Ll. Gershbein, ACTION OF ESTROGEN AND ADRENOCORTICOIDS ON ADENOCARCINOMA INDUCTION BY 1,2-DIMETHYLHYDRAZINE IN MALE-RATS, Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology, 81(1), 1993, pp. 117-120
Groups of male Sprague-Dawley rats at 39 days of age, were injected s.
c. with estradiol benzoate (15 mug/kg), cortisone acetate (2.5 mg/kg)
and deoxycorticosterone acetate (10.0 mg/kg) in peanut oil, the contro
ls receiving the oil vehicle on days 1 and 3 and weekly thereafter for
a total of 32 injections. 1,2-Dimethylhydrazine was administered s.c.
weekly after the 1st 2 drug doses, the dosage as base being 9.0 mg/k
for the 1st 7 injections, then 19.4 mg/kg for the last 13 dosages. The
rats were killed 31 weeks after the lst DMH injection. The changes in
animal condition at necropsy were moderate to extreme in half of the
rats and all survived the 20 DMH injection-schedule; mortality was low
per group but elevated with the deoxycorticosterone acetate treatment
(40%). Essentially all rats displayed colon adenocarcinomas and the t
otal frequency and the number in the proximal and distal portions were
in the control ranges except for the statistically significant decrem
ents in overall and distal colon numbers for the estrogen treated grou
p and possibly, near-significance in case of the cortisone acetate-inj
ected rats. Small intestinal adenocarcinomas which were more prevalent
in the upper areas occurred among the groups. As based on the current
findings with estrogen, the trend was in the direction of an inhibiti
ng effect on DMH tumorigenesis in contrast to a stimulatory response r
eported for androgenized males.