Ascorbic acid in cancer treatment: let the phoenix fly
- 01Vitamin C is re-emerging as a potential anti-cancer agent
- 02Intravenous administration achieves high, potentially therapeutic concentrations
- 03May work by creating oxidative stress in cancer cells
- 04May also influence gene expression via DNA demethylation
Intravenous Vitamin C is being reinvestigated as a promising anti-cancer agent due to newly understood mechanisms of action.
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid, ascorbate), despite controversy, has re-emerged as a promising anti-cancer agent. Recent knowledge of intravenous ascorbate pharmacokinetics and discovery of unexpected mechanisms of ascorbate action have spawned many investigations. Two mechanisms of anti-cancer activity with ascorbate have gained prominence: hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative stress and DNA demethylation mediated by ten-eleven translocation enzyme activation. Here, we highlight salient aspects of the evolution of ascorbate in cancer treatment, provide insights into the pharmacokinetics of ascorbate, describe mechanisms of its anti-cancer activity in relation to the pharmacokinetics, outline promising preclinical and clinical evidence, and recommend future directions.
- APA
- Niraj Shenoy, Edward Creagan, Thomas Witzig, & Mark Levine (2018). Ascorbic acid in cancer treatment: let the phoenix fly. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/ascorbic-acid-in-cancer-treatment-let-the-phoenix-fly/
- MLA
- Niraj Shenoy, et al. "Ascorbic acid in cancer treatment: let the phoenix fly." 2018, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/ascorbic-acid-in-cancer-treatment-let-the-phoenix-fly/.
- Chicago
- Niraj Shenoy et al. 2018. "Ascorbic acid in cancer treatment: let the phoenix fly.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/ascorbic-acid-in-cancer-treatment-let-the-phoenix-fly/
