Male 6‐week‐old BALB/c strain animals (groups 1 and 2) received 10 weekly intragastric intubations of 0.5 mg/mouse of N‐methyl‐N‐nitrosourea. At week 11 the forestomachs were resected in group 1 but not group 2. Although many animals in group 2 died due to development of squamous cell carcinomas in the forestomach, development of cancers in the glandular stomach was quite similar in both groups. Well‐differentiated adenocarcinomas in groups 1 and 2 were found at low incidence at week 20, rising to 100% at week 40, with two lesions metastasizing to the lymph nodes. Four poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas and 5 signet ring cell carcinomas were also found in 27 glandular stomach tumor‐bearing animals.
To assess the possibility of establishing an in vivo, medium-term bioassay system for gastric carcinogens and promoters, a total of 220 male WKY rats were divided into two groups. Group 1 animals were treated first with a single dose of N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) (160 mg/kg body wt) and starting 2 weeks later administrated one of five gastric carcinogens, a gastric promoter, one of five non-gastric carcinogens or no treatment, as a control, for 14 weeks. Saturated sodium chloride solution (1 ml) treatments were given by gastric intubation at weeks 4, 6, 8 and 10. Group 2 rats received 1 ml of DMSO instead of MNNG and were then treated in the same way as group 1. Analysis of pyloric mucosa sections for pepsinogen altered pyloric glands (PAPG) detected immunohistochemically after the animals were killed at week 16 revealed increased lesion numbers in group 1, with all gastric carcinogens and promoters examined. However, none of the five non-gastric carcinogens exerted any significant modification of PAPG development. The results strongly suggest that the experimental protocol consisting of the following four components: (i) adoption of PAPG as the end-point marker lesion; (ii) single dose of MNNG as initiator; (iii) test chemical administration for 14 weeks; and (iv) administration of saturated sodium chloride solution during the test chemical exposure, could be used effectively for the detection of gastric carcinogens as well as promoters of gastric carcinogenesis in a relatively short time period.
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