Abstract
•The importance of understanding the effect of multiple environmental exposures on breast cancer is highlighted.•The protective effect of genistein (a phytoestrogen) on mammary gland cancer may be modified by the addition of vinclozolin (an anti-androgen).•Early exposure to the mixture increases offspring mammary tumor growth.•Many endocrine disrupting chemicals with different modes of action may participate to the progression of breast cancer.
Endocrine disruptors may play substantial roles in the high incidence of breast cancer. We previously described how early exposure to the mixture of phytoestrogen genistein (G) and the anti-androgen vinclozolin (V) affects peripubertal mammary development. This study evaluates the carcinogenic potential of exposure to V alone or associated with G from conception until weaning in Wistar rats. Dams were exposed to V, G or GV during pregnancy/lactation. At PND50 offspring were treated with DMBA[7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene]. V or GV maternal exposure decreased number of DMBA-induced mammary tumors in the offspring, without significant modifications in tumor incidence, multiplicity and latency. G exposure decreased number of tumors, incidence and multiplicity. Unexpectedly, GV exposure increased tumor volume (p=0.04 vs controls) and epithelial proliferation (p=0.001 vs controls; p=0.005 vs G,V only). All tumors were in situ carcinomas. Concluding, maternal gestation/lactation exposure to a vinclozolin and genistein mixture significantly increases offspring tumor growth without changes in carcinogenesis susceptibility.