Today's post is from our founder Robin Daly challenging an article written about Yes to Life and Vitamin C. He shares the story of trying to hold the newspaper to account and gives us some the evidence as to why Vitamin C therapy is far from quackery.
Some of you may
have seen the article published by the Mail on Sunday, in print and online,
regarding Yes to Life and Vitamin C.
Despite giving Yes
to Life the opportunity, prior to publication, to respond to the ‘criticisms’ being
levelled at the charity - which we did in spades - when it came to publication,
the only nod to balanced reporting was
“YTL founder Robin Daly said: ‘The
only thing we do is to provide interested people with information.’”
The term that comes
to mind for this style of reporting is ‘hatchet job’.
We decided the
article was so biased we were not content to just let it go by, and so
approached IPSO, the regulator, with a view to getting some sort of redress. In
this we have had some degree of success, which is heartening:
•
The flagrantly untrue
sub-heading ‘Yes To Life charges up to £3000 for doses of intravenous Vitamin C” was
removed and replaced with the factually correct, if still rather misleading “Doctors
listed by Yes To Life charge up to £3000 for doses of intravenous Vitamin C.”
•
Yes to Life was given the
opportunity to respond more fully to the article in the form of a footnote to
the web article which was also published in Letters in the print version. The
footnote reads:
'Statement by Yes To Life: Your article referred to Yes To Life and quoted negative opinions about Vitamin C cancer treatments. In fact, considering there are no big profits to be made from Vitamin C, unlike a new drug, and therefore no commercial interest in research, there is actually an impressive body of evidence including laboratory, animal and human trials. Its safety combined with usefulness against both cancer and the side effects of standard treatments, makes a good case for considering Vitamin C as part of a treatment programme. Our charity provides information and contacts and helps many people to pay for treatments which are reasonably priced at around £200 per two-hour session including the cost of supervising doctor, nurse and clinic. - Robin Daly, Chairman, Yes To Life '
'Statement by Yes To Life: Your article referred to Yes To Life and quoted negative opinions about Vitamin C cancer treatments. In fact, considering there are no big profits to be made from Vitamin C, unlike a new drug, and therefore no commercial interest in research, there is actually an impressive body of evidence including laboratory, animal and human trials. Its safety combined with usefulness against both cancer and the side effects of standard treatments, makes a good case for considering Vitamin C as part of a treatment programme. Our charity provides information and contacts and helps many people to pay for treatments which are reasonably priced at around £200 per two-hour session including the cost of supervising doctor, nurse and clinic. - Robin Daly, Chairman, Yes To Life '
Vitamin C and Cancer
So how does Vitamin
C stack up as an approach for people with cancer?
Well firstly, and
very importantly, as mentioned above, it’s safety
profile is extraordinary, a rarity amongst cancer therapies1. The
evidence is that all its effects are positive, including:
•
Supports the immune system2
•
May significantly improve
quality of life measures alongside cancer treatment3
•
Produces a chemical reaction
that makes hydrogen peroxide, which may kill cancer cells4
•
Tumour cells selectively
uptake more vitamin C (and hence hydrogen peroxide) than regular cells5
•
Significantly reduces the side
effects of cancer treatment, including fatigue, nausea, insomnia, constipation
and depression6
This all adds up to a very compelling case for considering Vitamin C as part of a cancer programme. And as you can see, it is far from the case that “‘There is no evidence at all.” as stated by the MoS ‘experts’. The sum of the evidence for Vitamin C would, within the hierarchy of evidence, be classed as ‘emerging’. Yet this is hardly a basis for dismissing it wholesale, when it has an incredible safety record. By contrast, emerging evidence for a drug with potentially harmful side effects would be a major hot topic, with rules being bent and red tape slashed in the rush to get it to people dying from cancer.
Vitamin C, along
with a host of other unpatentable approaches, will never gain the research
attention it deserves until governments start to put their weight behind the
effort to find effective solutions. The corporations that we currently rely on
to find answers are sadly only looking for expensive and profitable ones. We
are paying heavily for this reliance with the lives of our families and
friends.
