Vitamin C and Cancer | | By Jack Challem - The Nutrition Reporter
| A recent study -- in human cells and mice --
was published in the journal Cancer Research and
immediately followed by newspaper and internet
headlines screaming that vitamin C interfered
with the cancer-killing effect of several chemotherapeutic
drugs.
The finding contradicted several promising
studies -- in cells, animals, and humans -- showing
that large amounts of vitamin C enhance the
body's ability to fight cancer. What gives?
The study, conducted by researchers at the
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New
York City, used an awful methodology. That's
what gives. I’ll explain.
Most of the vitamin C found in foods and
supplements is chemically known as ascorbic
acid. The Sloan-Kettering researchers did not use
this type of vitamin C. Instead, they used dehydroascorbic
acid, which is the "oxidized" form of
the vitamin, and found that it reduced the effectiveness
of chemo drugs on cells. Meanwhile,
in the mouse study, the researchers used dehydroascorbic
acid in doses known to be toxic.
No one in the entire world sells dehydoascorbic
acid supplements. In fact, when
dehydroascorbic acid is formed in the body, it
is quickly broken down because of its inherent
toxicity. It makes absolutely no sense to (1) call
dehydroascorbic acid vitamin C or (2) to use it in
cancer experiments.
Several studies have successfully used large
amounts of real vitamin C to destroy cancer
cells in cell experiments, animals, and humans.
The current theory is that large amounts of vitamin
C -- large intravenous doses of vitamin C in
humans -- generate hydrogen peroxide, which
functions as a natural chemotherapeutic agent
but does not harm normal cells. More Health Hotline articles |