| Literature DB >> 30002308 |
Gina Nauman1, Javaughn Corey Gray2, Rose Parkinson3, Mark Levine4, Channing J Paller5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ascorbate (vitamin C) has been evaluated as a potential treatment for cancer as an independent agent and in combination with standard chemotherapies. This review assesses the evidence for safety and clinical effectiveness of intravenous (IV) ascorbate in treating various types of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: ascorbate; cancer; clinical trials; intravenous; patients; vitamin C
Year: 2018 PMID: 30002308 PMCID: PMC6071214 DOI: 10.3390/antiox7070089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Low dose IV ascorbate + arsenic trioxide trials—Phase I and II trials.
| Reference |
| Patient Diagnosis | Trial Design | IV AA Treatment Type and Frequency | Concurrent Treatment Dose | Toxicity | Reported Outcomes/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 22 | Refractory multiple myeloma | Single Arm | 1 g on days 1, 4, 8, and 11 of a 21-day cycle for a maximum of 8 cycles | Bortezomib and Arsenic Trioxide | One occurrence of grade 4 thrombocytopenia was observed in a patient receiving high-dose bortezomib | Objective responses were observed in 27% of patients (2 partial and 4 minor). |
| [ | 65 | Relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma | Single Arm | 1 g on days 1–4 of week 1 and twice weekly during weeks 2–5 of a 6 week cycle. | Melphalan and Arsenic Trioxide | Grade 3/4 hematological (3%) or cardiac adverse events occurred infrequently, but grade 3/4 adverse events fever/chills (15%), pain (8%), and fatigue (6%) were reported. | Objective responses occurred in 48% of patients, including complete, partial, and minor responses. |
| [ | 20 | Multiple myeloma, relapsed and refractory | Single Arm | 1000 mg for 5 consecutive days during week 1, followed by twice weekly during weeks 2–12 | Dexamethasone and Arsenic Trioxide | Grade 3 events in 45% and grade 4 events in 5% | 30% complete and partial response. |
| [ | 17 | Lymphoid malignancies, relapsed and refractory. | Single Arm | 1000 mg for 5 days during week 1 followed by twice weekly during weeks 2–6 | Arsenic Trioxide | 1 cardiac death, multiple grade 3 and 4 events | Overall median survival was 7.6 months |
| [ | 11 | Advanced melanoma | Single Arm | 1000 mg for 5 days during week 0, and then twice weekly for an 8 week cycle. | Temozolomide and Arsenic Trioxide | Multiple grade 1 and 2 events. | No responses seen in the first 10 evaluable patients leading to early closure of study. |
| [ | 5 | Refractory metastatic colorectal carcinoma | Single Arm | 1000 mg/day for 5 days a week for 5 weeks | Arsenic Trioxide | Grade 3 nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, thrombocytopenia, and anemia | No complete or partial remission observed. |
| [ | 20 | Multiple myeloma, relapsed and refractory | Single Arm | 1 mg (one dose during the first week, twice weekly during weeks 2–4) | Dexamethasone and Arsenic Trioxide | Multiple grade 3 and 4 events | Clinical response was observed in 40% of patients (including partial and minor). |
| [ | 11 | Non-acute promyelocytic leukemia; acute myeloid leukemia (non-APL AML) | Single Arm | 1 g/day for 5 days a week for 5 weeks | Arsenic Trioxide | Few grade 3 or 4 adverse effects and the most common grade 3 toxicity was infection though possibly related to the leukemia | One patient achieved a complete response; another achieved a complete remission with incomplete hematologic recovery. |
| [ | 6 | Relapsed or refractory myeloma | Single Arm | 1000 mg/day for 25 days over 35 days total. | Arsenic Trioxide | One episode of grade 3 hematologic toxicity (leukopenia) was observed. | Two patients had partial responses; four had stable disease. |
| [ | 10 | Relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma | Single Arm | 1 g daily for 3 days of week 1, then twice weekly for a 3-week cycle. | Arsenic Trioxide and Bortezomib | No dose limiting adverse effects. | 40% response rate with one patient achieving a durable partial response. |
| [ | 13 | Myelodysplastic Syndrome and Acute Myeloid Leukemia (concurrent diagnoses) | Single Arm | 1 g for 5 days during week following each dose of IV Arsenic Trioxide and then once weekly thereafter | Decitabine and Arsenic Trioxide | Grade 3 and 4 events; two patient deaths occurred not related to treatment | One morphologic complete remission was observed. |
Note: This table illustrates the eleven clinical trials that evaluated intravenous ascorbate in combination with arsenic trioxide.
