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Epidemiology |
1 Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; 2 Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey; 3 Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; 4 Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; 5 MedStar Research Institute, Hyattsville, Maryland; and 6 Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington
Requests for reprints: Marc Gunter, Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, NY 10461. Phone: 718-430-3089; E-mail: mgunter{at}aecom.yu.edu.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Hyperinsulinemia has long been hypothesized to play a role in the obesity-colorectal cancer relationship (2, 3). Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia are prevalent in obese patients and insulin, in addition to its metabolic effects, has promitotic and antiapoptotic activity that may be tumorigenic. In laboratory models, for example, high insulin levels have been shown to promote the development of aberrant crypt foci in the colon (which are posited to be colorectal cancer precursors), as well as the growth of colon cancer cells (4). Furthermore, overexpression of the insulin receptor (IR) can induce cell transformation in vitro (5), and human colorectal adenocarcinomas have been shown to express the IR at high levels, indicating that these cells may be sensitive to the growth effects of insulin (6).
Few prospective studies, however, have directly assessed the relation of hyperinsulinemia with colorectal cancer, and their results have been conflicting. Of the four studies we are aware of (7–10), two reported positive associations between hyperinsulinemia and colorectal cancer (7, 10), but only one of these conducted multivariate analyses and the association was no longer statistically significant following adjustment for other risk factors (10). The remaining two studies found no association between insulin and colorectal cancer, but measured insulin using nonfasting blood specimens, which complicates their interpretation (8, 9). The unavailability of fasting serum samples may have also been the reason that other prospective investigations indirectly assessed the relation of insulin with colorectal cancer by measuring levels of C-peptide, a marker of insulin secretion. C-peptide is often used in such settings because C-peptide levels are thought to be less variable than insulin. C-peptide levels do, however, substantially increase postprandially (11), and there is an imperfect correlation of C-peptide and insulin even when measured in fasting specimens (12). Therefore, although recent prospective studies of C-peptide have provided important data, their findings have been inconsistent (13–17), and direct measurement of insulin, the putative carcinogenic agent, may provide a more accurate estimation of the relation of hyperinsulinemia with colorectal cancer.
A related peptide hormone, insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I, shares 40% amino acid sequence homology and downstream signaling pathways with insulin, but has much stronger mitogenic and antiapoptotic activity than insulin. At least four prospective investigations reported a significant positive association of colorectal cancer with circulating IGF-I levels (15, 18–20), and two of these studies also observed a significant inverse association with levels of IGF binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3), the most abundant IGF binding protein in circulation (19, 20). Other studies though, reported conflicting results, observing no relationship between IGF-I and colorectal cancer (13, 16, 21), as well as either positive (13, 18) or null associations with IGFBP-3 (16, 21). No prior studies, however, measured free (unbound) IGF-I levels, which has been hypothesized to be the main bioactive component of IGF-I in circulation (22).
Lastly, we note that no studies have ever examined the relation of endogenous estrogen levels with colorectal cancer, even though obesity is associated with high serum estradiol, and the use of oral hormone therapy (HT) has been related to reduced risk of colorectal cancer (23). Interestingly, although several laboratory studies reported that estrogen has antitumorigenic activity in keeping with the protective effects of hormone therapy (24–33), other studies found that estrogen has mitogenic effects on colorectal cells (34–42). Furthermore, oral estrogens have certain biological effects that differ from those of endogenous estrogens; most notably, oral hormone therapy exposes the liver to a large bolus of estrogen altering hepatic protein synthesis, a phenomenon known as the "first-pass effect" (43). Endogenous estrogen exposure, therefore, warrants separate study as a risk factor for colorectal cancer. In any event, it may be important to control for estradiol levels in studies of colorectal cancer and the insulin/IGF axes because there is biological cross-talk between the sex hormone and insulin/IGF pathways.
