Low-Dose Dietary Phytoestrogen Abrogates Tamoxifen-Associated Mammary Tumor Prevention

Author:

Liu Bolin1,Edgerton Susan1,Yang Xiaohe1,Kim Aeree1,Ordonez-Ercan Dalia1,Mason Terza1,Alvarez Kathy1,McKimmey Christine1,Liu Naxin2,Thor Ann1

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Pathology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and

2. 2Evanston Northwestern Healthcare Research Institute, Evanston, Illinois

Abstract

Abstract Wild-type erbB-2/neu transgenic mice were used to study the interactions between tamoxifen and dietary phytoestrogens (or isoflavones) by dose and form in vivo. Mice were randomized to one of four dietary formulas and implanted with an 8-week continuous-release tamoxifen or placebo pellet at 8 weeks of age. In placebo-treated mice, soy meal diet (but not diets supplemented with low-dose or high-dose isoflavones or a casein diet) resulted in prolongation of tumor latency. In tamoxifen-treated mice fed the soy meal, casein, or high-dose isoflavone enriched diets, the majority (>80%) showed no tumor formation by 60 weeks of age. Of the mice that developed tumors, latency was significantly prolonged. In tamoxifen-treated mice fed the low-dose isoflavone enriched diet, a much higher rate of mammary tumor development (>50%; P < 0.002) and a shorter tumor latency were observed. In vitro studies of human and mouse mammary tumor cell lines confirm that low doses of genistein, co-administered with tamoxifen, promote cell proliferation. This is in contrast to tamoxifen alone or tamoxifen with higher doses of genistein that are growth inhibitory. In summary, low-dose dietary isoflavones abrogated tamoxifen-associated mammary tumor prevention in vivo. These interactions are supported by in vitro data from human and mouse mammary tumor cell lines. These dose-associated interactions likely have relevance to the human use of tamoxifen for prevention or treatment of breast cancer.

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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