Richard Z Cheng1, Mikhail Kogan2,3,4, Devra Davis5. 1. Cheng Integrative Health Center, Columbia, South Carolina. 2. GW Center for Integrative Medicine, Washington, District of Columbia. 3. Department of Medicine, George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbia. 4. AIM Health Institute, Washington, District of Columbia. 5. Division of Research and Development, Environmental Health Trust, Teton Village, Wyoming.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: No validated treatments have been identified for the COVID-19 pandemic virus; several are currently in randomized clinical trials. Diagnostic instruments are rapidly evolving. Symptoms range from those of a common cold to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), to sepsis arising from the flood of inflammatory bacterial and viral pathogens in the blood. Mortality generally arises from cytokine storms of uncontrolled inflammation, oxidative injury, and damage to the alveolar-capillary barrier, with secondary bacterial infection. To address the indisputably urgent need for therapeutics for COVID-19, a specialized interdisciplinary medical panel convened in Shanghai in March 2020 to consider all relevant clinical and experimental evidence on the possible utility of intravenous (IV) ascorbate in the treatment of COVID-19-related ARDS. METHODS: The panel convened multidisciplinary medical experts and reviewed all relevant in vitro, in vivo, clinical studies and randomized controlled trials on IV ascorbate and issued a consensus report on 23 March 2020 noting that substantial differences in serum concentrations of ascorbate are achieved through IV administration in contrast with the oral route. FINDINGS: The Shanghai panel, and a parallel medical group in Guangzhou, are advising the use of high-dose IV ascorbate for the treatment of ARDS, along with other supportive therapies, including Vitamin D and zinc. We report preliminary progress in using this treatment for 50 consecutive cases treated in Shanghai hospitals, consistent with earlier reports from a meta-analysis of the use of IV ascorbate to treat sepsis. We provide an instructive clinical anecdote regarding a single family where one elderly member with cardiac and other major comorbidities developed and survived ARDS-related sepsis following daily treatments that included 15 g of IV ascorbate. None of her adult caregivers who had ingested between 2 and 10 g of ascorbate daily developed COVID-19.
BACKGROUND: No validated treatments have been identified for the COVID-19 pandemic virus; several are currently in randomized clinical trials. Diagnostic instruments are rapidly evolving. Symptoms range from those of a common cold to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), to sepsis arising from the flood of inflammatory bacterial and viral pathogens in the blood. Mortality generally arises from cytokine storms of uncontrolled inflammation, oxidative injury, and damage to the alveolar-capillary barrier, with secondary bacterial infection. To address the indisputably urgent need for therapeutics for COVID-19, a specialized interdisciplinary medical panel convened in Shanghai in March 2020 to consider all relevant clinical and experimental evidence on the possible utility of intravenous (IV) ascorbate in the treatment of COVID-19-related ARDS. METHODS: The panel convened multidisciplinary medical experts and reviewed all relevant in vitro, in vivo, clinical studies and randomized controlled trials on IV ascorbate and issued a consensus report on 23 March 2020 noting that substantial differences in serum concentrations of ascorbate are achieved through IV administration in contrast with the oral route. FINDINGS: The Shanghai panel, and a parallel medical group in Guangzhou, are advising the use of high-dose IV ascorbate for the treatment of ARDS, along with other supportive therapies, including Vitamin D and zinc. We report preliminary progress in using this treatment for 50 consecutive cases treated in Shanghai hospitals, consistent with earlier reports from a meta-analysis of the use of IV ascorbate to treat sepsis. We provide an instructive clinical anecdote regarding a single family where one elderly member with cardiac and other major comorbidities developed and survived ARDS-related sepsis following daily treatments that included 15 g of IV ascorbate. None of her adult caregivers who had ingested between 2 and 10 g of ascorbate daily developed COVID-19.
