Determination of Rb, Br, Se, Zn, Cu, Fe, and Br/Rb ratio in tissues of mice inoculated with colon and melanoma cancer cells is described. A group of 19 Balb/c mice inoculated with C26 colon carcinoma, 4 C57B1/6 mice inoculated with B16 melanoma, and 13 control mice of both kinds were under investigation. The study was conducted on samples of blood, liver, kidneys, colon, and skin, and the trace element levels in normal and inoculated mice were compared. The inoculation was by subcutaneous injection either at the back or intrafootpad. The blood samples were taken 1, 2, and 3 wk after inoculation, and after 4 wk all the animals were sacrificed. Two nondestructive, complementary analytical methods were used: a modified X-ray fluorescence (XRF) for solid tissue and particle-induced X-ray emission (PIXE) for blood samples. The detection limit (DL) in the PIXE method was 0.35 microg/g dry wt in 600 s counting time and in XRF, 1 microg/g dry sample for Rb, Br, Se and Zn and 2 microg/g for Cu and Fe in 200 s counting time. In all the cases studied, cancerous tissue developed at the site of the injection, and a significant difference in the trace element levels was observed between tissue samples obtained from normal and inoculated mice. The most pronounced effect was an increase in Rb level in the tumor by a factor ranging between 4 and 10 relative to normal tissue, with a corresponding decrease in the Br/Rb ratio (p < 0.05). Smaller changes were found in the Br, Se, Zn, and K levels. The changes in trace element levels in the inner organs were much smaller and seem to be influenced by the site of injection.