea and baby voice in no time,' another added.
Eventually, the Reddit page had more than 1,000 members who accused Towle of manufacturing emotion on camera to manipulate sympathetic followers.
One of the biggest detractors was a Redditor with the username Beginning_Field_2421, who was found to be Connie Wright - a privacy officer for Valley Health System in Bergen County, New Jersey who shapes and manages the organization's patient privacy practices, according to her LinkedIn.
'We have receipts, medical analysis, fact-checking discussions,' she wrote on the page, urging others to 'join the conversation and tell us how you found out and why you may have doubts.'
She also shared posts with headings like, 'Sydney Towle- Were you lying then or now?' and 'How to spot when Sydney Towle is lying: Her biggest tells, which catalogued her 'slow blinks, pauses and squinting.'
Wright also used some strong language in her posts, once reportedly writing: 'I've never disbelieved or hated this phony b more than today.'
Others were also alarmed when Google said cholangiocarcinoma 'often affects adults in their 70s' and carries a 'usually poor' prognosis in cases in which the cancer advanced, as had Towle's.
Many of the detractors did not seem concerned about their hostility, the Times reports.
'If she fabricated any part of her story, it's deeply unethical and she deserves backlash,' Beginning_Fields_2421 wrote as others hit out at Towle for accepting donations from some of her followers.
'Being a public figure comes with scrutiny - it's part of the job.'
Eventually, the hostility spread beyond the Internet, as Wright urged people to complain about Towle to the companies whose products she endorsed and suggested that Reddit commentators show up at a cancer research fundraiser that Towle would be attending.
Someone else also suggested sending Towle's photo to cancer hospitals, implying they need to be alerted of a potential fraudster, according to the Times.
A third Redditor even contacted the Jamaican scuba company where she and her brother had gone diving, asking about the protocol for allowing cancer patients to participate.
Meanwhile, Towle also noticed a surge in criticism on TikTok.
'My comments have been so inundated with people being like, "You will burn in hell. You are lying,"' she told the Times, adding that she also received death threats.
The comments left her feeling stuck, because if she quit social media, she feared her followers would believe she had something to hide.
'I'm sorry that they are so angry that living with cancer can look different than they think it should,' she said.
In a video after the article was published, Towle finally addressed the hatred she received to her TikTok followers.
'I haven't really addressed this because I was quite frankly shocked when I found out this was a thing - and I wasn't sure how else to prove I have cancer because I was posting at chemo every week,' she said.
'I also know that I know what I'm going through, my friends and family know what I'm going through and that is ultimately what matters the most.
'But it has taken a significant toll on my mental health... It has been a lot,' she admitted.
Towle concluded by saying she hopes the article 'reinforces that you do not know what someone is going through.
'Just because I am traveling, hanging out with my friends and doing normal things doesn't mean that I don't have Stage IV cancer,' she said, before thanking 'everyone who has supported me, because none of the negativity negates how much I appreciate the support of everyone on here.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

103-year-old British gran reveals the secret to long living
103-year-old British gran reveals the secret to long living

South Wales Argus

time2 hours ago

  • South Wales Argus

103-year-old British gran reveals the secret to long living

103-year-old Joan Partridge has also found fame as 'Britain's oldest influencer' after her make-up tutorials went viral. Originally from Birmingham, she starts every day at her care home in Redditch, Worcs, by "putting on her rouge" – and is now signed with a top beauty brand. The great-great-grandmother-of-six said: "I know I'm 103, but I still like my make-up. I do it every morning when I get up. @thismorning Want to know the secret to living a long life? 103-year-old influencer Joan Partridge shares her advice and her advice may just surprise you! 👀 ♬ original sound - This Morning "I didn't know much about Tiktok. I thought it was a clock. I never thought I would have gained so much attention. I was shocked and overwhelmed."

This ‘top tier' sleep hack will calm your nervous system in seconds
This ‘top tier' sleep hack will calm your nervous system in seconds