The current study, therefore, assessed the associations of incident colorectal cancer with hyperinsulinemia, IGF-I, and estradiol, as well as the degree to which these factors might account for the obesity-colorectal cancer relationship. We note that this study was specifically designed to have adequate statistical power to concurrently assess these moderately correlated variables.
| Materials and Methods |
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Study subjects. A case of incident colorectal cancer was defined as the diagnosis of disease (International Classification of Diseases for Oncology site codes 153.0–153.4, 153.6–153.9, and 154.0–154.1) after >1 year of follow-up (lag time) in a nondiabetic individual with no history of colorectal cancer at baseline. All cases of incident colorectal cancer who met the above criteria (n = 438), except two with missing data, were included in our study. A subcohort of 816 subjects randomly selected from all women in the WHI-OS at baseline and who met the same inclusion and exclusion criteria as the cases was used as the comparison group. Diabetics were excluded, as in several previous studies of the insulin/IGF-axis because of the uncertain effects an abnormal hormonal milieu might have on the relation of these factors with cancer.
Laboratory Methods
Serum insulin and glucose were measured by the designated central laboratory for WHI, Medical Research Laboratories, Highland Heights, KY, and insulin resistance was estimated using the Homeostasis Model Assessment-Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR) index ([fasting insulin (µIU/mL) x fasting glucose (mg/dL)] / 22.5; ref. 46). Serum estradiol levels were measured using the Vitros-Eci Immunodiagnostic Assay (Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics) at the Esoterix Center for Clinical Trials, the central laboratory designated by WHI for sex hormone assays. Concentrations of total IGF-I, free IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 were determined using commercially obtained ELISA (Diagnostic Systems Laboratories). Of note, "free IGF-I" testing by ELISA, unlike with ultrafiltration, measures not only the fraction of IGF-I that is unbound to IGFBPs but also "easily dissociable IGF-I", although these levels are well correlated (47). All estradiol, total IGF-I, free IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 tests were conducted in duplicate and the mean value for each duplicate pair was used as the result for analysis. Total IGF-I and IGFBP-3 tests with coefficients of variation (CV) >10% were repeated. For free IGF-I, a CV of >20% was used as the threshold because free IGF-I levels are low and, as mean values for a variable approach zero, the CV becomes mathematically sensitive to small changes in standard deviation. The Esoterix laboratory maintained its own quality control operations and any tests with CV >20% were repeated. Individual runs of any assay with quality control values outside of the expected range were repeated. Approximately 5% of the WHI-OS samples were retested in a blinded fashion. The correlations of assay values determined in the replicates were very high (total IGF-I, R2 = 0.964; free IGF-I, R2 = 0.903; IGFBP-3, R2 = 0.895; insulin, R2 = 0.984; glucose, R2 = 0.947; estradiol, R2 = 0.996). The estradiol assays were completed in a single batch. All other assays were completed in two separate batches. We tested the statistical equivalence of the age-adjusted hazard ratio (HR) estimates for the association of our serum measures and colorectal cancer between batches, and confirmed that the results did not significantly differ.
Statistical Analysis
As part of preliminary data analysis, the distributions of baseline characteristics among the cases and the subcohort (limited to those who did not later become cases) were compared and contrasted, with the age-adjusted Wilcoxon rank sum test (for continuous data) or Pearson's
2 (for categorical data) used to assess the statistical significance of any differences. All serologic data, in keeping with prior studies of insulin/IGF and cancer, were a priori expressed as quartiles or tertiles based on the distribution of results in the subcohort. For those assays conducted in two separate batches the quartiles were determined separately for each batch; an approach that minimized the possibility that even unrecognized variations in laboratory results across batch might affect our findings. Correlations between these categorical serologic data, age, and waist circumference were assessed using Spearman's correlation coefficient. To assess the effects of hormone therapy on each of the measured serologic factors, we determined their mean values by hormone therapy stratum categorized as (a) unopposed estrogen, (b) combined estrogen and progesterone, and (c) non–estrogen/estrogen + progesterone users, and compared these values using an ANOVA test.