While randomized controlled trials (RCTs) remain the gold standard for therapies, given the
unprecedented scale and scope of the COVID-19 pandemic, medicine is compelled to take a hard
look at interventions as they are evolving. We report here that a special expert medical
panel convened by the Shanghai government on 23 March 2020 advised treating physicians to
expand clinical uses of ingested ascorbate for prophylaxis and higher dose intravenous (IV)
therapy for COVID-19.[1] Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid or ascorbate, clearly has antioxidant
properties and appears generally to be depleted in those with underlying infections.[2]The Physicians Desk Summary (PDQ) on the U.S. National Cancer Institute website reports
that IV ascorbate has been evaluated in RCTs for the treatment of sepsis, for the prevention
of viral diseases, and in the treatment of advanced cancer along with a number of
chemotherapy agents for cases of advanced gastric, glioblastoma multiforme, and pancreas
cancer. IV ascorbate combined with Vitamin D and zinc as supportive therapies has also been
shown to be safe and efficacious in some cases involving viral infections that lead to lung
capillary endothelial cell activation, neutrophil infiltration, and increased reactive
oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS).[3]
Ascorbate Pharmacokinetics
Critically different results have been reported in duration and levels of ascorbate
depending on route of exposure. Experimental and clinical investigations led by Mark Levine
at the U.S. National Institutes of Health demonstrate that ascorbate plasma concentrations
can be maintained at <100 µM.[4] Levels in serum following oral administration are limited by gastrointestinal
absorption, renal function, tissue uptake, and metabolic rate.[4,5]In contrast, IV ascorbate can achieve up to 25 times higher serum ascorbate levels than
when the same amount is ingested.[3,6] IV
administered ascorbate provides immune-supportive as well as anti-oxidant,
anti-carcinogenic, and anti-mutagenic effects, including neutrophil chemotaxis,
phagocytosis, and consequent microbial clearance.[7] In addition, ascorbate promotes T-cell and natural killer (NK) cell proliferation and
modulates their functions against cancers and viral proliferation by enhancing macrophage
function.[8,9]The inability of earlier studies to show efficacy for ascorbate may lie with a fundamental
failure to differentiate between nutritional and pharmacological doses. For therapeutic
applications for COVID-19, the Shanghai protocol recommends that dosing regime should allow
sustained high plasma levels to be achieved through twice daily doses of 12 to 15 g
administered at 12 ml/h. The dosage recommendation will vary with the severity of the
illness ranging from 50 to 200 mg/kg/day to as much as 16,000 mg/kg/day administered IV.Recent evidence for a prophylactic role for ingested ascorbate against rhinovirus was
demonstrated by a randomized double-blind study of 1444 healthy military recruits in basic
training from Korea treated for 1 month from February to March of 2018. Those receiving
prophylactic ascorbate had 80% fewer upper respiratory infections compared with those
receiving the placebo, with the greatest benefit to never-smokers.[10]
Clinical Trials of Vitamin C and One Instructive Anecdote
In further support of the use of ascorbate both prophylactically and therapeutically, we
wish to report what we regard as a highly instructive corroborated anecdote that provides
some insight into the possible role of ascorbate for the current pandemic. A family of 6
well-educated adults in Wuhan, China, spent considerable time taking care of their eldest
member who had a number of comorbidities and developed COVID-19. Each one of her
non-cohabiting caregivers took between 3 and 10 g daily of ascorbate with their food in 2
divided doses. When the ill family member entered intensive care and was placed on a
mechanical respirator, treating physicians agreed to administer IV ascorbate in addition to
supportive therapy. Unlike more than half of those in her condition in Wuhan in February,
she recovered.Not a single member of the exposed caregivers came down with the virus.Of course, this anecdote might simply be the result of a coincidence. In effect this story
can be construed as a small-scale trial insofar as exposures certainly took place to
COVID-19 for the patient and each one of her caregivers who did not use personal protective
equipment. Yet none developed the disease after ingesting prophylactic doses of ascorbate
throughout her illness.
Interpretations From the Front Lines and Other Instructive Anecdotes
In an impressive series of papers, Prof. Paul Marik previously demonstrated the stunning
capacity of ascorbate with steroids, Vitamin D, and other supportive treatment to reverse
sepsis among critically ill patients.[11] Further support is provided by a meta-analysis of 3 studies, including 146 patients
in intensive care units that randomly administered IV ascorbate finding significant benefits
in those being treated.[11-13] When sepsis occurs, the cytokine surge and
neutrophil accumulation in the lungs destroy alveolar capillaries. These clinical studies
have shown that vitamin C can effectively prevent this process and can reduce alveolar fluid
by inhibiting the activation and accumulation of neutrophils and reducing alveolar
epithelial water channel damage that can induce vascular injury.This work is now effectively corroborated by additional reports from the medical frontlines
in China and Korea in the treatment of COVID-19. A medical director in Wuhan Tongji Hospital
reports the following:From South Korea, a treating physician, Hyoungjoo Shin, provides the following
