Strange has been said to have the ability to seal away the beyonder. Strange is extremely powerful and could obliterate the tartus and remove the doctors regeneration ability.
Here's something we really have to consider if involving Doctor (Who) in a battle against a magic wielding opponent. When the Time Lords removed magic from the universe and replaced it with the laws of physics to underpin reality, they also make themselves casually immune to magic. Or at least, magic as they know it, which basically means any unnatural and irrational alterations to the normal functions of physics. The novel Christmas on a Rational Planet has this passage.
The streets of the un-city shifted like the nonsense circuitry of the gynoids themselves, but it didnʼt take long to find Christopher Cwej at the heart of it all. The pathways arranged themselves into regular patterns as the Doctor passed by, almost as if they were scared of what he might do to them if they didnʼt comply.
Basically, that scene has demonstrated that if a Time Lord is proximate to an area that is under the effect of magic, his mere presence will force his immediate surroundings to comply with the laws of physics and effectively dispel magic in that area of effect. This can be seen where the Doctor walks through a magical city that functioned in opposition to physics and it simply just starts complying with the laws of physics. Effectively, the Doctor's mere presence is casually anti-magic.
So, what we'd have to consider is what magnitude of power magic from Doctor Who is and if it is stronger than Doctor Strange's magic. If so, then we may have to presume that the Doctor is casually immune to it. If Doctor Strange's magic is fundamentally different from the magic in the Whoniverse (which doesn't seem to be the case), then we would have to consider whether or not magic is equalized in this battle. If so, the Doctor could probably casually dispel it.
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