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Journal of Nutrition Vol. 114 No. 4 April 1984, pp. 746-752
Copyright © 1984 by American Society for Nutrition
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Inhibition of Tumor Growth by Zinc Depletion of Rats1,2,

Betty J. Mills, Walter L. Broghamer, Patrick J. Higgins and Robert D. Lindeman

The Louisville Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Biochemistry and Medicine, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY 40292

Tumors grow less rapidly when implanted into zinc-deficient rats. The objective of this study was to determine if tumor growth is also inhibited when tumors first are established and then a zinc depletion initiated. Therefore, rats with palpable mammary adenocarcinomas or with sham implants were pair-fed either a control or zinc-deficient diet for 32 days. Rats were then killed and tumors, plasma and several tissues analyzed. In three separate experiments tumor growth was inhibited 32, 35 and 35%, respectively. The extent of tumor necrosis and tumor zinc concentration were not different between control and deficient groups. However, there was a significant positive correlation between tumor zinc concentration and percent viable tumor tissue in both groups. Although zinc depletion in tumor-bearing rats resulted in a 10% loss of carcass weight, there was little effect on liver, kidney and heart weights. As a result of depletion alone, zinc concentrations decreased only in plasma and kidney. As a result of tumor growth alone, concentrations of liver zinc increased and kidney copper decreased. In plasma of tumor-bearing rats, levels of zinc decreased 40% while copper and magnesium increased 50 and 13%, respectively. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration that growth of established tumors can be retarded solely by dietary zinc depletion.


KEY WORDS: • tumor growth • zinc depletion

1 This work was supported in part by the Veterans Administration, the Disabled American Veterans (Kentucky Division) and Grant IN-111 from the American Cancer Society.

2 The work was presented in an abstract: Mills, B. J., Higgins, P. J. & Lindeman, R. D. (1983) Zinc depletion inhibits growth of established tumors. Proceedings American College of Nutrition, 24th Annual Meeting, Cincinnati, OH.

Manuscript received 30 September 1983.


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