High dose IV ascorbate + standard therapies—Phase I and II Trials.
| Reference |
| Patient Diagnosis | Trial Design | IV AA Treatment Type and Frequency | Concurrent Treatment Dose | Toxicity | Reported Outcomes/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 17 | Advanced tumors | Single Arm | Five cohorts treated with 30, 50, 70, 90, and 110 g/m2 for 4 consecutive days for 4 weeks. | Multivitamin and Eicosapentaenoic acid | Grade 3 and grade 4 hyponatremia, hyperkalemia | 3 patients had stable disease, 13 had progressive disease. |
| [ | 3 | Relapsed lymphoma | Single Arm | 75 g twice weekly | Rituximab, cyclophosphamide, cytarabine, etoposide, dexamethasone | Grade 3 neutropenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia | The authors concluded that 75 g was a safe dose. |
| [ | 11 | Advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma | Single Arm | 15–125 g twice weekly | Gemcitabine | No dose limiting adverse effects | Mean plasma ascorbate levels were significantly higher than baseline. |
| [ | 14 | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma, stage IV | Single Arm | 50, 75, and 100 g per infusion (3 cohorts) thrice weekly for 8 weeks | Gemcitabine and Erlotinib | Multiple toxicities, all grades, thought to not be related to AA; grade 4 adverse event included two patients with pulmonary embolism | 50% of patients had stable disease. |
| [ | 25 | Stage 3/4 ovarian cancer | Randomized | 75 or 100 g twice weekly for 12 months (target plasma concentration 20–23 mM) | Carboplatin and paclitaxel | Ascorbate did not increase grade 3/4; grade 1 and 2 toxicities were substantially decreased | 8.75 month increase in PFS in AA-treated arm. |
| [ | 16 | Various cancer types (lung, rectum, colon, bladder, ovary, cervix, tonsil, breast, biliary tract) | Single Arm | 1.5 g/kg body weight infused three times (at least one day apart) on week days during weeks when chemotherapy was administered (but not on the same day as intravenous chemotherapy) and any two days at least one day apart during weeks when no chemotherapy was given. | Standard care chemotherapy. | Increased thirst and increased urinary flow; these adverse symptoms did not appear to be caused by the ascorbate molecule | Patients experienced unexpected transient stable disease, increased energy, and functional improvement. |
| [ | 13 | Glioblastoma | Single Arm | Radiation phase: radiation (61.2 Gy in 34 fractions), temozolomide (75 mg/m2 daily for a maximum of 49 days), ascorbate (doses ranging from 15–125 g, 3 times per week for 7 weeks) | Ascorbate with radiation and temozolomide | Radiation phase toxicity: Grade 2 and 3 fatigue and nausea; grade 2 infection; grade 3 vomiting | Progression-free survival 13.3 months; average overall survival 21.5 months. |
| [ | 14 | Advanced stage non-small cell lung cancer | Single Arm | 1 cycle is 21 days; IV carboplatin (AUC 6, 4 cycles), IV paclitaxel (200 mg/m2, 4 cycles), IV pharmacological ascorbate (two 75 g infusions per week, up to 4 cycles) | Carboplatin, paclitaxel, and ascorbate | No grade 3 or 4 toxicities related to ascorbate | Imaging confirmed partial responses to therapy ( |
| [ | 14 | Locally advanced or metastatic prostate cancer | Single Arm | Phase I: Escalating dose of IVC from 25 g to 100 g and gemcitabine alone at 1000 mg/m2 (week 3) with a few patients receiving reduced doses and gemcitabine with IVC (week 4) | IVC and gemcitabine | Low toxicity; Increased thirst and nausea were caused by IVC | Patients experienced a mix of stable disease, partial response and disease progression. |
Note: This table illustrates the nine clinical trials that evaluated intravenous ascorbate in combination with non-redox cycling chemotherapy agents.
Figure 1Prisma Flow Diagram.
