FROM:
Alternative Medicine Review 1998 (Jun); 3 (3): 174–186 ~ FULL TEXT
Kathleen A. Head, N.D.
Introduction
In the mid-18th century, James Lind first demonstrated
that the juice of fresh citrus cures scurvy. The active agent, the enolic
form of 3-keto-L-gulofurnlactone, or ascorbic acid, was isolated in the
late 1920s by Albert Szent-Gyorgyi (see figure
1). By the mid-1930s, methods had been devised to synthesize ascorbic
acid, making it widely available at low cost. In the 1990s, it is the most
commonly used single supplement in the U.S. [1]
In 1954, W.J. McCormick, a Canadian physician, formulated
the hypothesis that cancer is a collagen disease, secondary to a vitamin
C deficiency. [2] While alternative cancer
treatments, such as The Gerson therapy, have been incorporating diets high
in vitamin C for many years, the use of vitamin C supplementation in large
doses for the prevention and treatment of cancer was further advanced in
1971 by Linus Pauling, PhD, and Ewan Cameron, MD. A discussion of their
use of high-dose vitamin C for treatment of patients with advanced cancer
can be found below. Since 1971, considerable attention has been paid to
vitamin C and cancer, particularly in the area of prevention. However,
there has been a paucity of human studies using vitamin C to treat already
existing cancer.
Biochemistry of Ascorbic Acid
Ascorbic acid is widely distributed in plants, its concentration
varying from 0.01 percent in apples to about 1 percent in rose hips and
citrus. It is one of the most important reducing agents occurring in living
tissue. While most animals synthesize their own vitamin C, humans and a
few other animals, such as non-human primates, guinea pigs, and fruit bats
do not. Ascorbate accelerates hydroxylation reactions, in part by donating
electrons to metal ion cofactors of hydroxylase enzymes. Hydroxylation
reactions are important in collagen synthesis, conversion of lysine to
carnitine, conversion of dopamine to norepinephrine, and in tyrosine metabolism.
Ascorbate is also utilized to catalyze other enzymatic reactions, such
as amidation necessary for maximum activity of the hormones oxytocin, vasopressin,
cholecystokinin, and alpha-melanotropin. [3]
Ascorbic acid is a water-soluble, chain-breaking antioxidant
which reacts directly with singlet oxygen, hydroxyl, and superoxide radicals.
It also may react with tocopheroxy radicals to regenerate vitamin E. [1]
Conversely, ascorbyl radicals are quenched by vitamin E.
Mechanisms of Action
Proposed mechanisms of vitamin C activity in the prevention
and treatment of cancer include: (1) enhancement of the immune system by
increased lymphocyte production; (2) stimulation of collagen formation,
necessary for "walling off" tumors; (3) inhibition of hyaluronidase,
keeping the ground substance around the tumor intact and preventing metastasis; [4]
(4) inhibition of oncogenic viruses; (5) correction of an ascorbate deficiency,
often seen in cancer patients; (6) expedition of wound healing after cancer
surgery; [5] (7) enhancement of the effect
of certain chemotherapy drugs, such as tamoxifen, cisplatin, DTIC and others; [6-8]
(8) reduction of the toxicity of other chemotherapeutic agents, such as
Adriamycin; [9] (9) prevention of cellular
free radical damage; [10] and (10) neutralization
of carcinogenic substances. [11]
Taking a closer look at the phenomenon of hyaluronidase
inhibition Cameron, Pauling and Leibovitz wrote in "Ascorbic Acid
and Cancer: A Review": ..."the dangerous features of neoplastic
cell behavior (invasiveness, selective nutrition, and perhaps growth) are
caused by microenvironmental depolymerization. In turn, this matrix destabilization
is brought about by constant exposure to lysosomal glycosidases continually
released by the neoplastic cells. Finally, ascorbate is involved in the
natural restraint of this degradative enzyme activity." [12]
Proper collagen formation is an important factor in the
encapsulation of tumors or the slowing of metastasis via the development
of an almost impermeable barrier (known as the schirrus response). Ascorbic
acid plays an important role in collagen synthesis and stability. A lack
of ascorbate significantly reduces hydroxylation of proline and lysine
to hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine, respectively, jeopardizing proper
collagen cross-linking. This leads to instability of the triple helix of
collagen which, in turn, results in increased collagen catabolism. In vitro,
vitamin C also has been found to increase collagen synthesis by fibroblasts. [12]
Cancer patients tend to be immuno-compromised, demonstrating
low lymphocyte ascorbate levels. The immune surveillance system is important,
