Cohen B I, Raicht R F
Cancer Res. 1981 Sep;41(9 Pt 2):3759-60.
Primary bile acids were studied as possible colon tumor promoters or inhibitors in a rat model of chemically induced colon cancer. Cholic acid feeding increased the number of animals with tumors, the number of tumors per animal, and the number of tumors per tumor-bearing animal. Tumor enhancement was attributed to deoxycholic acid, the bacterial metabolite of cholic acid. When chenodeoxycholic acid was fed to the rats in our model, tumor incidence was increased, but the number of tumors per animal and the number of tumors per tumor-bearing animal were similar to controls. The different fecal bile acid pattern obtained with chenodeoxycholic acid may be responsible for the differences in tumor incidence. The methodology to characterize and identify all steroidal components of the feces requires extraction, thin-layer chromatography, gas-liquid chromatography, and gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Newer techniques include LH-20 chromatography (for sulfated steroids) and high-pressure liquid chromatography.