The Mail on Sunday
gave the impression that intravenous Vitamin C therapy is likely to set you
back £3000 for a single treatment. This is far from the truth. A typical
cost is around £200 per session, which involves a clinic visit and full medical
supervision. The Vitamin C itself is relatively cheap, but safe professional
delivery has a price tag. A full cycle of 15 sessions is likely to cost about £3000,
and whilst, for the man in the street used to free healthcare, this could be
described as quite expensive, in terms of useful things to do about cancer, it’s
very inexpensive.
New Development
Until recently,
cancer patients using Vitamin C always had it delivered intravenously. The
reason for this is that the effective dose is far, far more than would be
possible to ingest orally. The gut simply can’t tolerate
high doses, and most of it would be speedily evacuated from the bowel! Doctors
regularly use doses of between 50 and 75 grams per session. Contrast this with
the dosage of a ’mega’
Vitamin C tablet at 1 gram!
Enter ‘liposomal’ Vitamin
C. Liposomes are a new form of delivery for both drugs and supplements, and
enable a far more efficient delivery direct to cells. This adds up to lower
dose - more effect. Though still considered by many practitioners to be
inferior to Intravenous Vitamin C, liposomal Vitamin C does enable patients to
generate a good level of Vitamin C orally, thus cutting out the necessity of
clinic visits7.
That said, a word
of caution: high dose Vitamin C, in common with most other unorthodox
approaches, should never be considered without expert guidance. Vitamin C is
not a suitable approach in every case, and careful, expert monitoring of
progress is essential.
A ‘Real
World’ Case
Blues musician and
Osteopath Charlie Lankester was diagnosed in 2011 with hepatocellularcarcinoma
(HCC), a cancer of the liver caused by a rare reaction to Hepatitis C. He
describes the appointment with his consultant following diagnosis:
“I sat across a
table, and on the other side he sat and shuffled his papers. I could see his
eyes adopting a startled and haunted expression, so I sort of knew what he
would say. Yes, HCC is curable in the early stages, but mine was so advanced
(stage 3 or 4) that this was out of the question. Stage 3 means it has spread
through the liver. Stage 4 means it is outside the liver. My scan showed some
small lesions in the peritoneum, but since I was going to die anyway, they were
never investigated. Transplants were inappropriate, as enough tumour cells
always remained to ‘reinfect’
the new liver. As I asked the obvious question I felt as though I was watching
a clichéd old movie.
‘Months rather
than years, Mr Lankester’. I laughed. The whole
situation seemed so unreal. ‘I have to release my record, so that’ll just have to wait’, I replied.”
He then radically
changed his diet and consulted a Naturopath who put him on a course of
supplements and suggested that high-dose Intravenous Vitamin C could
help. “I was keen to try the Vitamin C as I had read about it over the
years in the course of my work, and had always been interested in it.”
Charlie then saw the
Chief Liver Consultant, as surgery was clearly not an option. He pointed out the
tumour on Charlie’s scan, which, at 25 cms, was one of the biggest they had seen. “As
someone who has studied a great deal of medicine, I found the whole process
fascinating, and sometimes forgot we were talking about my imminent death. We
also talked about AlphaFetoProtein (AFP) which is the marker in the blood for
this cancer. I have read in the literature of people dying with an AFP of 500,
and I believe over 200 is considered terminal. The first blood test showed mine
at 660,000. Some of the doctors gasped when they read it! This man seemed to
think that with luck I could survive most of a year, but chemotherapy could
extend this, possibly to two years. However, I would have to start straight
away, and it would make me very sick. I didn’t wish to start the dying process immediately, so I put him off.
When Vitamin C was mentioned, and I explained that I wanted to try a
naturopathic approach, his two comments were ‘I’ve never heard of it’ and ‘it won’t work’.
So, I was too
far gone for surgery, radiotherapy was inappropriate, and chemotherapy would
just make me very ill for what time I had left. I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life being wheeled around a hospital
looking like a Belsen survivor full of plastic tubes and toxic drugs.
Strangely, being written off by the
medical profession, was in my opinion, what saved my life. I was all alone, and
free to make my own decisions.”
After two three week courses and
a month of twice weekly doses of Vitamin C, his tumour markers were down and he
revisited the Consultant.
