From: rpautrey2 on

Vitamin C injections slow tumor growth in mice
August 04, 2008

High-dose injections of vitamin C, also known as ascorbate or ascorbic
acid, reduced tumor weight and growth rate by about 50 percent in
mouse models of brain, ovarian, and pancreatic cancers, researchers
from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) report in the August 5,
2008, issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The researchers traced ascorbate's anti-cancer effect to the formation
of hydrogen peroxide in the extracellular fluid surrounding the
tumors. Normal cells were unaffected.


Natural physiologic controls precisely regulate the amount of
ascorbate absorbed by the body when it is taken orally. "When you eat
foods containing more than 200 milligrams of vitamin C a day--for
example, 2 oranges and a serving of broccoli--your body prevents blood
levels of ascorbate from exceeding a narrow range," says Mark Levine,
M.D., the study's lead author and chief of the Molecular and Clinical
Nutrition Section of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), part of the NIH.

To bypass these normal controls, NIH scientists injected ascorbate
into the veins or abdominal cavities of rodents with aggressive brain,
ovarian, and pancreatic tumors. By doing so, they were able to deliver
high doses of ascorbate, up to 4 grams per kilogram of body weight
daily. "At these high injected doses, we hoped to see drug-like
activity that might be useful in cancer treatment," said Levine.

Vitamin C plays a critical role in health, and a prolonged deficiency
leads to scurvy and eventually to death. Some proteins known as
enzymes, which have vital biochemical functions, require the vitamin
to work properly. Vitamin C may also act as an antioxidant, protecting
cells from the damaging effects of free radicals. The NIH researchers,
however, tested the idea that ascorbate, when injected at high doses,
may have prooxidant instead of antioxidant activity. Prooxidants would
generate free radicals and the formation of hydrogen peroxide, which,
the scientists hypothesized, might kill tumor cells. In their
laboratory experiments on 43 cancer and 5 normal cell lines, the
researchers discovered that high concentrations of ascorbate had
anticancer effects in 75 percent of cancer cell lines tested, while
sparing normal cells. In their paper, the researchers also showed that
these high ascorbate concentrations could be achieved in people.

The team then tested ascorbate injections in immune-deficient mice
with rapidly spreading ovarian, pancreatic, and glioblastoma (brain)
tumors. The ascorbate injections reduced tumor growth and weight by 41
to 53 percent. In 30 percent of glioblastoma controls, the cancer had
spread to other organs, but the ascorbate-treated animals had no signs
of disseminated cancer. "These pre-clinical data provide the first
firm basis for advancing pharmacologic ascorbate in cancer treatment
in humans," the researchers conclude.

Interest in vitamin C as a potential cancer therapy peaked about 30
years ago when case series data showed a possible benefit. In 1979 and
1985, however, other researchers reported no benefit for cancer
patients taking high oral doses of vitamin C in two double-blind,
placebo-controlled clinical trials.

Several observations led the NIH researchers to revisit ascorbate as a
cancer therapy. "Clinical and pharmacokinetic studies conducted in the
past 12 years showed that oral ascorbate levels in plasma and tissue
are tightly controlled. In the case series, ascorbate was given orally
and intravenously, but in the trials ascorbate was just given orally.
It was not realized at the time that only injected ascorbate might
deliver the concentrations needed to see an anti-tumor effect," said
Levine, who noted that new clinical trials of ascorbate as a cancer
treatment are in the planning stages.

Data from Levine's earlier studies of the regulation and absorption of
dietary vitamin C were used in the revision of the Institute of
Medicine's Recommended Dietary Allowance for the vitamin in 2000. In
the current study, Levine led a team of scientists from the NIDDK and
the National Cancer Institute (NCI), both components of the NIH, as
well as the University of Kansas. "NIH's unique translational
environment, where researchers can pursue intellectual high-risk, out-
of-the-box thinking with high potential payoff, enabled us to pursue
this work," he said.

Source: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases






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