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Publication : Prevention of tobacco carcinogen-induced lung cancer in female mice using antiestrogens.

First Author  Stabile LP Year  2012
Journal  Carcinogenesis Volume  33
Issue  11 Pages  2181-9
PubMed ID  22859269 Mgi Jnum  J:193229
Mgi Id  MGI:5467920 Doi  10.1093/carcin/bgs260
Citation  Stabile LP, et al. (2012) Prevention of tobacco carcinogen-induced lung cancer in female mice using antiestrogens. Carcinogenesis 33(11):2181-9
abstractText  Increasing evidence shows that estrogens are involved in lung cancer proliferation and progression, and most human lung tumors express estrogen receptor beta (ERbeta) as well as aromatase. To determine if the aromatase inhibitor anastrozole prevents development of lung tumors induced by a tobacco carcinogen, alone or in combination with the ER antagonist fulvestrant, ovariectomized female mice received treatments with the tobacco carcinogen 4-(methylnitrosoamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) along with daily supplements of androstenedione, the substrate for aromatase. Placebo, anastrozole and/or fulvestrant were administered in both an initiation and a promotion protocol of lung tumorigenesis. The combination of fulvestrant and anastrozole given during NNK exposure resulted in significantly fewer NNK-induced lung tumors (mean = 0.5) compared with placebo (mean = 4.6, P < 0.001), fulvestrant alone (mean = 3.4, P < 0.001) or anastrozole alone (mean = 2.8, P = 0.002). A significantly lower Ki67 cell proliferation index was also observed compared with single agent and control treatment groups. Beginning antiestrogen treatment after NNK exposure, when preneoplastic lesions had already formed, also yielded maximum antitumor effects with the combination. Aromatase expression was found mainly in macrophages infiltrating preneoplastic and tumorous areas of the lungs, whereas ERbeta was found in both macrophages and tumor cells. Antiestrogens, especially in combination, effectively inhibited tobacco carcinogen-induced murine lung tumorigenesis and may have application for lung cancer prevention. An important source of estrogen synthesis may be inflammatory cells that infiltrate the lungs in response to carcinogens, beginning early in the carcinogenesis process. ERbeta expressed by inflammatory and neoplastic epithelial cells in the lung may signal in response to local estrogen production.
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