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© 1992 Oxford University Press

research-article

Carcinogenicity of Oral Cadmium in the Male Wistar (WF/NCr) Rat: Effect of Chronic Dietary Zinc Deficiency1

MICHAEL P. WAALKES2 and SABINE REHM

Inorganic Carcinogenesis and Tumor Pathology and Pathogenesis Sections, Laboratory of Comparative Carcinogenesis, National Cancer Institute, Frederick Cancer Research and Deveopment Center Frederick, Maryland 21702-1201

Received March 17, 1992; accepted June 19, 1992

The effect of chronic dietary zinc deficiency on the carcinogenic potential of dietary cadmium was assessed in male Wistar (WF/NCr) rats. Groups (n=28) of rats were fed diets adequate (60 ppm) or marginally deficient (7 ppm) in zinc and containing cadmium at various levels (0, 25, 50, 100, or 200 ppm). Lesions were assessed over the following 77 weeks. Zinc deficiency alone had no effect on survival, growth, or food consumption. Cadmium treatment did not reduce survival or food consumption and only at the highest doses of cadmium (100 and 200 ppm) was body weight reduced (maximum 17%). The incidence of prostatic proliferative lesions, both hyperplasias and adenomas, was increased over that seen in controls (1.8%) in both zinc-adequate (20%) and zinc-deficient rats (14%) fed 50 ppm cadmium. The overall incidence for prostatic lesions for all cadmium treatment groups was, however, much lower in zinc-deficient rats, possibly because of a marked increase in prostatic atrophy that was associated with reduced zinc intake. Cadmium treatment resulted in an elevated leukemia incidence (maximum 4.8-fold over control) in both zinc-adequate and zinc-deficient groups, although zinc deficiency reduced the potency of cadmium in this respect. Testicular tumors were significantly elevated only in rats receiving 200 ppm cadmium and diets adequate in zinc. Both zinc-deficient and zinc-adequate groups showed significant positive trends for development of testicular neoplasia with increasing cadmium dosage. Thus, oral cadmium exposure is clearly associated with tumors of the prostate, testes, and he matopoietic system in rats, while dietary zinc deficiency has complex, apparently inhibitory, effects on cadmium carcinogenesis by this route.


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