both in inhibiting the initiation phase of cancerous growth, and also in
the prevention of spread. Ascorbate supplementation increases the number
and effectiveness of lymphocytes and enhances phagocytosis. [12]
Vitamin C in the Treatment of Cancer
The Vale of Leven Studies: Most of the studies
on vitamin C and cancer relate to its protective effect, rather than use
of the vitamin for the treatment of active cancer. The Vale of Leven studies
conducted by Ewan Cameron, MD and his associates, (later including Linus
Pauling, PhD), at his hospital in Loch Lomondside, Scotland, are among
the few exceptions. In preliminary studies which began in November 1971,
a small group of patients with advanced cancer were given 10 grams of sodium
ascorbate daily. The initial testing was an uncontrolled study, conducted
on 50 patients. Seventeen of these patients exhibited seemingly no response,
10 a minimal response, 11 retardation of the tumor growth, 3 ceasing of
the tumor growth, 5 regression of tumor growth with long-term survival,
and 6 experienced hemorrhage and necrosis of the tumors, which destroyed
the tumors but killed the patients in the process. [13]
An evaluation of the life expectancy of these first 50 "terminally
ill" patients treated with ascorbate yielded promising results. Based
on data from previous similar groups of patients, it was expected that
90 percent of the group would be dead within three months of being labeled
"terminal." When 10 g ascorbate was prescribed daily (beginning
at the time the patient was labeled "terminal"), by the 100th
day of treatment the mortality rate was only 50 percent. Of the remaining
25 patients, 20 died between days 110 and 659, with an average survival
time of 261 days; and five had an average survival time of greater than
610 days. [14]
Subsequently, a controlled retrospective study was conducted,
comparing survival times of 100 terminally ill cancer patients at Vale
of Leven Hospital with 1,000 matched controls from the same hospital. The
patients were randomly selected from the database of those terminal cancer
patients who had received ascorbate. Each ascorbate-treated patient was
matched with 10 controls from the same hospital of the same age, sex, and
type and stage of cancer who had not been prescribed vitamin C. In 90 percent
of the cases, the ascorbate-treated group lived three times longer than
the control group. For the other 10 percent, long-term survival made it
impossible to assess survival time with certainty, but at the time of publication
of the study, the ascorbate group exhibited greater than 20 times the survival
rate of the control group. [15] (see
Figure 2). [16]
Having been criticized by some investigators for not assuring
the subjects were randomly chosen from the same representative subpopulations
in the treated and control groups, a second retrospective evaluation at
the Vale of Leven hospital was undertaken in 1978 again with 100
patients receiving ascorbic acid compared to 1,000 matched controls without
vitamin C. [17] Most of the ascorbate-treated
group and about half the controls were the same subjects as in the initial
study. This time, since there are different mean survival times for different
types of cancer, the groups were further divided according to types of
cancer, and controls carefully matched (see Table
1) . In addition, the groups passed several "randomness" tests.
In each of the nine types of cancer the ascorbate group had a considerably
longer survival time than their matched controls. At the time of evaluation,
eight patients in the vitamin C group were still living, while no one was
alive in the control group; this resulted in 321+ days longer lifespan
for the vitamin C treated group. Factoring out those in the ascorbate group
who were still living at the time of evaluation, the vitamin C group lived
an average of 251 days longer than the control group.
Cameron and Pauling later evaluated the first 500 "terminal"
cancer patients to receive ascorbate. In most cases, subjective improvement
increased feeling of well-being, more energy, more alertness, decrease
or elimination of pain, better appetite were noted by the ascorbate
patients. Cameron reported a quite dramatic relief of bone pain from metastases
in four out of five patients. Objective improvements included a decrease
in malignant ascites and pleural effusion, relief from hematuria, some
reversal of hepatomegaly and jaundice, and decreases in erythrocyte SED
rate and serum seromucoid levels, all accepted indicators of a decrease
in malignant activity. [14] Furthermore, patients
who had been on large doses of narcotics, such as morphine, for pain relief,
showed none of the typical withdrawal symptoms.
