医学
药代动力学
口服
维生素
尿
安慰剂
药理学
给药途径
生物利用度
剂量
内科学
病理
替代医学
作者
Sebastian J. Padayatty,He Sun,Yaohui Wang,Hugh D. Riordan,Stephen M. Hewitt,Arie Katz,Robert Wesley,Mark Levine
标识
DOI:10.7326/0003-4819-140-7-200404060-00010
摘要
Background: Vitamin C at high concentrations is toxic to cancer cells in vitro. Early clinical studies of vitamin C in patients with terminal cancer suggested clinical benefit, but 2 double-blind, placebo-controlled trials showed none. However, these studies used different routes of administration. Objective: To determine whether plasma vitamin C concentrations vary substantially with the route of administration. Design: Dose concentration studies and pharmacokinetic modeling. Setting: Academic medical center. Participants: 17 healthy hospitalized volunteers. Measurements: Vitamin C plasma and urine concentrations were measured after administration of oral and intravenous doses at a dose range of 0.015 to 1.25 g, and plasma concentrations were calculated for a dose range of 1 to 100 g. Results: Peak plasma vitamin C concentrations were higher after administration of intravenous doses than after administration of oral doses (P < 0.001), and the difference increased according to dose. Vitamin C at a dose of 1.25 g administered orally produced mean (±sd) peak plasma concentrations of 134.8 ± 20.6 µmol/L compared with 885 ± 201.2 µmol/L for intravenous administration. For the maximum tolerated oral dose of 3 g every 4 hours, pharmacokinetic modeling predicted peak plasma vitamin C concentrations of 220 µmol/L and 13 400 µmol/L for a 50-g intravenous dose. Peak predicted urine concentrations of vitamin C from intravenous administration were 140-fold higher than those from maximum oral doses. Limitations: Patient data are not available to confirm pharmacokinetic modeling at high doses and in patients with cancer. Conclusions: Oral vitamin C produces plasma concentrations that are tightly controlled. Only intravenous administration of vitamin C produces high plasma and urine concentrations that might have antitumor activity. Because efficacy of vitamin C treatment cannot be judged from clinical trials that use only oral dosing, the role of vitamin C in cancer treatment should be reevaluated.
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