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[Cancer Research 49, 1447-1451, March 15, 1989]
© 1989 American Association for Cancer Research

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Effect of Dietary Palm Oils on Mammary Carcinogenesis in Female Rats Induced by 7,12-Dimethylbenz(a)anthracene1

K. Sundram, H. T. Khor2, Augustune S. H. Ong and R. Pathmanathan

Palm Oil Research Institute of Malaysia, Bangi, Selangor [K. S., A. S. H. O.], and Departments of Biochemistry [H. T. K.] and Pathology [R. P.], Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Female Sprague-Dawley rats, 50 days of age, were treated with a single dose of 5 mg of 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene intragastrically. 3 days after carcinogen treatment, the rats were put on semisynthetic diets containing 20% by weight of corn oil (CO), soybean oil (SBO), crude palm oil (CPO), refined, bleached, deodorized palm oil (RBD PO) and metabisulfite-treated palm oil (MCPO) for 5 months. During the course of experiments, rats fed on different dietary fats had similar rate of growth. Rats fed 20% CO or SBO diet have higher tumor incidence than rats fed on palm oil (PO) diets; however differences of mean tumor latency periods among the groups were not statistically significant. At autopsy, rats fed on high CO or SBO diets had significantly more tumors than rats fed on the three PO diets. Our results showed that high PO diets did not promote chemically induced mammary tumorigenesis in female rats when compared to high CO or SBO diets. CO and SBO differ greatly from the palm oils in their contents of tocopherols, tocotrienols, and carotenes. But further experiments would be required to determine whether the observed differences in tumor incidence and tumor numbers were due to the differences in these minor components or due to the unique triglyceride structure of the palm oils.

Analysis of the fatty acid profiles of plasma total lipids of tumor-bearing rats and of the tumor total lipids showed that, with the exception of arachidonic acid, the fatty acid profiles reflect the nature of the dietary fats. At autopsy, there were no differences in the plasma total cholesterol contents among rats fed on different dietary fats, but rats fed on palm oil diets had a significantly higher plasma triglyceride level than that of rats fed CO or SBO diets. As for the tumor lipids, there were no significant differences in the triglyceride, diglyceride, and phospholipid levels when the CO or SBO groups were compared to the palm oil groups.

1 This work was supported by a research grant from the Palm Oil Research Institute of Malaysia.

2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, 59100 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Received 6/24/88. Revised 11/14/88. Accepted 11/28/88.




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Copyright © 1989 by the American Association for Cancer Research.