Abstract
Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma is a rapidly fatal neoplasm that fails to adequately respond to any known chemotherapeutic regimen. We tested taxol (paclitaxel) against six human anaplastic thyroid carcinoma cell lines (DRO-90, ARO-81, KAT-4, KAT-18, SW-1736, and BHT-101). Each cell line monolayer culture, in log phase growth, was treated with taxol concentrations ranging from 0.001-5.0 mumol/L. Cell numbers, after 24-, 48-, and 72-h growth periods in separate experiments, were expressed as percentages of control cell numbers without taxol. All cell lines showed maximal inhibition with 0.05 mumol/L taxol at 3-28% of control cell numbers. Greater inhibition was seen with longer growth periods. Three cell lines (DRO-90, ARO-81, and KAT-4) were grown as sc xenograft tumors in nude mice for 18-26 days. Treatment groups received sc taxol injections in sites distant from the tumors, whereas control mice received vehicle. All taxol-treated xenografts were inhibited to near-starting volume or disappeared, whereas control xenograft volumes increased 9- to 59-fold. These results suggest that taxol may have beneficial clinical effects in anaplastic thyroid carcinoma patients.

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