| Literature DB >> 30190680 |
Abstract
The use of intravenous vitamin C (IVC) for cancer therapy has long been an area of intense controversy. Despite this, high dose IVC has been administered for decades by complementary health care practitioners and physicians, with little evidence base resulting in inconsistent clinical practice. In this review we pose a series of questions of relevance to both researchers and clinicians, and also patients themselves, in order to identify current gaps in our knowledge. These questions include: Do oncology patients have compromised vitamin C status? Is intravenous the optimal route of vitamin C administration? Is IVC safe? Does IVC interfere with chemotherapy or radiotherapy? Does IVC decrease the toxic side effects of chemotherapy and improve quality of life? What are the relevant mechanisms of action of IVC? What are the optimal doses, frequency, and duration of IVC therapy? Researchers have made massive strides over the last 20 years and have addressed many of these important aspects, such as the best route for administration, safety, interactions with chemotherapy, quality of life, and potential mechanisms of action. However, we still do not know the answers to a number of fundamental questions around best clinical practice, such as how much, how often and for how long to administer IVC to oncology patients. These questions point the way forward for both basic research and future clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: ascorbate; cancer; chemotherapy; enzyme cofactor; intravenous vitamin C; pharmacokinetics; quality of life; vitamin C
Year: 2018 PMID: 30190680 PMCID: PMC6115501 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.01182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Vitamin C levels in plasma or serum of oncology patients.
| Study types | Study cohorts | Vitamin C levels | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case control | 22 controls | Controls: 51 μmol/L | |
| Case control | 156 controls | Controls: 50 μmol/L | |
| Case control | 50 controls | Controls: 81 μmol/L | |
| Case control | 30 controls | Controls: 52 μmol/L | |
| Case control | 83 controls | Controls: 49 μmol/L | |
| Case control | 76 controls | Controls: 65 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 34 patients with lymphoma | 29% <23 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 50 patients with cancer (brain, breast, bronchial, urogenital, prostate, gastrointestinal, etc.) | 72% <23 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 22 patients with cancer (mostly colon) | 73% <50 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 12 patients with cancer (mostly colon and rectum) | 67% <50 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 24 patients with hematopoietic cancers | 92% <26 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 139 patients with lung cancer | 70% <20 μmol/L |
Effects of chemotherapeutic agents on plasma vitamin C levels in oncology patients.
| Study types | Study cohorts | Vitamin C patients. levels | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single arm | 34 patients with cancer (osteosarcoma, testicular) + cisplatin combinations | Before chemo: 46 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 15 patients with cancer (melanoma, colon, kidney) + interleukin-2 | Before chemo: 36 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 24 patients with hematopoietic cancers (bone marrow transplant) + chemotherapy | Before chemo: 48 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 20 patients with hematopoietic cancers (bone marrow transplant) + chemotherapy and/or total body irradiation | Before: 34 or 43 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 15 patients with hematopoietic cancers (stem cell transplantation) + conditioning regimens | Before chemo: 37 μmol/L | |
| Single arm | 15 patients with hematopoietic cancers (stem cell transplantation) + conditioning regimens | Before chemo: 41 μmol/L | |
| Case control | 30 patients with multiple myeloma before treatment | Before chemo: 39 μmol/L |
Pharmacokinetics of high dose vitamin C in preclinical cancer models and oncology patients with and without chemotherapy.
| Model/Cancer | IVC dose (g/kg)a | AUC (mM∗h) | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gulo−/− mice, Lewis lung (LL/2) | 1.0 (IV) | 5 | 5 | 1.3 | |
| Nude mice, hepatoma (TLT) | 1.0 (IP) | 7 | 12 | 1.0 | |
| Wistar rats, no tumors | 0.5 (IP) | 3 | – | – | |
| 12 advanced cancer | 0.6 | 14 | – | – | |
| 10 prostate cancer | 0.07–0.7 (5–60 g/d) | 2–20 | 4–48 | 1.7–2.0 | |
| 15 advanced cancer | 0.8–3.0 (30–110 g/m2) | 23–37 | 74–217 | 2.1–2.5 | |
| 11 advanced cancer | 0.1–1.5 | 2.4–26 | 6–93b | – | |
| 12 advanced cancer with chemotherapy | 0.6 | 14 | – | – | |
| 9 pancreatic cancer with gemcitabine | 0.2–1.8 (15–125 g/d) | 5–30 | – | – | |
| 25 ovarian cancer with carboplatin, paclitaxel | 1.1–1.4 (75–100 g/d) | 20–23 | – | – | |
| 14 pancreatic cancer with gemcitabine, erlotinib | 1.1–1.4 (75–100 g/d) | 20–30 | – | – |
Summary of the effects of high-dose vitamin C administration in pre-clinical cancer models.
