Abstract

A high incidence of mammary tumors is found in multiparous GR mice during the 2nd and 3rd pregnancies and in nulliparous GR mice treated with estrone/progesterone. The purpose of this study was to determine if prolactin is a contributing hormone in the genesis of these neoplasms. In one series of experiments, 238 15-week-old nulliparous GR mice were treated with estrone (drinking water, 0.5 mg/liter) plus progesterone (30 mg progesterone pellet with cholesterol, implanted SC once monthly) for a period of 13 weeks. Half of these mice were injected SC once daily with 100 micrograms of the prolactin-suppressing drug 2-bromo-alpha-ergocryptine (CB-154) for the duration of hormone treatment, and the other half were injected SC once daily with 0.9% NaCl solution (controls). In another series of experiments, 87 pregnant GR mice were divided into two groups and injected SC once daily from day 7 to 21 of pregnancy with 0.9% NaCl solution (controls) or CB-154 (100 micrograms/mouse). In the first series, the numbers of mice with mammary tumors and total number of mammary tumors were: controls, 58/119 (49%) and 73; CB-154 treatment, 34/119 (29%) and 37, respectively. In the second series, the numbers were: controls, 39/44 (89%) and 73; CB-154 treatment, 24/43 (56%) and 43, respectively. In both studies, CB-154 treatment significantly (p less than 0.05-0.005) reduced the percentage of mice with mammary tumors and total number of mammary tumors. These results provide evidence that prolactin is a contributing hormone in the genesis of estrone/progesterone and pregnancy-induced mammary tumors in female GR mice.

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