In the main analysis, we estimated HRs for the associations of each serologic variable, as well as other risk factors, with risk of incident colorectal cancer using multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression models that employed the Self-Prentice method (48) for robust standard error estimates (to account for the case-cohort design), with time from enrollment as the underlying time scale. All models were adjusted for a priori determined established colorectal cancer risk factors, including: age categorized as (a) 50 to 54 years of age (referent), (b) 55 to 59, (c) 60 to 64, (d) 65 to 69, (e) 70 to 74, (f) 75 to 79; smoking categorized as (a) never (referent), (b) former, and (c) current; race/ethnicity categorized as (a) white (referent), (b) black, (c) Hispanic, and (d) other; physical activity assessed as metabolic equivalent tasks per hour per week (MET); waist circumference, categorized as (a) <75.0 cm, (b) 75.0 to <83.5 cm, (c) 83.5 to <93.0 cm, and (d)
93.0 cm; use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in the preceding year, alcohol consumption, assessed as number of servings per week and categorized as (a) none (referent), (b) <3, and (c)
3; and family history of colorectal cancer. Additional variables, including colorectal cancer screening history and intake of calcium, folate, vitamin D, and fiber were evaluated as potential covariates but their inclusion in our a priori determined multivariate models did not alter the overall risk estimates and are not further discussed. Endogenous estradiol data were assessed only in women who did not use estrogen or estrogen + progesterone because standard assays cannot accurately measure the equine hormones present in most hormone therapy preparations. This created five nonoverlapping groups, i.e., non–HT users with (a) low (referent), (b) moderate, or (c) high estradiol tertile levels, (d) estrogen users, (e) estrogen + progesterone users. These groups were then parameterized as separate dummy variables with low estradiol as the common referent, which permitted potentially different effects of estrogen use, estrogen + progesterone use, and high estradiol (among non–estrogen/estrogen + progesterone users) to be modeled in a single model.
Analyses stratified by HT use (nonuser, estrogen use, or estrogen + progesterone use), waist circumference (
median or >median), tumor location (colon versus rectum; distal versus proximal colon), and tumor stage (
stage 2 and >stage 2) were also performed.
| Results |
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0.85).
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Risk of colorectal cancer. Table 3 shows the associations of incident colorectal cancer with each of the serologic variables and with obesity, adjusted only for age. Waist circumference was a stronger predictor of colorectal cancer incidence [HR for highest versus lowest quartile (HRq4–q1), 2.04; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.43–2.92; Ptrend = 0.0001] than BMI or waist-to-hip ratio, and was used as the primary measure of obesity in all subsequent multivariable models. The other factors associated with colorectal cancer included insulin, HOMA-IR index, and endogenous estradiol. The results for estradiol suggested a threshold effect; that is, the HRs for the second (HR, 1.67; 1.14–2.46) and third (HR, 1.43; 0.95–2.16) estradiol tertiles, compared with the first tertile, were similar and of statistical significance and borderline statistical significance, respectively. As a single joint variable, the upper two tertiles of estradiol were associated with a 1.57-fold (95% CI, 1.10–2.22) increased risk of incident colorectal cancer relative to levels in the first tertile. In contrast, total IGF-I, IGFBP-3, and glucose were not associated with risk of colorectal cancer in age-adjusted or more comprehensive multivariate analyses (data not shown); this included models that concurrently adjusted for both IGF-I and IGFBP-3, or assessed the IGF-I/IGFBP-3 molar ratio. Only free IGF-I had a more significant effect in multivariate models than in simple age-adjusted models (as shown below).
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Free IGF-I levels were also associated with colorectal cancer in models that controlled for established risk factors, although the association was of borderline statistical significance (HRq4–q1, 1.35; 95% CI, 0.92–1.98; Ptrend = 0.05). This association was essentially unaltered following adjustment for waist circumference and HT/estradiol, but was attenuated following adjustment for insulin, (HRq4–q1, 1.22; 95% CI, 0.82–1.81; Ptrend = 0.17).