Metro

time2 hours ago

  • Metro

This ‘top tier' sleep hack will calm your nervous system in seconds

Sleep can sometimes be a complicated beast, as according to the NHS, around one in every three Brits struggles with insomnia. But there is one unique trick doing the rounds on TikTok that's allegedly helping countless people doze off– and it's called the 'cricket feet' or 'cricketing' method. With over 50 million views and 265,000 searches this month alone, it's a self-soothing technique that involves rubbing the feet together gently and repetitively as you're trying to fall asleep. Sometimes, it's even done subconsciously. When @notyouraveragethrpst asked her followers 'who else is laying in bed just 'cricketing' their feet?' many were surprised to hear that it was a common thing. 'Didn't know it had a name,' @ezeee1717 shared, adding that they've 'been doing it [their] whole life.' Another, @lindsaybatista, said they thought they were the 'only one' who did it, while @maureensqueo commented that they 'often' used it as a coping mechanism when when they're 'having a lot of anxiety.' As adult sleep consultant and The Sleep Works founder Maryanne Taylor tells Metro, while there isn't a huge amount of direct research on the links between 'cricket feet' and sleep, it does tap into 'self-soothing behaviours that can help calm the nervous system.' 'Gentle, repetitive movements like this can signal safety to the brain, especially during wind-down time,' she explains. 'They activate the parasympathetic nervous system (your calm setting), which helps the body relax enough to fall asleep.' Maryanne's top tip for ensuring a good night's sleep is a 'calm nervous system, but she says that a peaceful, uninterrupted slumber isn't just shaped by nighttime routines – it also comes down to 'habits, thoughts, and behaviours' throughout the day. And if the brain has been in 'go mode' all day long with little to no opportunity to slow down, it's ultimately 'not surprising that it struggles to wind down at bedtime.' 'Building in micro resets during the day to give the brain a chance to process and decompress, together with a wind-down routine that genuinely soothes the mind, rather than just ticking boxes, can be hugely helpful,' Maryanne says. Neurodivergent people have also long been sharing that they enjoy 'cricketing' as a stimming behaviour – a self-stimulatory repeated movement for either sensory stimulation, or to 'keep calm and express joy,' according to the National Autistic Society. TikToker @_joossiiee included 'cricket feet' in a list of their 'neurodivergent sleep habits that are completely satisfying,' alongside 'aggressive face rubs' and 'the cave,' which involves burrowing under the duvet, burrito-style. Meanwhile, @florishwithvicki described it as a 'top tier stim.' This checks out, too, as Maryanne says that research does support 'cricketing' as a self-soothing behaviour for neurodivergent people. This is because those with ADHD or autism in particular have a 'natural need for repetitive movement or sensory input for emotional comfort,' which in turn helps to 'calm their brain and regulate their nervous system.' But 'cricket feet' aside, Maryanne has another self-soothing sleep system to recommend: the pre-bed 'brain dump.' More Trending 'Before bed, write down three things you don't need to think about until tomorrow,' she explains, noting that this technique helps 'relieve the build-up of mental pressure that impacts as soon as you lie down in bed.' In her view, the brain wants to 'hold onto everything it thinks is important,' so processing it on a piece of paper 'gives you permission to let go for the night.' Likewise, she suggests dimming the lights earlier than you normally would – at least an hour before bed, as softer lighting helps the brain to 'transition' into sleep mode, as well as supports natural melatonin production (AKA, the sleep hormone). View More » Ready to sleep like a baby tonight? Sweet dreams. Do you have a story to share? Get in touch by emailing MetroLifestyleTeam@ MORE: TikTok star Sana Yousef shot dead by man who repeatedly contacted her online MORE: Student spends £129 on a Wowcher mystery holiday – to the city where she lives MORE: Rest easier with Emma Sleep's Summer Sale – shop our top picks with up to 20% off Your free newsletter guide to the best London has on offer, from drinks deals to restaurant reviews.

Este Haim describes relationship with health condition
Este Haim describes relationship with health condition

Wales Online

time2 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Este Haim describes relationship with health condition

Este Haim describes relationship with health condition The Haim bassist had advised her then-partner that there was a chance her future children could also develop the condition Este Haim, Alana Haim, and Danielle Haim will release their fourth album in June (Image: Getty Images for Prime Video ) Este Haim's boyfriend dumped her because she has diabetes. The Haim bassist - who was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, where the body is unable to produce insulin correctly, when she was 14 years old - had advised her then-partner that there was a chance her future children could also develop the condition, and was stunned when his reaction was to end their relationship. ‌ In an interview with Britain's GQ magazine, Este said: "I had a guy break up with me because I said that there was a possibility that our kid would have diabetes. ‌ "He was like, 'Then why are we here?' And I was like, 'What?!'" The Haim sisters have been sharing their dating woes on TikTok in honour of their new single 'Relationships', and Alana Haim admitted one story she'd told was worse than she described on the platform, having ignored advice from her siblings and flown from Los Angeles to London for New Year's Eve to meet a mystery musician she'd been dating for a year, only for him to high-five her at midnight and for it to later emerge that he'd been cheating on her. She said: "I was 20, and I was so in love with this guy in a band. Everyone thinks it's about another guy and it's not him, that theory is wrong." Article continues below Discussing flying over to the UK over the festive period, she added: "And then he ghosted me the whole week. "And then I found out he was cheating on me with his ex... I was devastated. Devastated!" Alana Haim, 33, also recalled another horror story, which saw her dump her boyfriend after he issued her an ultimatum when she was offered a role in 2021's 'Licorice Pizza', but she has no regrets. ‌ She said: "I had a boyfriend that gave me an ultimatum between doing 'Licorice Pizza' and staying with him. "I obviously made the right choice ..." Singer Danielle Haim, 36, split up with the band's co-producer Ariel Rechtshaid in 2022 after nine years together, but she has learned she is more than "okay alone". Article continues below She said: "Not only okay, but so happy. Sorry to be that bitch but I'm like, really having a great time being by myself. And now, unless someone's gonna make me so much more happy, I'm good." Este announced her engagement to Jonathan Levin in February. Sharing a selfie on Instagram at the time, she showed off a sparkly diamond ring on her wedding finger, and donned a blue t-shirt that read "I'm taken".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store