Carcinogenesis, Vol 19, 699-702, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press
S Lu, WM Lee and MC Archer
Indirect evidence from both epidemiological studies and animal experiments
suggests that insulin may promote breast cancer development. In this study,
we directly tested for a promoting effect of insulin on mammary
carcinogenesis in Sprague-Dawley rats. Fifty day- old female rats received
an i.p. injection of 37.5 mg/kg methylnitrosourea (MNU). Five days later,
the animals were randomized into two groups. One group received insulin
injections five times/week until the time of death, while the other control
group received similar injections of normal saline. Over the course of 26
weeks following MNU treatment, the mammary tumour incidence in the
insulin-treated group did not differ significantly from the saline-treated
controls. Furthermore, the number of tumours per tumour-bearing rat did not
differ between groups. Our results demonstrate that insulin is not a
promoter of mammary carcinogenesis in this model.
ARTICLES
Insulin does not promote rat mammary carcinogenesis
Department of Nutritional Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Canada.
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