report from March 2020:In March 2020, high-dose IV administration successfully treated 50 moderate to
severe COVID-19 patients in Shanghai, China.[14] The doses ranged from 2 g to 10 g per day, given over a period of 8 to 10 hours, for
5 to 7 days. For this group of recent patients, the oxygenation index improved in real time
and all were discharged from intensive care and released from the hospital as of 23 March 2020.[1]On the afternoon of 20 February 2020, another 4 patients with severe new coronaviral
pneumonia recovered from the C10 West Ward of Tongji Hospital [Wuhan]. In the past 8
patients have been discharged from hospital … [H]igh-dose vitamin C achieved good
results in clinical applications … [H]gh-dose vitamin C can not only improve antiviral
levels, but more importantly, can prevent and treat acute lung injury (ALI) and acute
respiratory distress (ARDS).At my hospital in Daegu, South Korea, all inpatients and all staff members have been
using vitamin C orally … . Some people this week had a mild fever, headaches and coughs,
and those who had symptoms got 30,000 mg intravenous vitamin C. Some people got better
after about 2 days, and most had symptoms go away after one injection.It is important to note that high-dose ascorbate has been clinically used for several
decades with no serious side effects reported, aside from those that are carriers of G6PD
who cannot receive more than 15 g a day because this increases their risk of hemolytic
anemia and rare instances of oxalate nephropathy after long-term treatments. In fact a
recent NIH expert panel document states clearly that a regimen of 1.5 g/kg body weight is
safe and without major adverse events.[3]As of April 10, 2020, there were over a dozen RCTs registered on
clinicaltrials.gov that are assessing the effects of vitamin C
administration in critically ill patients, particularly those with sepsis, and 28 studies
listed on ascorbate and cancer.[15] Two ongoing trials in Canada and China are assessing ascorbate in patients admitted
to the ICU with sepsis, including COVID-19.[16,17] (Figure 1)
Clinical Trials and Relative Risk Profiles of Investigational Agents Against
COVID-19
We note with interest that Northwell Health facilities on New York’s Long Island has
reportedly begun using IV ascorbate with critically ill patients in that hospital system as
is the University of Wisconsin Critical Care Unit.[16] Other efforts to employ bolus infusions of ascorbate and other nutritional
supplementation for COVID-19 patients are underway under the medical direction of Miriam
Rahav in New York City. In addition, George Moskowitz, MD, a family physician in Borough
Park, Brooklyn, New York, reported recently that COVID-19 positive patient that had
developed unresponsive respiratory symptoms was successfully and uneventfully treated with a
single course of 40 grams of IV ascorbate. As this report was being prepared, we learned
that high doses of IV ascorbate were part of the successful treatment given to a gravely ill
44-year-old emergency room physician in Seattle. As glassy lung developed, he was placed on
a mechanical ventilator at Swedish Hospital. A combination of twice daily infusions of up to
25 g of ascorbate and the rheumatoid arthritis medication Actemra are credited with
preventing his demise.Of course, there is no dispute that the gold standard for clinical evidence remains the
RCT. There is also no dispute that under these grave circumstances of an exponentially
growing pandemic, where more than a quarter of all children who are positive for COVID-19
have few or no symptoms and many transmitters of the disease are asymptomatic it is
critically important to devise innovative approaches both to prevent and treat the disease.[17] The use of ascorbate, a relatively low-cost and nontoxic option, should be considered
an important option in light of the growing impact COVID-19 is having on public health and
the global economy.In conclusion, we note that the history of medicine is replete with instances where
well-drawn case reports have guided the creation of life-saving innovations. The
catheterization of the human heart by Andre Cournand and Dickinson Richards provides an
especially apt instance of such a world-changing clinical case report, depicted in
Cournand’s Nobel Prize in Medicine acceptance speech in 1956.[18]We present these cases and findings fully aware of their limitations and the unprecedented
nature of the challenges posed by this global pandemic. Ultimately RCTs will prove pivotal.
Currently, supportive care is the only proven remedy for those with advanced COVID-19. Were
reliable, nontoxic treatments such as the use of ascorbate validated for this novel virus,
this would greatly facilitate the return to a new normal for medicine and for civil
society.A recent consensus statement from a group of renowned infectious disease clinicians
observed that vaccine programs have proven ill-suited to the fast-changing viruses
underlying these illnesses, with efficacy ranging from 19% to 54% in the past few years.
Accordingly, they advise that:supplementing above the RDA for certain immune-supporting vitamins, promotes optimal
immune function, helps to control the impact of infections, and could help limit the
emergence of novel, more virulent strains of pathogenic viruses. We, therefore, strongly
encourage public health officials to also include nutritional strategies in their
arsenal to improve public health and to limit the impact of seasonal and emerging viral infections.[19]
Authors: Vivek Patel; Katelyn Dial; Jiaqi Wu; Alex G Gauthier; Wenjun Wu; Mosi Lin; Michael G Espey; Douglas D Thomas; Charles R Ashby; Lin L Mantell Journal: Int J Mol Sci Date: 2020-02-01 Impact factor: 5.923