Department of Intensive Care, Austin Hospital, Heidelberg, VIC, Australia.
Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Crit Care Med. 2020 Jul;48(7):e620-e628. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000004396.
The potential harm associated with the use of IV vitamin C has not been systematically assessed. We aimed to review the available evidence on harm related to such treatment.
We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, National Institute of Health Clinical Trials Register, and World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform.
We included studies in adult population that reported harm related to IV high-dose vitamin C which we defined as greater than or equal to 6 g/d, greater than or equal to 75 mg/kg/d, or greater than or equal to 3 g/m/d.
Two independent investigators screened records and extracted data.
We identified 8,149 reports, of which 650 full text were assessed for eligibility, leaving 74 eligible studies. In these studies, 2,801 participants received high-dose vitamin C at a median (interquartile range) dose of 22.5 g/d (8.25-63.75 g/d), 455 mg/kg/d (260-925 mg/kg/d), or 70 g/m/d (50-90 g/m/d); and 932 or more adverse events were reported. Among nine double-blind randomized controlled trials (2,310 patients), adverse events were reported in three studies with an event rate per patient for high-dose vitamin C identical to placebo group in one study (0.1 [1/10] vs 0.1 [1/10]), numerically lower in one study (0.80 [672/839] vs 0.82 [709/869]), and numerically higher in one study (0.33 [24/73] vs 0.23 [17/74]). Six double-blind randomized controlled trials reported no adverse event in either group. Five cases of oxalate nephropathy, five cases of hypernatremia, three cases of hemolysis in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency patients, two cases of glucometer error, and one case of kidney stones were also reported overall.
There is no consistent evidence that IV high-dose vitamin C therapy is more harmful than placebo in double-blind randomized controlled trials. However, reports of oxalate nephropathy, hypernatremia, glucometer error, and hemolysis in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency patients warrant specific monitoring.
静脉注射大剂量维生素 C 相关的潜在危害尚未得到系统评估。本研究旨在综述相关治疗危害的现有证据。
我们检索了 MEDLINE、EMBASE、Cochrane 图书馆、美国国立卫生研究院临床试验注册处和世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台。
纳入了报道静脉注射大剂量维生素 C 相关危害的成年人群研究,我们将大剂量定义为每天≥6 g、≥75 mg/kg/d 或≥3 g/m/d。
两名独立的调查员筛选了记录并提取了数据。
我们共识别出 8149 篇报告,其中 650 篇全文符合纳入标准,最终纳入 74 项研究。这些研究中,2801 名参与者接受了中位数(四分位间距)剂量为 22.5 g/d(8.25-63.75 g/d)、455 mg/kg/d(260-925 mg/kg/d)或 70 g/m/d(50-90 g/m/d)的高剂量维生素 C 治疗,报告了 932 次及以上不良事件。在 9 项双盲随机对照试验(2310 名患者)中,3 项研究报告了不良事件,其中 1 项研究的高剂量维生素 C 组和安慰剂组的不良事件发生率相同(0.1[1/10] vs 0.1[1/10]),1 项研究的不良事件发生率略低(0.80[672/839] vs 0.82[709/869]),1 项研究的不良事件发生率略高(0.33[24/73] vs 0.23[17/74])。6 项双盲随机对照试验报告两组均无不良事件。总的来说,还报道了 5 例草酸肾病、5 例高钠血症、3 例葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶缺乏症患者的溶血、2 例血糖仪错误和 1 例肾结石。
在双盲随机对照试验中,尚无一致证据表明静脉注射大剂量维生素 C 治疗比安慰剂更有害。然而,草酸肾病、高钠血症、血糖仪错误和葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶缺乏症患者的溶血报告需要特别监测。