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Altered Eicosanoid Levels in Human Colon Cancer

Overview
Journal J Lab Clin Med
Publisher Elsevier
Date 1993 Nov 1
PMID 8228569
Citations 158
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Abstract

Eicosanoids may participate in colon carcinogenesis, as evidenced from work in animal tumor models showing prevention of colon cancer by inhibitors of their synthesis and epidemiologic studies demonstrating reduced risk of colon cancer in long-term users of aspirin and other nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). The levels of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), PGF2 alpha, PGI2, thromboxane A2 (TXA2), and leukotriene B4 (LTB4), which represent the cyclooxygenase and 5-lipoxygenase pathways, were determined in 21 pairs of surgically excised human colon cancer and histologically normal mucosa samples 5 to 10 cm away from the tumor. The levels of PGE2 were elevated in colon cancer samples as compared with histologically normal mucosa samples distant from the cancer (p < 0.01), whereas levels of prostacyclin (PGI2) were decreased (p < 0.05). The differences in the levels of PGF2 alpha, TXA2, and LTB4 between normal and malignant tissue were not statistically significant. No statistically significant association was found between the level of each of the eicosanoids assayed and Dukes' stage of colon cancer. These findings, confirming and extending earlier work from tumors and cell culture, suggest that the protective effect of aspirin and other NSAIDs in the development of human colon cancer may be mediated, at least in part, through their inhibition of arachidonic acid metabolism by cyclooxygenase.

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