A need exists for an appropriate animal model for the involvement of both hepatitis B virus infection and ingestion of aflatoxins in the etiology of liver cancer. Duck hepatitis B virus-infected ducks, on the basis of hepatoma development in the wild in China, appear to offer this possibility. The duck has been reexamined as a model system, and key metabolic processes have been assayed in comparison with the rat model for hepatocarcinogenesis. Aflatoxin B1 was found to be more actively metabolized by hepatic microsomes isolated from Pekin ducks in vitro to the aflatoxin B1-8,9-epoxide than corresponding fractions from the rat, and in vivo, higher levels of aflatoxin B1-guanine adduct were formed in hepatic DNA than in the livers of the aflatoxin B1-sensitive F344 rat. Repair of this DNA lesion in the duck and the subsequent formation of the ring-opened aflatoxin B1-FAPy adduct paralleled that in the rat. No effect of duck hepatitis B virus infection was found on any of these biochemical processes. The formation of hepatic lesions was also studied, and lesions were compared with those seen in the aflatoxin B1-treated rat. Histological analysis of necropsy specimens from ducks, 20 mo after the ducks received doses of aflatoxin B1 (25 and 50 micrograms/kg body wt), showed almost complete regression of the early acute lesions, with no evidence of neoplasia. Male F344 rats treated with aflatoxin B1 150 micrograms/kg 5 days/wk for 4 wk had extensive bile duct hyperplasia at the end of the treatment period and 100% incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma after 52 wk. The possible basis for the relative sensitivity of ducks and rats to the carcinogenic action of aflatoxin B1 is discussed.

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