Unlike the above model, endogenous estradiol had a statistically significant positive association with risk of incident colorectal cancer that was entirely unaffected by controlling for waist, insulin, and free IGF-I, as well as all other colorectal risk factors. That is, the age-adjusted model (Table 3) and the full model that incorporated all other variables (HRhigh/low, 1.53; 95% CI, 1.02–2.27), provided nearly identical estimates of the strength of association between endogenous estradiol levels and colorectal cancer. Use of estrogen and estrogen + progesterone, on the other hand, were both inversely, albeit nonsignificantly, associated with risk of incident colorectal cancer in age-adjusted models: the HR for use of estrogen compared with no hormone therapy was 0.83 (95% CI, 0.61–1.13) and was 0.77 (95% CI, 0.55–1.09) for use of estrogen + progesterone versus non–HT users (Table 3).
We detected no significant heterogeneity in the results stratified by HT use (estrogen or estrogen + progesterone), waist circumference, tumor location, including colon, versus rectum, or distal versus proximal colon, or tumor stage (all P-interaction > 0.5).
| Discussion |
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The most novel of these findings was the positive association between endogenous estradiol and colorectal cancer. Although this result seems to conflict with the well established protective effects of exogenous hormone therapy (mainly estrogen + progesterone) against the development of colorectal cancer (23), we note that estrogen + progesterone use was associated, albeit nonsignificantly, with reduced risk of colorectal cancer in our data set. To our knowledge, no prior studies have assessed the relation of endogenous estradiol with incident colorectal cancer and, therefore, no other human data exist to either support or contradict this potentially important finding. Although this observation requires confirmation in other populations, the findings are biologically plausible. Several in vitro studies have shown that estrogen may have mitogenic and possibly tumorigenic effects on colorectal cells (34–42). For example, in human colorectal cancer cell lines, estradiol activates the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade, a key pathway in the stimulation of DNA and protein synthesis that can induce cell growth and proliferation (36, 39). In addition, there is evidence of reduced metabolic inactivation of estradiol in colorectal cancer compared with normal tissue, suggesting that colon cancer cells may be exposed to higher levels of estradiol than noncancer cells (38, 42).
How then, if estradiol is tumorigenic, can we explain the protective effects of hormone therapy against the development of colorectal cancer? One possibility relates to the well known first-pass effect of oral estrogens on the liver, whereby oral hormone therapy exposes the liver to a large bolus of estrogen, altering hepatic protein synthesis (43). Indeed, our serologic data were consistent with prior reports of changes in the IGF-axis related to the first-pass effect: total IGF-I, free IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 levels were highest among women not using hormone therapy, lowest among women using estrogen, and intermediate among women using estrogen + progesterone (reflecting the fact that progestins partially offset the estrogen effects; refs. 43, 49). Insulin levels were also significantly lower in hormone therapy users in our data set, and a wide range of other factors may also be altered by the use of oral estrogen. For example, oral estrogen significantly increases C-reactive protein levels (50), decreases low-density lipoprotein, reduces lipoprotein(a) (50), and has a significant effect on coagulation-related proteins (51). The first-pass effect undoubtedly also causes a number of as yet undiscovered changes, and it remains unclear which factor(s) altered by the first-pass effect might be the most likely to explain the protective effects of oral estrogen + progesterone against colorectal cancer. Another possibility that has been raised relates to the fact that oral estrogen and estrogen + progesterone preparations are a concatenation of estrogens comprising mainly estrone rather than estradiol (42). Estrone has been shown to decrease the proliferative response in colonic epithelial cells, whereas estradiol promotes proliferation (36, 42), and estrone has been shown to protect ovariectomized mice from carcinogen-induced colon cancer (52). As a result, it has been hypothesized that the inverse relationship between hormone therapy and colorectal cancer could be partly attributed to the potentially protective effects of estrone. Direct measurement of other components of the sex hormone axis in addition to estradiol will be needed in future studies to more comprehensively address this issue.
The relationships of waist circumference (obesity), hyperinsulinemia, and free IGF-I with incident development of colorectal cancer were largely consistent with our a priori hypotheses; i.e., each of these three factors was positively associated with risk of colorectal cancer even after control for multiple other risk factors. However, when adjusted for one another, the effects of waist circumference, insulin, and free IGF-I each became attenuated and lost statistical significance. Specifically, we found that (a) control for insulin levels essentially eliminated the modest effects of free IGF-I, and moderately attenuated those of waist circumference; (b) control for waist circumference moderately attenuated the effects of insulin; but (c) adjustment for free IGF-I had little effect on either of the other two relationships. Together, these data suggest that confounding by insulin may account for the free IGF-I association.
