Ascorbic acid supplements may reduce benefit from wide range of chemotherapy drugs
In pre-clinical studies, vitamin C appears to substantially
reduce the effectiveness of anticancer drugs, say researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center. These new findings, published in the October 1 issue of Cancer
Research, a publication of the American Association of Cancer Research (AACR),
came from studying laboratory cancer cells and mice, but the study's authors say
the same mechanism may affect patient outcomes, although they add this premise
needs to be tested.
"The use of vitamin C supplements could have the potential
to reduce the ability of patients to respond to therapy," said Heaney, an Associate
Attending Physician at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
Use of vitamin C during cancer treatment has been controversial.
Some studies have suggested that because vitamin C is an antioxidant it might
be beneficial to cancer patients. But some classes of chemotherapy drugs produce
"oxygen free radicals," unpaired oxygen molecules that can fatally react with
other molecules in a cell, forcing cell death. In this theory, vitamin C could
sop up the radicals, keeping the cancer cell alive despite chemotherapy treatment.
Heaney and his colleagues tested a wide variety of chemotherapy
drugs - those that produce reactive oxygen and those that work in other ways -
on cancer cells in the laboratory, that were pretreated with dehydroascorbic acid
(DHA), the form that ascorbic acid takes to enter cells.
They found to their surprise that every chemotherapy
drug they tested - which included targeted agents like Gleevec - did not work
as well if cells were pretreated with vitamin C, as they did on untreated cancer
cells. In the cell culture experiments, 30 to 70 percent less cancer cells treated
with vitamin C were killed depending on the drug tested.
They then checked these findings by implanting the cancer
cells into mice, and again found that, in an animal model system, while chemotherapy
kept untreated cancer in check, tumors grew more rapidly in mice that were given
cancer pretreated with vitamin C.
The research team, which includes researchers from Columbia
University, then delved into the mechanism by which vitamin C may be protecting
these cells, and discovered that it wasn't because the nutrient was neutralizing
oxygen-free radicals.
They found instead that DHA was restoring viability to
the cancer cell's damaged mitochondria.
"Vitamin C appears to protect the mitochondria from extensive
damage, thus saving the cell," Heaney said. "And whether directly or not, all
anticancer drugs work to disrupt the mitochondria to push cell death."
Heaney says that the amount of DHA used in the experiments
resulted in an intracellular buildup similar to what could be seen in cancer patients
using large supplemental doses of vitamin C.
Researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
have long been researching the connection between vitamin C and cancer therapy,
and these new findings expand on their earlier observation that vitamin C seems
to accumulate within cancer cells more than in normal cells.
"We recognized that DHA is the form of vitamin C that
gets into cells, and that the tumor microenvironment allows cancer cells to convert
more vitamin C into DHA," he said. "Inside the cell, DHA is converted back into
ascorbic acid, and it gets trapped there and so is available to safeguard the
cell."
Heaney says that he suspects that vitamin C is good for
the cells of normal tissue because it provides more protection for the mitochondria,
and thus probably extends cell life. "But that isn't what you want when you are
trying to eliminate cancer cells," said Heaney, who notes that cancer patients
should eat a healthy diet, which includes foods rich in vitamin C. It is use of
large doses of over-the-counter vitamin C that is worrisome, he says
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