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Chemopreventive Agent Development Research Group, Division of Cancer Prevention, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-7322 [C. W. B., G. J. K.]; Division of Environmental Health Sciences, The Ohio State University School of Public Health, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1240 [G. D. S., M. A. M.]; and Bacus Laboratories, Lombard, Illinois 60148 [J. V. B., V. K., J. W. B.]
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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In the manufacture of green tea, the enzyme polyphenol oxidase is denatured by steam heat to prevent its activation by mechanical crushing of the tea leaves and subsequent catalytic action on the polymerization of catechins and gallic acid into oligomers, which are black in color. By contrast, in the manufacture of black tea, polyphenol oxidase is allowed to continue catalyzing the polymerization reaction until most of the catechins and gallic acid have been converted into black oligomers. Four of the oligomers, the agallate, two different monogallates, and the digallate, together termed "theaflavins" account for 36% of the total dry weight of black tea leaves (4) .
In a previous report (5) , the MTG, measured by CAQITA as described in detail below, was validated as a method for grading NMBA-induced rat esophageal carcinogenesis. The validation was performed in two ways: (a) the MTG was shown to correlate with the two universally used measures of response to a carcinogen, tumor incidence (the percentage of rats with esophageal papillomas), and tumor multiplicity (the number of esophageal papillomas per rat); and (b) the powerful chemopreventive agent, phenethylisothiocyanate, was shown to produce a reduction in MTG that closely paralleled the reduction it produced in esophageal tumor incidence and multiplicity (5) .
As illustrated in Fig. 1
, when rats were given NMBA s.c. at a dose of 0.5 mg/kg three times a
week for 5 weeks, by the 10th week after starting the NMBA their
esophageal epithelia exhibited diffuse intraepithelial neoplasia
(6)
plus multiple sharply demarcated microscopic plaques
of high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia, each measuring up to 2 mm in
length (5)
. At least some of these microscopic plaques in
each rat progressed over the next 5 weeks into visible papillomas with
high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia. The esophageal papillomas
continued to increase in number and size until the 30th week, after
which they blocked the passage of food through the esophagus, leading
to the death of the rats. Wargovich et al. (7)
reported that if the s.c. dose of NMBA is increased 7-fold to 3.5 mg/kg
three times a week for 5 weeks, as early as the 15th week after
starting NMBA, the papillomas in 17% of 29 rats had progressed to
invasive squamous cell carcinomas. Thus, the microscopic plaques of
intraepithelial neoplasia observed at the 10th week represent the
beginning of a neoplastic continuum that ends in invasive carcinoma.
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| Materials and Methods |
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Animals.
Male F344 rats were obtained from Harlan Sprague Dawley (Indianapolis,
IN) at 56 weeks of age, housed in groups of three in plastic cages
with hardwood bedding (Beta Chips; Northeastern Products Corporation,
Warrenburg, NY), and quarantined for 2 weeks before use in experiments.
All rats were fed a modified AIN-76A diet consisting of 20% casein,
0.3% DL-methionine, 52% cornstarch, 13% dextrose, 5%
corn oil, 5% Alphacel, 3.5% AIN mineral mixture, 1% AIN vitamin
mixture, and 0.2% choline bitartrate. Water was given ad
libitum. The rats were maintained under standard conditions
(20 ± 2°C, 50 ± 10% relative humidity; 12/12-h
light-dark cycle). Animal cages and water bottles were changed twice a
week.
Preparation and Staining of Histological Sections.
At the time of sacrifice, rats were euthanized with
CO2 inhalation and subjected to complete gross
necropsy examination. The esophagus of each rat was excised, opened
longitudinally, affixed to white index cards mucosal side up, and fixed
in 10% neutral buffered formalin. The fixed esophagi were cut into
three equal segments, which were oriented in paraffin blocks stacked
flat one above the other such that a single microtome section showed a
cross section of the entire wall of the esophagus. One histological
slide of each esophagus was prepared and stained with the DNA-Feulgen
stain. No counterstain was used.
CAQITA.
The Bliss CAQITA system (Bacus Laboratories, Inc.) was used. This
included a Zeiss Axiophot 2 microscope with an attached x, y microscope
stage. All calculations described below were automatically performed by
the computer. On the video monitor, the computer divided the image of
the rat esophageal epithelium into a row of contiguous small image
"tiles" that were fused seamlessly together and were not visible.