Several possibilities may explain why including insulin and waist circumference in a single statistical model resulted in mutually attenuated but still moderate associations with colorectal cancer that were of borderline statistical significance for both variables. Most notably, obesity and hyperinsulinemia may share a tumorigenic pathway associated with risk of colorectal cancer, i.e., obesity may be associated with colorectal cancer, in part, because of the high prevalence of hyperinsulinemia in obese women and the direct tumorigenic effects of insulin on colorectal tissue. In this context, the degree to which adjustment for insulin alters the waist circumference hazard ratio could be interpreted as the extent to which the effects of obesity are accounted for by insulin, whereas the residual association of colorectal cancer with waist circumference is an indication that there are also additional obesity-related tumorigenic mechanisms. By extension, the existence of these additional pathways would also explain the attenuation of the insulin effect by adjustment for waist circumference, as obesity and insulin levels are correlated. We cannot, however, exclude the possibility that insulin and obesity are mainly biomarkers for unrecognized causal factors involved in colorectal tumorigenesis.
The possibility that insulin might have a direct etiologic role in the development of colorectal cancer is well supported by laboratory data. Insulin, in addition to its metabolic effects, has promitotic and antiapoptotic activity. For example, insulin binding to the IR leads to activation of IR substrate molecules and the downstream activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. Furthermore, animal models have found that high insulin levels promote the development of aberrant crypt foci in the colon, which are posited to be colorectal cancer precursors (4), and overexpression of the IR can induce cell transformation in vitro (5). Human colorectal adenocarcinomas have, in fact, been shown to express the IR at high levels, suggesting that these cells may be particularly sensitive to the tumorigenic effects of insulin (6).
A number of prior epidemiologic studies of colorectal cancer also suggested a possible association of hyperinsulinemia with risk of colorectal cancer. The preponderance of these positive studies reported a moderate 1.4- to 2.0-fold effect of hyperinsulinemia on colorectal cancer incidence, whether measured directly or through C-peptide. Although this effect was statistically significant more often in men (7, 10, 14, 16) than in women, most studies involved a relatively small number of female cases (n < 200; refs. 7–9, 13, 15), whereas a larger prospective investigation of women observed a near-significant 1.6-fold effect for colon cancer (17). The current study is one of the few to directly measure fasting insulin levels and also control for multiple colorectal cancer risk factors. Based on the cumulative data, it is fair to say that there is still growing but not yet conclusive evidence of a moderate effect of hyperinsulinemia on risk of colorectal cancer. However, there can be little remaining question regarding the existence of a tumorigenic pathway that is causally related to the risk of colorectal cancer and is at least correlated with obesity and hyperinsulinemia.
Our study has several important limitations that must be highlighted. Most notably, we measured only baseline serum levels, whereas repeated measurements over time would have provided more precise classification of subjects. It is possible, for example, that the attenuation of the baseline insulin effect, when adjusted for waist circumference, partly reflects the fact that both are actually surrogate markers of "long-term" insulin levels. In adults, though, the levels of insulin, total IGF-I, free IGF-I, IGFBP-3, and estradiol are known be stable over several years (53), suggesting that this issue would most likely have had a modest effect if any on the results during the 7-year follow-up in the current investigation. A second concern is that, despite having excluded women who developed colorectal cancer within the first 12 months of follow-up, we cannot entirely reject the possibility that some cases had subclinical disease at baseline, and that the associations we observed might be partly due to reverse causality. In this connection, we conducted a post hoc analysis that included only women who developed colorectal cancer at least 3 years after the baseline blood draw, and our results remained essentially unaltered (data not shown).
