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Original Articles

Age‐dependent responses to 2‐acetylaminofluorene in BALB/c female mice

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Pages 113-129 | Received 11 Dec 1986, Accepted 02 Feb 1987, Published online: 20 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

In order to evaluate the influence of age on 2‐acetylaminofluorene (2‐AAF) carcinogenesis, female BALB/c mice were fed diets containing 500 ppm 2‐AAF for 6 mo, starting at 1, 7, or 13 mo of age. Croups of mice were killed immediately, 3 or 6 mo after termination of treatment, or were allowed to complete their life span. Mice corresponding to the age of each sacrifice group of the 2‐AAF‐treated mice and a life‐span group were also included as controls. The study was moved to a different animal room area after 25 wk into the study. Thus, certain treatment groups were replicated to evaluate the impact of the change in environment. Controls and the young 2‐AAF‐treatment group killed at 7 mo of age were replicated twice in the new animal room at 6‐mo intervals. Similarly, controls and the mid‐aged treatment group killed at 13 mo of age were repeated once in the new animal room. This resulted in mice of each age/treatment group being treated simultaneously in the same room and killed as soon as treatment was stopped. The main histopathologic responses to 2‐AAF were observed in the urinary bladder, liver, and mammary glands. In all three replicates urinary bladder hyperplasia was less severe when young mice were treated than when mid‐aged or old mice were treated. In contrast, there was no clear influence of age on bladder tumorigenesis, although replicate variation in this response was very great.

Tentatively one also may conclude that (1) sensitivity to the induction of mammary tumorigenesis by 2‐AAF increased with the age of mice at the time of treatment, and (2) old mice were sensitive to induction of liver karyomegaly and cytoplasmic and nuclear inclusions, while young and mid‐aged mice were resistant to this influence.

Perhaps the most important conclusion to be made from this study is that replicate variation, probably due to environmental factors, may result in false conclusions concerning age sensitivity to a carcinogen if differing age groups are not treated simultaneously and/or key parts of an experiment are not replicated to eliminate the possibility of an influence of environmental factors or nonrandom assignment of animals to age groups.

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