Each tile measured 87 µm along the long axis of the esophageal
epithelium and 292 µm perpendicular to the epithelium across the
basal cell layer, intermediate cell layer, and part of the keratin
layer. By using a mouse to "point and click," the image tile
registered at any point along the esophageal epithelium could be made
to appear at magnifications of x5, x10, x20, or x40. The computer
automatically made quantitative measurements of selected features (see
below) in each contiguous image tile of the epithelium at x40.
Tissue Features Used to Calculate the Tile Grade.
The tile grade was calculated from measurements of four selected tissue
features within each tile. The feature, "Sum OD per Tile," in
absorbance units, is proportional to the total DNA within a tile
and becomes increased in tiles containing piled-up neoplastic nuclei.
The "Fraction of Tile Area Covered by Nuclei," in
µm2, measures the silhouette area of aggregates
of overlapping nuclei within a tile. The "Configureable Run Length
with Step Length of 14.38 micrometers," in hole counts per tile, is
measured as follows. At x40, there are >20,000 pixels within a tile.
In relation to each given pixel (the index pixel), the computer
measures the absorbance of a second pixel 14.38 µm away in both the
horizontal and vertical directions. If the absorbance of either second
pixel is less than the index pixel by 0.05 absorbance units or more, a
"hole" is counted for the pixel pair. Increased hole counts occur
when there is crowding and overlapping of nuclei within a tile. To
measure "Deep Valley Detector," in triplet holes per tile, the
computer reviews all pixel triplets in the horizontal, vertical, and
two diagonal directions. Pixel triplets whose center pixels have an
absorbance less than either end pixel by 0.05 absorbance units or more
are counted as a triplet hole. These occur at the borders of chromatin
clumps, which are sharply marginated, i.e., have a steep
absorbance drop off, a feature that is characteristic of neoplastic
change.
Z-Score Transformation of Tissue Feature Measurements.
The measured value of each tissue feature within each tile was
transformed into a statistical Z-score according to the equation,
Z = (x - X)/S),
where x is the raw tile feature measurement from a
carcinogen-treated rat, X is the mean of the same tile
feature measured in normal rats, and S is the SD of the same
tile feature measured in normal rats (8)
.
Calculation of Tile Grade.
Each tile was given a tile grade equal to the weighted sum of the four
tile feature Z-scores, each weight being a unique coefficient <1,
which remained constant among all tiles measured in a given esophagus
(but which differed among different esophagi). The weighting
coefficient was determined by Fisher linear discriminant analysis
(8
, 9)
.
The mean of 300 tile grades, or MTG, measured in a tissue section of neoplastic esophageal epithelium, provided a single numerical grade analogous to a pathological grade assigned by a pathologist. When the MTG is measured in a section of normal esophagus, a value near zero results. For example, the grand mean and SD of 12 esophageal MTGs measured in 12 normal rats at the 15th week after starting the studies was 0.025 ± 0.723, and in 12 rats at the 20th week it was 0.050 ± 0.626. The MTGs of rats that received theaflavins alone, without carcinogen, were between (-) 0.5 and (+) 0.5. When neoplastic rather than normal esophageal epithelium was analyzed, the MTG shifted to higher values.
Studies.
The rats were acclimated on AIN-76 diet for 2 weeks and then randomly
assigned to the different study groups. A regimen of the carcinogen,
NMBA, was administered consisting of 0.5 mg/kg s.c. three times a week
for 5 weeks. Theaflavins were given in the drinking water at a low dose
of 360 ppm and a high dose of 1200 ppm, starting 1 week before
administration of NMBA. For each set of four groups of rats, one group
received theaflavins alone, one NMBA alone, one NMBA plus low-dose
theaflavins, and one NMBA plus high-dose theaflavins. One set of four
groups, at 4 rats/group, was sacrificed at the 15th week, and another
set at the 20th week after starting NMBA; a final set with 15
rats/group was sacrificed at the 25th week. Esophageal tumors <0.5 mm
were counted and mapped, and their sizes were measured as the product
of two perpendicular diameters, in mm2 (10)
. On one
histological slide from each rat, CAQITA of the esophagus was
performed, and a MTG was calculated, as described above.
