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Carcinogenesis Advance Access originally published online on August 1, 2003
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Carcinogenesis, Vol. 24, No. 10, 1683-1690, October 2003
© 2003 Oxford University Press


MOLECULAR EPIDEMIOLOGY AND CANCER PREVENTION

Meat and cancer: haemoglobin and haemin in a low-calcium diet promote colorectal carcinogenesis at the aberrant crypt stage in rats

Fabrice Pierre1,3, Sylviane Taché1, Claude R. Petit1, Roelof Van der Meer2 and Denis E. Corpet1

1 Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire Toulouse, UMR INRA-ENVT Xénobiotiques, 23 Capelles, 31076 Toulouse, France and 2 Nutrition and Health Programme, Wageningen Centre for Food Sciences, NIZO Food Research, PO Box 20, 6710 BA Ede, The Netherlands

High intake of red meat, but not of white meat, is associated with an increased risk of colon cancer. However, red meat does not promote cancer in rodents. Haemin, added to low-calcium diets, increases colonic proliferation, and haemoglobin, added to high-fat diets, increases the colon tumour incidence in rats, an effect possibly due to peroxyl radicals. We thus speculated that haem might be the promoting agent in meat, and that prevention strategies could use calcium and antioxidants. These hypotheses were tested in rats at the aberrant crypt foci (ACF) stage at 100 days. F344 rats (n = 124) were given an injection of azoxymethane and were then randomized to 11 groups fed with low-calcium (20 µmol/g) AIN76-based diets, containing 5% safflower oil. Haemin (0.25, 0.5 and 1.5 µmol/g) or haemoglobin (1.5 and 3 µmol haem/g) was added to five experimental diets, compared with a control diet without haem. Three other high-haemin diets (1.5 µmol/g) were supplemented with calcium (250 µmol/g), antioxidant butylated hydroxyanisole and rutin (0.05% each), and olive oil, which replaced safflower oil. Faecal water was assayed for lipid peroxidation by thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARs) test, and for cytolytic activity. Haemin strikingly increased the ACF size, dose-dependently, from 2.6 to 11.4 crypts/ACF (all P < 0.001). The high-haemin diet also increased the number of ACF per colon (P < 0.001). Promotion was associated with increased faecal water TBARs and cytotoxicity. Calcium, olive oil and antioxidants each inhibited the haemin-induced ACF promotion, and normalized the faecal TBARs and cytotoxicity. The haemoglobin diets increased the number of ACF and faecal TBARs, but not the ACF size or the faecal cytotoxicity. In conclusion, dietary haemin is the most potent known ACF promoter. Haemoglobin is also a potent promoter of colorectal carcinogenesis. The results suggest that myoglobin in red meat could promote colon cancer. Diets high in calcium, or in oxidation-resistant fats, may prevent the possible cancer-promoting effect of red meat.


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