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[Cancer Research 51, 2025-2028, April 15, 1991]
© 1991 American Association for Cancer Research

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Estrogens Influence the Natural History of Sinclair Swine Cutaneous Melanoma1

Craig W. Beattie2, Salve G. Ronan and Max S. Amoss, Jr.

Specialized Center for Cancer Research and Education [C. W. B., S. G. R.], Department of Pathology [S. G. R.], University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 60612, and Department of Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology [M. S. A., Jr.], Texas A & M University, College Station, Texas 77843-4466

Initial results (Cancer Res., 48: 1708–1711, 1988) suggest that ovariectomy alters the proliferation of congenital exophytic melanoma in Sinclair swine. In order to provide a phenotypic basis for this effect, histopathological staging of 375 exophytic melanomas from 236 intact male and female Sinclair swine was compared with 114 lesions from 51 gonadectomized (6 weeks of age) and 90 lesions from castrated swine receiving s.c. silastic implants of estradiol during the first year of life. A rapid progression from actively proliferating tumor cells (Stages I–III) to regressive lesions (Stages IV–V) was virtually complete by 16 weeks of age in intact swine of both sexes. Bilateral ovariectomy reduced (P < 0.02) tumor volume over time compared with intact animals. Replacement of estradiol in gilts increased tumor volume to that in intact animals. In contrast, neither bilateral orchidectomy nor estradiol replacement altered tumor volume in boars. Ovariectomy significantly reduced the tumor macrophage, keratinocyte, and fibroblast invasion that normally replaces tumor cells and expands tumor volume (Stages IV and V) with increasing age. Chronic exposure to estradiol reversed this process. Orchidectomy and estradiol replacement did not significantly affect histopathological stage in boars with increasing age. A significant number (20 of 41; 49%) of Stage III lesions (>75% tumor cells) in swine of both sexes contained low but reproducibly measurable amounts of receptor for estrogen determined radiometrically and by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. These results suggest that reproductive steroids influence the natural history of these heritable lesions, and that the effect may be via alteration of host immune status.

1 Supported in part by NIH-National Cancer Institute Grants CA 33764 and CA 31046, and the Texas Agricultural Experimental Station.

2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Specialized Center for Cancer Research and Education, University of Illinois School of Medicine at Chicago, 840 South Wood St., Chicago, IL 60612.

Received 9/10/90. Accepted 2/ 4/91.







HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cancer Research Clinical Cancer Research
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
Cancer Prevention Journals Portal Cancer Reviews Online
Annual Meeting Education Book Cell Growth & Differentiation
Copyright © 1991 by the American Association for Cancer Research.