In summary, our data suggest the existence of at least two independent biological pathways associated with the development of colorectal cancer: one that involves endogenous estradiol, and a second that is broadly associated with obesity, hyperinsulinemia, and free IGF-I. If correct, strategies aimed at lowering endogenous estradiol levels, either through behavioral or pharmacologic means, could reduce the risk of colorectal cancer in postmenopausal women. Although a number of studies of the colorectal cancer-insulin relationship have been conducted without arriving at a firm conclusion, it may be of interest to now study individuals at known high risk of colorectal cancer, such as those with defined cancer-related gene mutations or a strong family history of colorectal cancer. The effects of insulin on colorectal tumorigenesis—which largely relate to cell proliferation and apoptosis—might well be strong in patients with DNA repair gene or other mutations.
| Appendix A. WHI Investigators |
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Clinical Coordinating Center: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Seattle, WA) Ross Prentice, Garnet Anderson, Andrea LaCroix, Charles L. Kooperberg, Ruth E. Patterson, Anne McTiernan; Wake Forest University School of Medicine (Winston-Salem, NC) Sally Shumaker; Medical Research Labs (Highland Heights, KY) Evan Stein; University of California at San Francisco (San Francisco, CA) Steven Cummings.
Clinical Centers: Albert Einstein College of Medicine (Bronx, NY) Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller; Baylor College of Medicine (Houston, TX) Jennifer Hays; Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School (Boston, MA) JoAnn Manson; Brown University (Providence, RI) Annlouise R. Assaf; Emory University (Atlanta, GA) Lawrence Phillips; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Seattle, WA) Shirley Beresford; George Washington University Medical Center (Washington, DC) Judith Hsia; Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center (Torrance, CA) Rowan Chlebowski; Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research (Portland, OR) Evelyn Whitlock; Kaiser Permanente Division of Research (Oakland, CA) Bette Caan; Medical College of Wisconsin (Milwaukee, WI) Jane Morley Kotchen; MedStar Research Institute/Howard University (Washington, DC) Barbara V. Howard; Northwestern University (Chicago/Evanston, IL) Linda Van Horn; Rush Medical Center (Chicago, IL) Henry Black; Stanford Prevention Research Center (Stanford, CA) Marcia L. Stefanick; State University of New York at Stony Brook (Stony Brook, NY) Dorothy Lane; The Ohio State University (Columbus, OH) Rebecca Jackson; University of Alabama at Birmingham (Birmingham, AL) Cora E. Lewis; University of Arizona (Tucson/Phoenix, AZ) Tamsen Bassford; University at Buffalo (Buffalo, NY) Jean Wactawski-Wende; University of California at Davis (Sacramento, CA) John Robbins; University of California at Irvine (Irvine, CA) F. Allan Hubbell; University of California at Los Angeles (Los Angeles, CA) Howard Judd; University of California at San Diego (La Jolla/Chula Vista, CA) Robert D. Langer; University of Cincinnati (Cincinnati, OH) Margery Gass; University of Florida (Gainesville/Jacksonville, FL) Marian Limacher; University of Hawaii (Honolulu, HI) David Curb; University of Iowa (Iowa City/Davenport, IA) Robert Wallace; University of Massachusetts/Fallon Clinic (Worcester, MA) Judith Ockene; University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (Newark, NJ) Norman Lasser; University of Miami (Miami, FL) Mary Jo O'Sullivan; University of Minnesota (Minneapolis, MN) Karen Margolis; University of Nevada (Reno, NV) Robert Brunner; University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill, NC) Gerardo Heiss; University of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh, PA) Lewis Kuller; University of Tennessee (Memphis, TN) Karen C. Johnson; University of Texas Health Science Center (San Antonio, TX) Robert Brzyski; University of Wisconsin (Madison, WI) Gloria E. Sarto; Wake Forest University School of Medicine (Winston-Salem, NC) Mara Vitolins; Wayne State University School of Medicine/Hutzel Hospital (Detroit, MI) Susan Hendrix.
| Acknowledgments |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
| Footnotes |
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8 Available from: http://www.whiscience.org/about/about_biospecimen.php. ![]()
Received 8/ 1/07. Revised 9/28/07. Accepted 10/30/07.
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KO and wild-type mice from carcinogen-induced colon cancer. J Nutr 2004;134:179–82.This article has been cited by other articles:
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