Information about vitamin c and cancer





 

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Vitamin C and cancer - August 05, 2008
vit c mice.jpgIt’s time for another ride on ‘vitamin C cures cancer’
rollercoaster. Some readers may recall that chemist Linus Pauling took
a long ride a while ago and was never quite the same after. Exercise
caution people.

In a paper published this week in PNAS Qi Chen, of the US National
Institutes of Health, and colleagues show that injected vitamin C
(ascorbate) can halve the growth rate of tumours in mice. The team
tested vitamin C injections in mice with rapidly spreading ovarian,
pancreatic, and brain tumours. Injections reduced tumour growth by 41%
and appeared to control spreading to other organs.
By injecting vitamin C you can produce far higher levels of ascorbate
than you can achieve with oral tablets. High concentrations of
ascorbate generate hydrogen peroxide, which is known to slow tumours
in mice, they write.

“Similar pharmacologic concentrations of vitamin C were readily
achieved in humans given ascorbate intravenously,” say the
researchers. “These data suggest that ascorbate as a prodrug may have
benefits in cancers with poor prognosis and limited therapeutic
options.”
Alison Ross, from charity Cancer Research UK, says (BBC), “This is
encouraging work but it’s at a very early stage because it involves
cells grown in the lab and mice. There is currently no evidence from
clinical trials in humans that injecting or consuming vitamin C is an
effective way to treat cancer.

“Some research even suggests that high doses of antioxidants can make
cancer treatment less effective, reducing the benefits of radiotherapy
and chemotherapy.”
New Scientist notes:

Definitive answers on the effectiveness of intravenous vitamin C
will only come from subsequent larger trials. But given recent
experiences with a drug called DCA, which some patients began
taking without medical supervision after reading about promising
results on cancer cells, there are concerns that patients may take
matters into their own hands by injecting themselves with vitamin
C or taking large doses of vitamin C pills.
The Press Association says:

The use of high dose vitamin C as a complementary or alternative
cancer treatment has a long history dating back to the 1970s. ...
Patients have taken the vitamin both by mouth and intravenously.
But despite some positive outcomes, reliable evidence that the
therapy works has been lacking. For this reason claims that
vitamin C can treat cancer have been dismissed by conventional
cancer experts.
And, as if you needed to be told, unconventional cancer experts are
probably best avoided...

Image: Mark Levine
Posted by Daniel Cressey on August 05, 2008
Categories: Health and medicine  Permalink  Comments (4) 
TrackBacks (0)

Comments
While caution is appropriate, I think the above essays is a little TOO
cautious. Injectable ascorbate has shown to be promising by more than
one researcher. Anyway, for an excellent discussion of the history of
this controversy see the book LINUS PAULING: A MAN AND HIS SCIENCE, by
anthony serafini

Posted by: Hobart Cidrule  August 11, 2008 01:30 PM
Alison Ross claims that there is no evidence from clinical trials that
vitamin C has value in cancer treatment, but she is wrong. Pauling and
Cameron published two clinical reports involving more than one
thousand patients in PNAS in the late 1970s. Cameron and Campbell
published a clinical trial of 50 consecutive cancer patients given
high-dose vitamin C in Chem.-Biol. Interactions in 1974. Recent
clinical reports on favorable responses to high-dose vitamin C have
been published in CMAJ and JACN. There's plenty of evidence suggesting
benefit for some patients if you care to look.

Posted by: Stephen Lawson  September 6, 2008 12:59 AM
I found this info very useful, and will tell my family about this
because they are always looking for better solutions. Thank you!

Posted by: Daryl Saari  October 7, 2008 02:43 AM
If Vitamin c in high doses can help reduce tumours in mice then I
would have thought it would do similar in humans. What dose is being
used?

Posted by: mike  December 5, 2009 07:16 PM
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