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View Full Version : prolonged exposure to some antibiotics increased risk of her2+ brst cancer 3Xin mice


Lani
06-18-2006, 01:08 AM
gentamycin is rarely used for long periods in humans as it can be ototoxic (hurt hearing) but it is included in antibiotic-impregnated cement and beads securing joint replacements and treating bone infections. ?need to test other antibiotics, such as those taken for years in the 1970s and 80s against acne?

1: Cancer Res. 2006 Jun 15;66(12):6219-24. Related Articles, Links

Influence of Antibiotic Treatment on Breast Carcinoma Development in Proto-neu Transgenic Mice.

Rossini A, Rumio C, Sfondrini L, Tagliabue E, Morelli D, Miceli R, Mariani L, Palazzo M, Menard S, Balsari A.

Molecular Targeting Unit, Medicine Laboratory Unit, and Unit of Medical Statistics and Biometry, Department of Experimental Oncology and Laboratories, National Cancer Institute.

The effect of prolonged antibiotic treatments on tumor development was evaluated in proto-neu transgenic mice, which spontaneously develop mammary carcinomas. Virgin transgenic mice were treated with metronidazole/ciprofloxacin or gentamicin through the drinking water. The hazard ratio [HR; 95% confidence interval (95% CI)] of breast cancer occurrence in metronidazole/ciprofloxacin-treated mice was more than triple that for controls [3.11 (1.13-8.53); P = 0.028], whereas only a slight increase in HR (95% CI) was observed in gentamicin-treated mice [1.39 (0.56-3.47); P = 0.481]. Tumor growth rate in gentamicin-treated mice was significantly faster than in untreated control mice (P = 0.043). Moreover, mammary glands from mice treated with either antibiotic regimen showed increased lobulization, with more numerous and more developed terminal ductal lobular units than in controls. These results indicate that prolonged exposure to relevant doses of antibiotics affects the mammary glands in this particular model of HER-2/neu transgenic mice; further studies to understand the precise mechanism by which antibiotic treatments influence mammary gland differentiation are critical. (Cancer Res 2006; (12): 6219-24).

PMID: 16778196 [PubMed - in process]