Statistical Procedures.
Three response variables were compared: the MTG, in SD units; tumor
multiplicity, in number of esophageal papillomas per tumor-bearing rat;
and mean tumor size, in mm2. By 15 weeks,
esophageal tumor incidence was 100% in all groups receiving
carcinogen. Thus, tumor incidence could not be used to discriminate
between groups in this study. t tests were performed on the
difference between means of groups of rats treated with NMBA alone
(Xo) compared with groups treated with
low or high doses of theaflavins (X1)
in the diet. In a conventional t test for significance of
the difference between two sample means, the value of t is
given by t = (Xo -
X1)(n)1/2/Sp(1/n1
+
1/n2)1/2,
where Sp is the pooled variance
obtained as: Sp =
[(Sl)2 +
(S2)2]/2
(11)
. Because the sample sizes were equal, this reduces to
t = (Xo -
X1)(n)1/2/[(Sl)2
+
(S2)2]1/2.
The variable VNDM was defined as: VNDM =
(Xo -
X1)/[(Sl)2
+
(S2)2]1/2.
The VNDM was used to analyze the responses of MTG, tumor multiplicity,
and mean tumor size to theaflavins in the drinking water and also to
determine the power of a t test to detect an observed or
specified difference in means of groups of rats treated with NMBA alone
(Xo) versus groups treated with low or high doses
of theaflavins (X1), at a null curve
level of 0.05 (12)
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| Results |
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Fig. 2
and Table 1
show that at the 25th week, in t tests comparing the groups
given NMBA alone versus groups given dietary theaflavins,
the observed difference in MTG, tumor multiplicity (1200 ppm dose
only), and mean tumor size, were all significant at the
P < 0.01 level with 99% power to detect them. At the
15th and 20th weeks, however, only the MTG showed a significant
difference at both the low and high doses of theaflavins. The effects
of theaflavins on tumor multiplicity and mean tumor size at 15 and 20
weeks were only significant (P < 0.01) in the case of
tumor multiplicity at the 20th week. Fig. 2
shows that the MTG of rats
receiving NMBA alone declines between the 20th and 25th weeks. The most
likely reason for this is that two of the four tissue features used to
calculate the MTG depend on the area density of nuclei within the image
tiles being measured. Visual inspection of the esophagi at the 25th
week shows that the extent of reactive epithelial hyperplasia and
subepithelial chronic inflammatory infiltrate attributable to
carcinogen exposure for the first 5 weeks have diminished. The reduced
degree of hyperplasia correlates with reduced area density of nuclei
and, therefore, a fall in the MTG.
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level of
0.05. Finally, the last column in Table 1
In Table 1
, the MTG has the highest average VNDM (1.86), compared with
tumor multiplicity (0.97) and mean tumor size (0.32), indicating that
it is the most sensitive of the three measurements to the effects of
dietary theaflavins. The very low average VNDM of mean tumor size
(0.32) is attributable to its very high pooled variance level of 2.48,
i.e., high variability of individual tumor sizes within each
group, compared with the more moderate pooled variance levels of MTG
(0.92) and tumor multiplicity (0.64).
| Discussion |
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The variable MTG appears to have excellent promise for use as an intermediate end point in animals and, possibly, human chemoprevention trials. Because of its increased sensitivity, the MTG should be able to detect a greater difference in tissue biopsies and cytological smears before and after treatment of the same individual with a chemopreventive agent, thereby permitting evaluation by paired sample t tests with up to a 50% reduction in cohort size without significant loss of study power (13) .
| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by National Cancer
Institute Contract NO1-CN-25486-01 and National Cancer Institute Grant
PO1 CA-46535. ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Division of Environmental Health Sciences, The Ohio State
University School of Public Health, CHRI 1148, 300 West Tenth Avenue,
Columbus, OH 43210-1240. ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: NMBA,
N-nitrosomethylbenzylamine; MTG, mean tile grade;
CAQITA, computer-assisted quantitative image tile analysis; VDNM,
variance-normalized difference of means. ![]()
Received 5/ 3/00; revised 8/25/00; accepted 9/ 6/00.
| References |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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G. D. Stoner and A. Gupta Etiology and chemoprevention of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma Carcinogenesis, November 1, 2001; 22(11): 1737 - 1746. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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