Reference SummaryPauling L, Am J Clin Nutr 1991 Dec;54(6 Suppl):1252S-1255S

Title

Effect of ascorbic acid on incidence of spontaneous mammary tumors and UV-light-induced skin tumors in mice.

Authors

Pauling L

Journal

Am J Clin Nutr

Volume

54

Issue

6 Suppl

Year

1991

Pages

1252S-1255S

Abstract

Two large-scale studies of the effect of different amounts of L-ascorbic acid in the food on tumor-free survival have been conducted. One involved the incidence of spontaneous mammary tumors in RIII mice, with seven ascorbic acid and three control groups, 50 mice per group. With increasing ascorbic acid in the diet, there was a highly significant delay before appearance of the first tumor. Median age at first tumor was 82.5 wk in ad libitum controls, 124.9 wk in the highest-dose ascorbate group. The proportion of mice with tumors was also reduced. The other study involved dermal neoplasms in mice irradiated with ultraviolet light. A pronounced effect of vitamin C in decreasing the incidence and delaying the onset of malignant lesions was observed with high statistical significance. By 20 wk approximately five times as many mice had developed serious lesions in the zero-ascorbate as in the high-ascorbate group.

Links

J:634 – MGI References
1962578 – National Library of Medicine/PubMed

Models

Strain Model Name Treatment Agent(s) Organ Affected Frequency Model Details
RIII/Imr Mammary gland adenocarcinoma Mammary gland

56

RIII/Imr Mammary gland adenocarcinoma
  • calorie restricted
Mammary gland

44

RIII/Imr Mammary gland adenocarcinoma
  • vitamin C (ascorbic acid) (ascorbate)
Mammary gland

30 - 44

SKH Hrhr Skin tumor Skin

0

SKH Hrhr Skin tumor
  • ultraviolet radiation (UV)
Skin

22

SKH Hrhr Skin tumor
  • vitamin C (ascorbic acid) (ascorbate)
  • ultraviolet radiation (UV)
Skin

7.5 - 23

SKH Hrhr Skin tumor
  • vitamin C (ascorbic acid) (ascorbate)
Skin

0