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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 95, 562-571, Copyright © 1988 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
MJ Derrick, WG Hammond, HY Pak, N Azumi, SS Smith and JR Benfield
The progression of preneoplasia into lung cancer can be serially studied in
a new canine model that is simpler and more cost effective than previously
reported methods of orthotopic endobronchial carcinogenesis. Short segments
of bronchus, obtained by pneumonectomy, were placed on the back of 10 dogs
in the form of subcutaneous bronchial autografts. These autografts (12 to
14 per dog) became vascularized and lined with normal respiratory
epithelium. Four to 12 weeks after autograft implantation, 10%
methylcholanthrene in crystalline form was put into 57 autografts and 10%
methylcholanthrene in a silicone polymer sustained-release implant was
placed into 54 autografts. Ten autografts without carcinogen (one per dog)
served as controls. Serial samplings of each autograft during 9 to 97 weeks
of carcinogen exposure showed the neoplastic progression from normal
bronchial cells to invasive cancer through stages such as atypical squamous
metaplasia and carcinoma in situ. To date, cancers have been histologically
proved in 60 autografts; 36 were induced by implants and 24 by the
crystalline form. Thirty-nine cancers were epidermoid, and the remainder
were either adenocarcinomas (n = 3) or poorly differentiated spindle cell
cancers (n = 18). The sustained-release implant method resulted in larger
autografts with a greater tendency to progress to cancer than the
crystalline carcinogens (p greater than 0.025). Therefore, the
sustained-release implant is now considered the preferred method.
Measurement of nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid by image analysis of nine
histologic cancers demonstrated hyperploidy. Deoxyribonucleic acid from the
L1 repeated sequence family was demonstrably hypomethylated in spindle cell
tumors. Curettement of individual autografts yielded sheets of respiratory
epithelium from which 43.5 to 409.5 micrograms of deoxyribonucleic acid was
isolated. For the first time, deoxyribonucleic acid from each stage of the
neoplastic progression in non-small cell lung cancer is available in
adequate quantities for serial biochemical and therapeutic analysis.
ARTICLES
Non-small cell lung cancer in autogenous subcutaneous bronchial grafts in dogs
Division of Surgery, City of Hope Medical Center, Duarte, Calif.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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A. A.W. TenHave-Opbroek, X.-B. Shi, and P. H. Gumerlock 3-Methylcholanthrene triggers the differentiation of alveolar tumor cells from canine bronchial basal cells and an altered p53 gene promotes their clonal expansion Carcinogenesis, August 1, 2000; 21(8): 1477 - 1484. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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