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Effects of tobacco smoke on tumor growth and radiation response of dunning R3327 prostate adenocarcinoma in rats

Johansson, S ; Landstrom, M ; Bjermer, Leif LU and Henriksson, R (2000) In The Prostate 42(4). p.253-259
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The influence of tobacco smoke has been investigated on the growth rate and histology of prostate cancer, both in untreated tumors and in those subjected to fractionated irradiation. METHODS: Twenty-five rats were implanted bilaterally with Dunning R3327 tumor fragments at 10 weeks of age. Approximately 3 months later, they were randomly allocated to two groups, one of which was exposed to tobacco smoke for an hour each day, 5 days a week. Three weeks later the groups were further subdivided into two groups which acted as controls or were subjected to 5 daily doses of 6 Gy. The tumors were measured weekly to construct growth curves. At a fixed time, 9 weeks or 20 weeks later, the animals were sacrificed and the tumors were... (More)
BACKGROUND: The influence of tobacco smoke has been investigated on the growth rate and histology of prostate cancer, both in untreated tumors and in those subjected to fractionated irradiation. METHODS: Twenty-five rats were implanted bilaterally with Dunning R3327 tumor fragments at 10 weeks of age. Approximately 3 months later, they were randomly allocated to two groups, one of which was exposed to tobacco smoke for an hour each day, 5 days a week. Three weeks later the groups were further subdivided into two groups which acted as controls or were subjected to 5 daily doses of 6 Gy. The tumors were measured weekly to construct growth curves. At a fixed time, 9 weeks or 20 weeks later, the animals were sacrificed and the tumors were removed for histological evaluation of the tissue composition. Sections from each tumor were scored in a morphometric analysis of the fraction of the area of tumor that was occupied by (epithelial) tumor cells, by stroma, or by luminal spaces. In addition, the density of mast cells was assessed in adjacent sections stained with toluidine blue. RESULTS: Smoking caused only minor changes in the growth rates of both the control and the irradiated tumors. At the cellular level, smoking caused a small but significant increase in the fraction of tumor cells relative to controls. Irradiation also caused a small but significant decrease in tumor cell fraction compared to controls, even after 20 weeks of regrowth. This difference was reduced in the smoking and irradiation group. The main difference observed was in the mast cell numbers. Smoking caused a 4-fold increase in mast-cell density. Irradiation caused an even greater increase (25-fold). The combination of smoking and irradiation resulted in an intermediate increase (10-fold). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term smoke exposure can slightly alter the growth rate and morphology of Dunning R3327 rat prostatic adenocarcinoma, but our study does not show a negative effect on the outcome of radiation treatment of this tumor model. We have also demonstrated a highly elevated number of mast cells in the irradiated group, and have shown that smoke exposure significantly depressed the radiation-induced enhancement of the number of mast cells. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
prostate adenocarcinoma, irradiation, smoke exposure, mast cells
in
The Prostate
volume
42
issue
4
pages
253 - 259
publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
external identifiers
  • pmid:10679754
  • scopus:0033951373
ISSN
0270-4137
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
49c65694-531c-402a-b15b-d3883d7fedb8 (old id 1116689)
alternative location
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/69504097/PDFSTART
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:07:04
date last changed
2022-01-26 23:03:00
@article{49c65694-531c-402a-b15b-d3883d7fedb8,
  abstract     = {{BACKGROUND: The influence of tobacco smoke has been investigated on the growth rate and histology of prostate cancer, both in untreated tumors and in those subjected to fractionated irradiation. METHODS: Twenty-five rats were implanted bilaterally with Dunning R3327 tumor fragments at 10 weeks of age. Approximately 3 months later, they were randomly allocated to two groups, one of which was exposed to tobacco smoke for an hour each day, 5 days a week. Three weeks later the groups were further subdivided into two groups which acted as controls or were subjected to 5 daily doses of 6 Gy. The tumors were measured weekly to construct growth curves. At a fixed time, 9 weeks or 20 weeks later, the animals were sacrificed and the tumors were removed for histological evaluation of the tissue composition. Sections from each tumor were scored in a morphometric analysis of the fraction of the area of tumor that was occupied by (epithelial) tumor cells, by stroma, or by luminal spaces. In addition, the density of mast cells was assessed in adjacent sections stained with toluidine blue. RESULTS: Smoking caused only minor changes in the growth rates of both the control and the irradiated tumors. At the cellular level, smoking caused a small but significant increase in the fraction of tumor cells relative to controls. Irradiation also caused a small but significant decrease in tumor cell fraction compared to controls, even after 20 weeks of regrowth. This difference was reduced in the smoking and irradiation group. The main difference observed was in the mast cell numbers. Smoking caused a 4-fold increase in mast-cell density. Irradiation caused an even greater increase (25-fold). The combination of smoking and irradiation resulted in an intermediate increase (10-fold). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term smoke exposure can slightly alter the growth rate and morphology of Dunning R3327 rat prostatic adenocarcinoma, but our study does not show a negative effect on the outcome of radiation treatment of this tumor model. We have also demonstrated a highly elevated number of mast cells in the irradiated group, and have shown that smoke exposure significantly depressed the radiation-induced enhancement of the number of mast cells.}},
  author       = {{Johansson, S and Landstrom, M and Bjermer, Leif and Henriksson, R}},
  issn         = {{0270-4137}},
  keywords     = {{prostate adenocarcinoma; irradiation; smoke exposure; mast cells}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{253--259}},
  publisher    = {{John Wiley & Sons Inc.}},
  series       = {{The Prostate}},
  title        = {{Effects of tobacco smoke on tumor growth and radiation response of dunning R3327 prostate adenocarcinoma in rats}},
  url          = {{http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/69504097/PDFSTART}},
  volume       = {{42}},
  year         = {{2000}},
}