Abstract
Tumor necrosis and oxygen status were investigated as a function of tumor size in three syngeneic murine carcinomas, MCa-4, OCa-I, and SCC-VII, in C3Hf/Kam mice. Tumor necrosis was estimated histologically, and tumor oxygenation determined by direct polarographic histography. As tumor volume increased necrosis increased significantly in all three tumor types (p < 0.001). Similarly, as tumor volume increased from 200 to 1 400 mm3, hypoxia, defined as the percentage of measured p02 Values ±5.0 mm Hg, increased from 55.1% to 95.9%, 70.3% to 81.4%, and 56.8% to 98.5% in MCa-4, OCa-I, and SCC-VII tumors respectively (p < 0.001). Correcting p02 for necrosis reduced the tumor size dependence of measured tumor hypoxia in all three tumor types but in no case was the reduction significant. The main effect of correction was to shift the fitted curves of percent pO2 values <5.0 mm Hg down toward lower percentages for all tumors. This change was significant for MCa-4 and OCa-I tumors (p < 0.001), but not for SCC-VII (p = 0.054). Defining the influence of variables such as necrosis that affect polarographic assessment of tumor oxygenation is important to enhance the technique's reliability and prospect as an investigative and predictive tool.
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