| Literature DB >> 27927180 |
Jeffrey Wimsatt1,2,3, Meghan Villers4, Laurel Thomas4, Stacey Kamarec4, Caitlin Montgomery4, Leo W Y Yeung5, Yanqing Hu6, Kim Innes7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer is the second most common cause of cancer deaths for both men and women, and the third most common cause of cancer in the U.S. Toxicity of current chemotherapeutic agents for colorectal cancer, and emergence of drug resistance underscore the need to develop new, potentially less toxic alternatives. Our recent cross-sectional study in a large Appalachian population, showed a strong, inverse, dose-response association of serum perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) levels to prevalent colorectal cancer, suggesting PFOS may have therapeutic potential in the prevention and/or treatment of colorectal cancer. In these preliminary studies using a mouse model of familial colorectal cancer, the APCmin mouse, and exposures comparable to those reported in human populations, we assess the efficacy of PFOS for reducing tumor burden, and evaluate potential dose-response effects.Entities:
Keywords: APCmin mouse; Colorectal cancer; Dose–response; Gender; PFOS; Perfluorooctane sulfonate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27927180 PMCID: PMC5143440 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2861-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1a-c Fig. 1a shows the number of tumors (mean and s. e.: Total, SI-small intestine, LI-large intestine) counted at 15 weeks in female APCmin mice exposed to varying target doses from 7–15 weeks of age, and receiving up to 250 mg/kg PFOS in their drinking water. Controls received 0.5% Tween-20 vehicle only. Figure 1b shows the number of tumors counted by region (mean and s. e.: Total, SI-small intestine, LI-large intestine) in male APCmin mice exposed to target doses of up to 200 mg/kg PFOS in their drinking water. Figure 1c. The number of large tumors 1–3 mm in diameter plotted against PFOS is depicted. These results suggest PFOS may cause tumor regression, and not just prevent tumor development (mean and s. e.: Total, SI-small intestine, LI-large intestine). For the female study, animal numbers were 7, 8, and 4 for vehicle, 20, and 250 mg/kg dose groups respectively. For the male study, animal numbers were n = 6 for each group. Values represent total tumors counted in the vehicle controls as compared to each treatment group
Fig. 2Shown are plasma PFOS levels (mean and s. e.) from male APCmin mice at 15 weeks of age by dose administered. Total linear and branched PFOS levels are shown. As expected, levels increased with PFOS dose
Fig. 3Shown is the average body weight (mean and s. e.) by dose group from 6–15 weeks of age weeks in male mice. As can be seen, body weight appeared to slow in proportion to PFOS dose. At approximately 12 weeks of age, the 200 mg/kg group stopped exhibiting weight increases altogether. Table 1 depicts the gender, dose groups, animal numbers and duration of exposure for the animals completing each study
Depicts the gender, dose groups, animal numbers and duration of exposure for the animals completing each study
| Trial | Dose Groups in mg/kg | Age at First Exposure | Treatment Duration | Age at Tumor Counts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Females | 0 (8), 20 (7a), 250 (4b) | 7 weeks | 8 weeks | 15 weeks |
| Males | 0 (6), 10 (6), 50 (6), 200 (6) | 6 weeks | 9 weeks | 15 weeks |
aOne animal developed breast cancer and was dropped from study; bfour animals had > 10% weight loss before 15 weeks and were lost to follow-up. “0” dose animals received vehicle only