High dose IV ascorbate only—Phase I and II trials.
| Reference |
| Cancer Type | Trial Design | IV AA Treatment Type and Frequency | Toxicity | Reported Outcomes/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| [ | 24 | Advanced cancer or hematologic malignancy | Single Arm | 1.5 g/kg body weight three times weekly | No dose limiting adverse effects. | Two patients had unexpectedly stable disease. |
|
| ||||||
| [ | 23 | Castration-resistant prostate cancer | Single Arm | 5 g during weekly week 1, | Multiple grade 3 events including hypertension and anemia; two patients experienced pulmonary embolism. | Adverse events were thought to be more likely related to disease progression than ascorbic acid. |
| [ | 11 | Late stage terminal cancer patients | Single Arm | 150–710 mg/kg/day for up to eight weeks | Two Grade 3 adverse events: one patient with a history of renal calculi developed a kidney stone after thirteen days of treatment and another patient experienced hypokalemia after six weeks of treatment. | One patient had stable disease and continued the treatment for forty-eight weeks |
Note: This table illustrates the three IV ascorbate-only trials evaluated in this review. These trials evaluated IV ascorbate as a single intervention.
Figure 2This figure represents the total number of cancer patients (n = 185) that were treated with intravenous ascorbic acid within the clinical trials summarized in this paper. This figure does not include patients who were enrolled in trials that used arsenic trioxide.
Upcoming and active interventional trials utilizing pharmacological IV ascorbate.
| Phase | Trial Title | Trial Design | IV AA Treatment Type and Frequency | Interventions | Status | Enrollment | NCT Identifier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Gemcitabine, Ascorbate, Radiation Therapy for Pancreatic Cancer | Single Arm | 50 g–100 g during radiation therapy for 5–6 weeks; escalating dose based on tolerance | Ascorbate | Ongoing, closed to accrual | 16 | NCT01852890 |
|
| High-Dose Ascorbate in Glioblastoma Multiforme | Single Arm | 15 g–87.5 g by IV | Ascorbate | Ongoing, closed to accrual | 13 | NCT01752491 |
|
| High Dose Ascorbic Acid (AA) + Nanoparticle Paclitaxel Protein Bound + Cisplatin + Gemcitabine (AA NABPLAGEM) in Patients Who Have No Prior Therapy for Their Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer | Single Arm | No dosing information provided | Ascorbic Acid | Ongoing, actively recruiting participants | 36 | NCT03410030 |
|
| High-dose Ascorbate for Pancreatic Cancer (PACMAN 2.1) | Single Arm | 75 g by IV | Ascorbate | Accrual began 28 May 2018 | 30 | NCT02905578 |
|
| High-Dose Ascorbate in Stage IV Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer | Single Arm | 75 g by IV | Ascorbic Acid | Ongoing, actively recruiting participants | 57 | NCT02420314 |
|
| High-Dose Ascorbate in Glioblastoma Multiforme | Single Arm | 87.5 g by IV | Temozolomide | Ongoing, actively recruiting participants | 90 | NCT02344355 |
|
| Adding Ascorbate to Chemotherapy and Radiation Therapy for NSCLC (XACT-LUNG) | Single Arm | Concurrent phase: 75 g by IV | Paclitaxel | Ongoing, actively recruiting participants | 46 | NCT02905591 |
|
| Docetaxel with or Without Ascorbic Acid in Treating Patients with Metastatic Prostate Cancer | Randomized | 1 g/kg | Docetaxel | Ongoing, actively recruiting participants | 69 | NCT02516670 |
|
| Randomized Study to Evaluate the Role of Intravenous Ascorbic Acid Supplementation to Conventional Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Women with Breast Cancer | Randomized | 1.5 g on day 1 followed by 0.75 g on day 2–4 at each chemotherapy cycle | Ascorbic Acid | Status Unknown | 30 | NCT03175341 |
|
| Evaluating the Safety and Tolerability of Vitamin C in Patients with Intermediate or High Risk Myelodysplastic Syndrome with TET2 Mutations | Single Arm | 50 gm CIVI/24 h x 5 days every 4 week | Ascorbic acid | Accrual begins 26 June 2018 | 18 | NCT03433781 |
Note: This table illustrates the current and upcoming trials listed on clinicaltrials.gov that are utilizing standard of care chemotherapeutics in combination with pharmacological IV ascorbate.