Hamster bronchial carcinogenesis induced by carcinogen-containing sustained release implants placed endobronchially: A clinically relevant model

Abstract
For several widely appreciated reasons, the Syrian hamster has been the most frequently used experimental animal in investigations of conducting airway carcinogenesis. To develop a model where bronchogenic cancer arises focally at a predetermined site, we used the Laskin-Kuschner self-retaining intrabronchial pellet principle, employing a carcinogen-containing silastic polymer sustained release implant (SRI). The SRI is placed in the right lower lobe bronchus via tracheostomy; when modified, the SRI can be removed without loss of the animal. Special preparation of the SRI implant site after fixation but prior to paraffin embedding allows for full histopathological examination of the carcinogen-affected target tissue. Logistic regression analysis of histological findings provides valid quantitative inter-regimen comparisons of histomorphic classifications suitable for determining modulation of carcinogenesis by external influences. Using this model, we demonstrated that the sequential progression of carcinogenesis (SPC) in hamster bronchus is similar to that which occurs in humans and in dogs, including both the ploidy increases that are progressive during the SPC, and the histological patterns of the induced cancers. We have shown genetic variation in susceptibility to carcinogenesis among inbred hamster strains, and have assessed effects of Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) immunostimulation on the SPC. Time/dose response studies were performed, as were comparisons between four polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon carcinogens. Systemic administration of 5-azacytidine (AZC) soon after SRI placement was found to inhibit the SPC, to alter the ploidy changes during the SPC and in the eventual cancers, and to affect the degree of differentiation of the cancers. Studies using removable SRIs have assessed the duration of carcinogen exposure required to induce a neoplastic transformation that proceeds to cancer without further carcinogen exposure. Serial syngeneic transplantation of cancers arising in inbred animals has shown that the degree of tumor differentiation is affected by the extent of host immunocompetence, and has also led to development of models for study of the processes of metastasis.