Rp. Bird et al., INABILITY OF LOW-FAT OR HIGH-FAT DIET TO MODULATE LATE STAGES OF COLON CARCINOGENESIS IN SPRAGUE-DAWLEY RATS, Cancer research, 56(13), 1996, pp. 2896-2899
The main objective of the present proposal was to investigate the effe
ct of feeding a low- or high-fat diet in the early and late stages of
colon carcinogenesis. Sprague-Dawley male rats were injected with azox
ymethane (20 mg/kg/week) for 2 weeks, One week later they were randoml
y allocated to eat a low-fat (4% beef tallow + 1% corn oil) or a high-
fat (18.6% beef tallow + 4.7% corn oil) diet (LF or HF). After 10 week
s of feeding, 10 animals per group were killed, and their colons were
evaluated for tumors. The remaining animals in each group were divided
further into LP and HF groups. The four experimental groups consisted
of groups receiving LF or BF diet throughout the study (LF-LF or HF-H
F) and the groups fed LF or HF diet for the first 10 weeks, then assig
ned the alternate diet for the remainder of the duration (LF-HF or HF-
LF). By week 26, the remaining animals were killed, and their colons w
ere evaluated for the number, location and size of tumors. The tumor i
ncidence in the AF-HF and HF-LF groups were higher than the LF-LF and
LF-HF groups (81.6 and 84.8% versus 71.4 and 60.0%), Tumor multiplicit
y ranged from 1.86 + 0.25 to 2.54 +/- 0.33 in all groups. The average
size of tumors and total tumor area/rat were affected significantly by
the time at which the diet was fed. Average size and total tumor area
in the animals fed HF diet during early stages (HF-HF and HF-LF) were
significantly higher than those fed the LF diet during the early stag
es. Late intervention by specific diets did not affect tumor outcome.
Sequential enumeration of aberrant crypt foci of different growth feat
ures representing early preneoplastic stages corroborated the findings
of the tumor outcome, It was concluded that early preneoplastic stage
s were more sensitive than their advanced counterparts to the dietary
interventions of the present study.