“He seemed
grave, and I didn’t know what to expect. ‘It
seems there has been a slight reduction in the tumour. This sometimes happens
in these very large tumours and is called
autoinfarction. There has been a reduction in the tumour marker also’. ‘Well, does that mean you think I might survive?’ ‘Unfortunately, Mr Lankester, the literature is quite clear. In these
cases there is no possibility of survival.’ ‘Do you think the Vitamin C may have helped?’ ‘There is no evidence whatsoever that it works, and I only practice
evidence-based medicine.”
As they were
walking out of the door, Charlie asked exactly how much the ‘slight
reduction’ was, and the reply left him open-mouthed: “About
50%.”
Over the coming
months Charlie stopped losing weight and gradually began to regain his
strength. The pain in his liver subsided and eventually disappeared altogether.
Just over a year after diagnosis, the doctors at King’s College were unable to find any evidence of cancer on Charlie’s scans, and he has
remained in good health since by dint of good diet and lifestyle choices, and
ongoing supportive therapies.
In Conclusion
All of this makes
the case for Yes to Life’s persistence in wanting to make such
potentially helpful information available to all those with cancer,
particularly those who have been assigned to the ‘no hope’ category.
With cancer incidence and survival rates as bad as they are in Britain, people
need all the help they can get. With so few treatment options on offer from the
NHS, a therapy that will almost certainly do no harm, and stands a fair chance
of helping, possibly in several ways, deserves better than being dismissed as
just a ‘quack’
remedy.
PS
If you’re
thinking this post is one sided, in that I am unashamedly and exclusively
airing the Yes to Life perspective, I would agree. In my opinion, the MoS’s ‘experts’ (who
include ‘leading cancer consultant Agamemnon Epenetos’, owner of a
pharmaceutical company called Trojantec that received a glowing article8
about of one of its ‘breakthrough’ products a few months earlier written by… the
same journalist that wrote the article about Yes to Life and Vitamin C!) have
already had an unhindered opportunity to broadcast their opinions to the
world.This post seeks to do a fuller job of redressing the balance than was
possible in the footnote added to the MoS article.
Further Reading
If you are
interested to see more of the extensive evidence base for Vitamin C, you may
like to purchase New Insights on Vitamin C and Cancer. It’s
expensive for a very slim book, but packed with everything you need to know
about the research, up until last year, when it was published.
Also: Vitamin C: The Real Story: The Remarkable and Controversial
Story of Vitamin
Read more blogs from Robin here.
Read more blogs from Robin here.
References
1Sorice
A, Guerriero E, Capone F, Colonna G, Castello G, Costantini S (2014) Ascorbic
acid: its role in immune system and chronic inflammation diseases. Mini Rev Med
Chem. May;14(5):444-52.
Block KI, Koch AC, Mead MN, et al. Impact of antioxidant supplementation
on chemotherapeutic efficacy: A systematic review of the evidence from
randomized controlled trials. Cancer Treat Rev 2007;33:407–418.
2Sorice
A, Guerriero E, Capone F, Colonna G, Castello G, Costantini S (2014) Ascorbic
acid: its role in immune system and chronic inflammation diseases. Mini Rev Med
Chem. May;14(5):444-52.
3Fritz
H1, Flower G2, Weeks L2, Cooley K3, Callachan M1, McGowan J1, Skidmore B1,
Kirchner L4, Seely D5. (2014) Intravenous Vitamin C and Cancer: A Systematic
Review. ) Integr Cancer Ther. 2014 May 26;13(4):280-300.
4National
Cancer Institute, accessed on 20/10/14 http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/pdq/cam/highdosevitaminc/patient/page2.
5Zhao
FQ, Keating AF (2007) Functional Properties and Genomics of Glucose
Transporters. Current Genomics. Apr; 8(2): 113–128.
6Ma
Y, Chapman J, Levine M, Polireddy K, Drisko J, Chen Q. (2014) Highdose
parenteral ascorbate enhanced chemosensitivity of ovarian cancer and reduced
toxicity of chemotherapy. Sci Transl Med. Feb 5;6(222).
Block KI, Koch AC, Mead MN, et al. Impact of antioxidant supplementation
on chemotherapeutic toxicity: A systematic review of the evidence from
randomized controlled trials. Int J Cancer 2008;123:1227–1239.
7 Hickey,
Stephen, Roberts, Hilary J. and Miller, Nicholas J.(2008)'Pharmacokinetics of
oral vitamin C',Journal of Nutritional & Environmental Medicine.
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