Based on the above cited studies the researchers concluded:
"It is our conclusion that this simple and safe treatment, the ingestion
of large amounts of vitamin C, is of definite value in the treatment of
patients with advanced cancer. Although the evidence is as yet not so strong,
we believe that vitamin C has even greater value for the treatment of cancer
patients with the disease in earlier stages and also for the prevention
of cancer." [18]
The Vale of Leven protocol called for a ten-day course
via intravenous (IV), continuous slow-drip infusion of sodium ascorbate
in half-strength Ringer's Lactate Solution. After the IV treatment, assuming
the patient was able to take medication by mouth, an oral dose of vitamin
C was begun at a dose of 2.5 grams every 6 hours for a total of 10 grams
in 24 hours. The dosage varied somewhat, ranging from 10-30 grams daily,
and was continued indefinitely. The goal was to maintain plasma ascorbate
levels of at least 3 mg/dl. The researchers reported generally a subjective
improvement in well-being, vigor, pain relief, and appetite was apparent
within 5-7 days. Increased energy was believed to be a result of improved
carnitine synthesis with a resulting increase in triglyceride transport
into cell mitochondria. [19]
Japanese Studies: Uncontrolled trials conducted
at two different hospitals in Japan during the 1970s also confirmed the
increase in survival time of terminal cancer patients supplemented with
ascorbate. At the Fukuoka Torikai Hospital, the average survival time after
being labeled "terminal" was 43 days for 44 patients supplemented
with low levels of ascorbate (less than 4 grams daily), and 246 days for
55 patients supplemented with higher dosages of ascorbate (greater than
5 grams daily - averaging 29 grams daily) and starting at the time of "terminal"
diagnosis. [20] The researchers found no differences
in survival times between the groups receiving 5-9 grams daily and those
receiving 10-29 grams daily. A decline in effect was noted in those receiving
30-60 grams daily. They found the best results with uterine cancer, and
the smallest increases in survival time with lung and stomach cancer.
Effectiveness of ascorbate was also observed at the Kamioka
Kozan Hospital where 19 terminally-ill control patients survived an average
of 48 days compared to six patients on high levels of vitamin C who lived
an average of 115 days, or 2.4 times longer than the control group. [21]
These researchers also reported the improved quality of life observed in
the Scottish studies.
Mayo Clinic Studies: In an attempt to either duplicate
or refute the Cameron and Pauling results, the Mayo Clinic initiated a
test on 150 patients. [22] Subjects were randomly
divided into two groups, one group of 60 received 10 grams of ascorbic
acid daily in four divided doses while the control group of 63 received
an equal number of placebo capsules. After randomization, 27 patients elected
not to participate and comprised a third "no treatment" group.
Treatment was continued until death or until the patient was no longer
able to take medication orally. The two groups were evenly balanced with
regard to age, sex, tumor site, initial performance status, and previous
treatment. Fifty-eight percent of those receiving placebo and 63 percent
of those receiving ascorbate reported subjective improvement in symptoms
during the treatment period. The researchers reported no significant difference
between the vitamin C and placebo groups in regard to survival time; however,
the 27 patients who received no treatment experienced a significantly lower
survival time, living an average of 25 days compared to an average of 51
days for the vitamin C or placebo groups. All but nine of the 123 subjects
had received prior chemotherapy, radiation, or both.
Based on other researchers' complaints that the Mayo study
had not addressed the effect of vitamin C on cancer patients who had not
received prior chemotherapy or radiation, a second trial was initiated
by the same researchers. [23] In this study,
only patients with advanced colorectal cancer were included. At the time
of administration of vitamin C, the researchers deemed them all inappropriate
candidates for chemotherapy. One hundred patients were randomly assigned
to receive either 10 grams ascorbic acid or placebo daily. Patients continued
on the treatment for as long as they were able to take oral medications
or until there was evidence of tumor progression. At this point, over half
of the subjects received subsequent chemotherapy. The researchers did not
report survival times as they did not continue the patients on vitamin
C until they died. Instead, they reported that after one year 49 percent
of the vitamin C group and 47 percent of the placebo group were still living.