| Treatments | Animal models | Tumor types | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral vitamin C | Murine (SCID, C57BL/6, Gulo−/−) or guinea pig | Melanoma (B16F10), Lewis lung (LL/2), lymphoma (P493), colorectal (CMT-93), breast (4T1), liver (L-10) | Increased plasma and tumor vitamin C levels | |
| IV or IP vitamin C | Murine (wild type, nude, SCID, Gulo−/−) | Colon (HT29, CT26, WiDr), ovarian (Ovar5), pancreatic (Pan02, MIA PaCa-2), glioblastoma (9L), hepatoma (TLT), lung (H322, LL/2), sarcoma (S180), prostate (PAIII), colorectal (HCT116, VACO432) | Increased plasma and tumor vitamin C levels | |
| IP vitamin C | Murine (nude) | Pancreatic (Pan02), colorectal (HCT116) | High dose GSH or NAC inhibited vitamin C-dependent decrease in tumor growth | |
| IV or IP vitamin C | Murine (wild type, nude, NOD, SCID) | Pancreatic (Pan02, PANC-1), sarcoma (S180), leukemia (L1210), melanoma (B16-F10), lymphoma, ovarian (SHIN3) | Decreased tumor growth (synergistic and non-synergistic) | |
| IP vitamin C | Murine (nude) | Pancreatic (MIA PaCa-2, PANC-1) | Decreased tumor growth and proliferation (synergistic) | |
| IP vitamin C | Murine (wild type) | Glioma (GL261) | Administration 2 h prior to radiation attenuated radiation-dependent increase in survival (radio-protective) | |
| IP vitamin C | Murine (nude) | Pancreatic (MIA PaCa-2), non-small-cell lung cancer (H292), glioblastoma (U87) | Decreased tumor growth (synergistic) | |
Summary of the effects of IVC administration in clinical studies.
| Treatments | Study types | Cancer types | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral and/or IVC 0.5–30 g/d daily for duration | Case controls | Advanced cancer | Improved quality of life | |
| IVC 10–200 g/d one to four times per week for 2–4 weeks | Single arms | Advanced cancer | No serious adverse events | |
| IVC 60 g/d once a week for 12 weeks | Single arm | Prostate cancer | No decrease in PSA | |
| IVC 75–100 g/d two times per week for 12 months | RCT | Ovarian cancer with carboplatin, paclitaxel | Decreased chemotherapy-related organ toxicity and adverse events | |
| IVC 3.5–5.6 g/70 kg/d daily for 9 days | RCT | Acute myeloid leukemia with decitabine, cytarabine, aclarubicin | Increased complete remission after first induction | |
| IVC 50–125 g/d two to three times per week for 2 weeks to 18 months | Single arms | Advanced cancer, lymphoma, pancreatic cancer with chemotherapy, or gemcitabine, erlotinib | No serious adverse events | |
| IVC 2.5 g/d during increasing pain | Case control | Bone metastasis with palliative radiotherapy | Decreased pain | |
| IVC 7.5 g/d once per week for at least 4 weeks | Case control | Breast cancer with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy | Decreased complaints | |
| IVC 75–87.5 g/d two to three times per week for up to 35 weeks | Single arms | Glioblastoma with radiotherapy and temozolomide or non-small-cell lung cancer with carboplatin and paclitaxel | Extended median survival | |
| IVC 15–100 g/d two times per week or less for 12–48 months | Case reports | Advanced cancer with or without radiotherapy and chemotherapy | Regression/resolution of metastases | |