Abstract

A high incidence of oral squamous cell carcinoma was present in male and female Brown-Norway rats fed ad libitum or food-restricted dietary formulations. One hundred eight-nine rats were examined from 4 dietary treatment groups: male ad libitum, male food-restricted, female ad libitum, and female food-restricted. The ad libitum treatment groups for both males and females had significantly more cases of oral squamous cell carcinoma than cohort food-restricted groups. In ad libitum rats, 10 of 47 (21%) males and 15 of 47 (32%) females had oral squamous cell carcinoma, whereas only 4 of 47 (9%) males and 5 of 48 (10%) females in the food-restricted groups were similarly affected. The food-restricted rats lived significantly longer than ad libitum cohorts, so the higher incidence of squamous cell carcinoma was not dependent on extended lifespans. In addition to the dietary influence, a significant difference in oral squamous cell carcinoma incidence occurred between various familial lines. Family lines having representatives in both ad libitum and food-restricted groups had lower oral squamous cell carcinoma incidences in the food-restricted group whether comparing affected litters or individuals. Results suggest that the incidence of oral squamous cell carcinoma in our colony of Brown-Norway rats can be influenced by both the dietary treatment group and genetic predilection within certain pedigrees.

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