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Response to flavone acetic acid (NSC 347512) of primary and metastatic human colorectal carcinoma xenografts

  • Experimental Oncology
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Abstract

The antitumour activity of flavone acetic acid (FAA) was evaluated against two human colorectal carcinoma (HCC) lines, HCC-P2988 and HCC-M1410, transplanted into nude mice. On repeated i.v. injection of 200 mg kg-1 every 4 days FAA was moderately active against the s.c. growing HCC-P2988. HCC-M1410 transplanted s.c. was almost unresponsive in the same experimental conditions. In contrast, FAA (200 mg kg-1 i.v. every 4 days, repeated three times) significantly reduced liver tumour colonies produced by the HCC-M1410 cells injected intrasplenically into nude mice. These findings suggest that FAA has potential activity against human colorectal carcinoma, particularly against liver metastases.

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Giavazzi, R., Garofalo, A., Damia, G. et al. Response to flavone acetic acid (NSC 347512) of primary and metastatic human colorectal carcinoma xenografts. Br J Cancer 57, 277–280 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1988.59

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1988.59

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