They reported that for both groups survival time was comparable to the
Cameron and Pauling untreated group. When they selected patients with a
bias toward those with a more favorable prognosis, they found results in
both groups similar to the Cameron and Pauling vitamin C treated groups,
implying bias selection on the part of Cameron and Pauling. Because of
the differences in study design, it is impossible to compare the results
of these trials.
The Controversy: It is impossible to have a discussion
about vitamin C and cancer without discussing the controversy stirred by
the Vale of Leven and Mayo studies. Both sides accused the other of serious
study flaws. The Mayo researchers claimed that, because the Vale of Leven
studies were retrospective instead of prospective, and since the subjects
were not randomly assigned to groups ahead of time but chosen after the
fact, that selection bias occurred, with the researchers consciously or
subconsciously selecting the ascorbate- treated patients who had the best
prognosis and outcomes to be part of the study group. The Mayo researchers
made this statement:
"Uncontrolled or historically controlled studies
have a necessary purpose in the evaluation of any therapeutic method, since
they serve to develop a hypothesis of therapeutic effectiveness. Such studies,
however, rarely prove such effectiveness, which in most circumstances should
be established by prospective randomized study. Whether one is dealing
with the treatment of the common cold or of cancer, and whether one is
dealing with a benign vitamin or a highly toxic chemotherapy program, it
would seem to serve the interest of the patient best for public advocacy
of a proposed treatment to be withheld until that treatment had been proved
effective by definitive studies of sound scientific design." [23]
The initial Mayo study was criticized by Pauling and Cameron
as they felt the two groups were not comparable. In the initial Cameron
study, only 4 of the 100 patients had received prior chemotherapy or radiation,
while in the first Mayo study the majority of patients had received prior
chemotherapy. As previously mentioned, the Mayo Clinic conducted a second
study with patients who had not received prior chemotherapy or radiation.
Regarding the second study, in a personal interview
with Dr. Pauling, he told this author: [24]
"I have formulated three criteria for validity of
a clinical trial. The Mayo Clinic paper fails on all three." When
asked what the three criteria were, this is what he said: "Well, first
if you want to test something with a cohort of patients, every patient
should be treated the same way as the other patients and the same way over
the period of the trial. In the Mayo Clinic study, there were perhaps four
separate periods. There was a period when the vitamin C patients received
vitamin C every day. So that would be like Cameron's patients. They received
vitamin C every day. Then there was a period when they didn't receive vitamin
C and that would be a trial of patients during a period after they receive
vitamin C for awhile and then stop it. Then there was a period when they
were being given chemotherapy. This was a rather short period, maybe a
month or two. Then there was a period when they didn't receive anything
after they'd been given chemotherapy. So, there were four periods. The
first period lasted a median time of 2.5 months and nobody died. None of
the vitamin C or control patients died. Since none of the vitamin C patients
died you don't have any mortality data similar to Cameron's, of patients
who received vitamin C every day until their death. So, it just doesn't
have any relation to Cameron's work. Then there is the period after the
vitamin C or placebo was stopped. None of the placebo patients died for
some strange reason. During this period, after stopping the vitamin C,
the vitamin C and placebo patients died off at about the same rate. That's
perhaps what you would expect, not expect the vitamin C given the year
before to be [effective]. Then there's no information about what happened
when they started giving chemotherapy to the patients, but about 58 out
of 100 got chemotherapy and they began dying faster than when they weren't
getting chemotherapy. So, that may be significant. Well, that's the first
criteria.
"The second criteria is if you plot the logarithm
of the fraction surviving against time, you either get a straight line
or it can be bending up, it can't bend down unless you do something that
causes them to die. Well, theirs bent down because they started giving
them chemotherapy.
"Thirdly, for a well-conducted study, the death line,
surviving line extrapolates back to the origin. They had a period of 90
days when only one patient died out of 100. They should have had about
30 dying in that first 90 days according to the rate at which they died
afterward. So, there's something fishy about that."
In a personal interview with Dr. Ewan Cameron, he said
of the Mayo study: [25]
"They give a drug in tolerable doses for a particular
period of time and then suddenly stop it. If they don't see significant
results they go to the next drug and so on. That's not how to test vitamin
C. We're talking about a totally different therapy. We're talking about
something that supports the patient for the rest of his life, not for ten
weeks, which was what the Mayo clinic did. Then they stopped it abruptly
and gave them 5FU."
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