Our earlier experiments revealed that orotic acid, a precursor for pyrimidine nucleotides, selectively stimulated the growth of carcinogen-modified liver cells to grow into enzyme-altered hepatocytes (Cancer Lett., 16: 191–196, 1982). The present study was designed to determine whether prolonged feeding of orotic acid will result in hepatocellular carcinoma in initiated rats. Accordingly, groups of rats were given i.p. either 1,2-dimethylhydrazine dihydrochloride (100 mg/kg) or an equivalent volume of 0.9% sodium chloride solution 18 hr after two-thirds partial hepatectomy. After 1 week of recovery, they were continued on either the basal diet or the basal diet containing 1% orotic acid for 10 or 13 months. Some groups of rats, in addition, received a single necrogenic dose of CCI4 8 weeks following exposure to orotic acid diet. The results obtained indicated that 87.5% of initiated rats exposed to orotic acid developed hepatocellular carcinomas in 10 months and 100% in 13 months. Initiated rats exposed to orotic acid diet coupled with a single administration of CCI4 developed 100% hepatocellular carcinoma by 10 months. In contrast, the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma in initiated rats fed basal diet alone for 13 months was 37.5%, while, in those that received CCI4 in addition, the incidence was 25% in 10 months. Interestingly, a significant number of liver cancers (29 to 36%) in the orotic acid-fed group metastasized to lungs, whereas none of the liver cancers in rats exposed to basal diet metastasized. Uninitiated rats exposed to orotic acid coupled with a single administration of CCI4 did not develop hepatocellular carcinoma in 13 months. However, one of these seven uninitiated rats developed hepatic nodules. These results were interpreted to indicate that orotic acid is a promoter for experimental liver carcinogenesis.

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This work was supported in part by USPHS Research Grants CA23958 and CA21157 from the National Cancer Institute and by funds from the J. P. Bickell Foundation, Toronto; National Cancer Institute, Canada; and Ministry of Labour, Ontario, Canada.

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