Diabetes mellitus is one of the risk factors for carcinogenesis. Recently we reported that alloxan induces squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) with coincidental inflammation, bacteria/fungal infections, and a severe diabetic condition. The present study was conducted to examine the effects of blood glucose control with insulin on the proliferative changes of the forestomach in alloxan-induced diabetic rats. Male 15-week-old WBN/Kob rats were divided into a control group of non-treated rats with naturally occurring diabetes after 40 weeks of age (non-treated group), alloxan-induced diabetic rats (AL group), and alloxan-induced diabetic rats given insulin implant treatment (AL + In group). The animals were sacrificed at 90 weeks of age for histopathologic examination. The blood glucose and urinary glucose level of the AL + In group fluctuated variously from high to normal levels compared with a constantly high level of AL (for 75 weeks) as well as in the non-treated group (for 50 weeks). The mucosal hyperplasia in the forestomach developed in 88.2% of the AL group and 37.5% of the non-treated group, but in only 10.0% of the AL + In group. SCC was only detected in 23.5% of the AL group. Hyperplastic changes were constantly accompanied by inflammation and fungal/bacterial infections in the AL and non-treated groups, whereas inflammation and fungal infection were completely suppressed in the AL + In group. These findings demonstrate that blood glucose control suppressed neoplastic changes in alloxan-induced diabetic rats. We postulate that inflammation together with bacterial/fungal infections under prolonged severe diabetic conditions play a pivotal role in carcinogenesis. © 2009 Japanese Cancer Association.
CITATION STYLE
Sano, T., Ozaki, K., Kodama, Y., Matsuura, T., & Narama, I. (2009). Prevention of proliferative changes of forestomach mucosa by blood glucose control with insulin in alloxan-induced diabetic rats. Cancer Science, 100(4), 595–600. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.2008.01081.x
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