Sydney: Feeding brain cancer cells with vitamin C softens them up for radiation therapy and hastens their death.
Patries Herst from the University of Otago,
with Melanie McConnell investigated how combining high dose vitamin C
with radiation affected the survival of cancer cells isolated from brain
tumours, and compared this with the survival of normal cells.
They found that a high dose of vitamin C by itself
caused DNA damage and cell death which was much more pronounced,
especially before radiation, the journal Free Radical Biology and
Medicine reports.
Herst says brain cancer patients have a poor
prognosis because these tumours are aggressive and very resistant to
radiation therapy.
"We found that high dose vitamin C makes it easier
to kill these cells by radiation therapy," says Herst, according to an
Otago statement.
She says there has long been a debate about the
use of high dose vitamin C in the treatment of cancer. High dose vitamin
C specifically kills a range of cancer cells in the lab and in animal
models.
"If carefully designed clinical trials show that
combining high dose vitamin C with radiation therapy improves patient
survival, there may be merit in combining both treatments for
radiation-resistant cancers, such as glioblastoma multiforme," says
Herst.
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