Proliferation of both mouse and human breast cancer cells was inhibited by chlorpheniramine (CPA) in a dose-response manner. At the beginning of the exponential phase of growth (two days after seeding), 250 microM CPA was able to reduce cell proliferation by 75% (in Ehrlich cell cultures) and 30% (in MCF-7 cultures). The antiproliferative effect of CPA was also tested on a poorly-differentiated and hormone-insensitive human breast cancer cell line (MDA-MB231) and on a highly proliferative human colon cancer cell line (clone 3). CPA was cytotoxic for MDA-MB231 cells at concentrations higher than 50 microM, and it was also cytotoxic for the colon cancer cell clone 3 at 250 microM CPA. Nevertheless, colon cancer cells were slightly stimulated at CPA concentrations less than 100 microM. CPA reduced (by 50-70%) the ornithine decarboxylase induction occurring early after culture seeding of experimental mammary tumors (Ehrlich carcinoma cells) and human breast cancer cells (MCF-7). The presented data suggest that in addition to ODC inhibition, CPA presents other still unknown cytotoxic effects.