The aim of the present investigation was to study the interaction of dietary fat in combination with a vegetables-fruit mixture on 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH)-induced colorectal carcinogenesis in rats. For this purpose, 120 weanling male. Wistar rats received a semisynthetic diet without (Groups A and C) or with a vegetables-fruit mixture (Groups B and D; vegetables and fruit content 19.5% wt/wt) for 35 weeks. Diets of Groups A and B contained 20 energy percent (20e%) fat, whereas diets of Groups C and D contained 40e% fat. The vegetables and fruit used the amount of fat, and its fatty acid composition were chosen according to the mean consumption values of The Netherlands. After the animals were maintained for four weeks on the respective diets, they were given 10 weekly injections of DMH at 50 mg/kg body wt sc. After sacrifice, their colons were removed and examined macroscopically and microscopically for the presence of tumors. Rats fed high-fat diets developed significantly more tumors than rats fed low-fat diets. Furthermore, although not statistically significant, a lower number of colorectal tumors was observed in rats fed a low- or a high-fat diet containing the vegetables-fruit mixture than in rats fed diets without the vegetables-fruit mixture. No differences were observed in intestinal tumor incidences among all groups. The results suggest that the vegetables-fruit mixture used in this experiment, present in an amount comparable with the mean consumption in The Netherlands, has no significant inhibitory effect on the development of colorectal tumors induced by DMH in rats maintained on diets low or high in fat.