The role of nitrate, nitrite and N-nitrosamines in carcinogenesis of colon tumours following ureterosigmoidostomy

Abstract
Summary Urinary diversion in both a rat model for ureterosigmoidostomy and in ureterosigmoidostomy patients result in an increased incidence of colon tumours. Bacterial and chemical investigations on feces-urine mixtures from both the rat model and ureterosigmoidostomy patients showed the presence of a complex nitrate-reducing bacterial flora in both rats and humans. This bacterial flora actively reduced urinary nitrate to nitrite in humans and increased the endogenous formation of N-nitroso compounds. No evidence of urinary nitrate reduction and increased nitrosamine formation in the rectosigmoid of rats was found. The results support the N-nitrosamine theory of carcinogenesis of the colon following ureterosigmoidostomy in humans, but not in rats. As the rat model induces colon carcinomas, factors other than the increased endogenous formation of N-nitroso compounds in the rectosigmoid may contribute to the initiation of colon carcinomas following ureterosigmoidostomy.