Protective effects of progesterone and tamoxifen in estrogen-induced mammary carcinogenesis in ovariectomized W/Fu rats

Japanese journal of cancer research : Gann, 76(8), 699-704

PMID 3930447 Source

Abstract

The protective effect of progesterone or tamoxifen, an antiestrogenic agent, was investigated in estrogen-induced mammary carcinogenesis. Multiple mammary tumors (MT) of tubular or medullary carcinoma type developed at a high rate following prolonged treatment of ovariectomized W/Fu rats with diethylstilbestrol or 17 beta-estradiol. All MTs were located adjacent to the nipple and were slow-growing. The induction rate, multiplicity and size of estrogen-induced MTs were reduced by the simultaneous administration of either progesterone or tamoxifen. The estrogen-induced pituitary tumorigenesis was effectively inhibited by tamoxifen treatment, but it was not affected by progesterone. The results indicated that the inhibitory effect of progesterone or tamoxifen in estrogen-induced carcinogenesis is attributable to interference with the binding of estrogen to the estrogen receptors on the target cells.

Topics

progesterone breast cancer protection, estrogen-induced mammary carcinoma, progesterone tamoxifen comparison, hormone-related breast cancer risk, estrogen receptor antagonists, progesterone anticancer effects, estradiol breast tumor development, hormonal carcinogenesis prevention, progesterone receptor mechanisms, estrogen dominance breast tissue

Cite this article

Inoh, A., Limpias Kamiya, K. J. L., Fujii, Y., & Yokoro, K. (1985). Protective effects of progesterone and tamoxifen in estrogen-induced mammary carcinogenesis in ovariectomized W/Fu rats. *Japanese journal of cancer research : Gann*, *76*(8), 699-704.

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