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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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