Ethisterone, also known as ethinyltestosterone, pregneninolone, and anhydrohydroxyprogesterone and formerly sold under the brand names Proluton C and Pranone among others, is a progestin medication which was used in the treatment of gynecological disorders but is now no longer available.[3][4][5] It was used alone and was not formulated in combination with an estrogen.[1][6] The medication is taken by mouth.[4]
Ethisterone was discovered in 1938 and was introduced for medical use in Germany in 1939 and in the United States in 1945.[14][15][16] It was the second progestogen to be marketed, following injectedprogesterone in 1934, and was both the first orally active progestogen and the first progestin to be introduced.[17][18][15] Ethisterone was followed by the improved and much more widely used and known progestin norethisterone in 1957.[19][20]
Ethisterone was available in the form of 5, 10, and 25 mg oral and sublingualtablets, as well as 50 , 100 , and 250 mg oral capsules.[1][6][22] The usual dosage was 25 mg, up to four times per day.[6]
Based on in vitro research, ethisterone and norethisterone are about equipotent in their EC50Tooltip half-maximal effective concentration values for activation of the androgen receptor (AR), whereas, conversely, norethisterone shows markedly increased potency relative to ethisterone in terms of its EC50 for the progesterone receptor.[9] As such, there is a considerable separation in the ratios of androgenic and progestogenic activity for ethisterone and norethisterone.[9] Moreover, at the larger dosages in which it is used to achieve equivalent progestogenic effect, ethisterone has more androgenic effect relative to norethisterone and other 19-nortestosterone progestins.[10][11] However, the androgenic activity of ethisterone has in any case been described as weak.[24] Due to its androgenic activity, ethisterone has been associated with the masculinization of female fetuses in women who have taken it during pregnancy.[8] The 5α-reducedmetabolite of ethisterone, 5α-dihydroethisterone, has been found to show reduced androgenic activity relative to ethisterone.[2] Interestingly, ethisterone showed antiandrogenic activity when co-administered with dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in animals, whereas 5α-dihydroethisterone did not.[2]
Ethisterone is active both orally and sublingually in humans.[34] Good oral bioavailability of ethisterone has been observed in rats.[34] The medication was the first orally active progestin to be discovered and introduced for clinical use.[34]
Ethisterone was synthesized in 1938 by Hans Herloff Inhoffen, Willy Logemann, Walter Hohlweg, and Arthur Serini at Schering AG in Berlin.[14] It was derived from testosterone via ethynylation at the C17α position, and it was hoped, that, analogously to estradiol and ethinylestradiol, ethisterone would be an orally active form of testosterone.[41] However, the androgenic activity of ethisterone was attenuated and it showed considerable progestogenic activity.[41] As such, it was developed as a progestogen instead and was introduced for medical use in Germany in 1939 as Proluton C and by Schering in the United States in 1945 as Pranone.[15][16] Ethisterone remained in use as late as 2000.[37]
Society and culture
Generic names
Ethisterone is the generic name of the drug and its INNTooltip International Nonproprietary Name, USANTooltip United States Adopted Name, and BANTooltip British Approved Name, while ethistérone is its DCFTooltip Dénomination Commune Française.[36][37][4] It has also been referred to as ethinyltestosterone, pregneninolone, and anhydrohydroxyprogesterone.[36][37][4]
Brand names
Ethisterone has been marketed under a variety of brand names including Amenoren, Cycloestrol-AH Progestérone, Duosterone, Estormon, Etherone, Ethisteron, Luteosterone, Lutocyclin, Lutocylol, Lutogynestryl, Menstrogen, Nugestoral, Oophormin Luteum, Ora-Lutin, Orasecron, Pranone, Pre Ciclo, Prodroxan, Produxan, Progestab, Progesteron lingvalete, Progestoral, Proluton C, Syngestrotabs, and Trosinone among others.[36][37][22][42]
^ abcdLemus AE, Enríquez J, García GA, Grillasca I, Pérez-Palacios G (January 1997). "5alpha-reduction of norethisterone enhances its binding affinity for androgen receptors but diminishes its androgenic potency". The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. 60 (1–2): 121–129. doi:10.1016/s0960-0760(96)00172-0. PMID9182866. S2CID33771349.
^ abcWilkins L, Jones HW, Holman GH, Stempfel RS (June 1958). "Masculinization of the female fetus associated with administration of oral and intramuscular progestins during gestation: non-adrenal female pseudohermaphrodism". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 18 (6): 559–585. doi:10.1210/jcem-18-6-559. PMID13539170.
^ abcdefMcRobb L, Handelsman DJ, Kazlauskas R, Wilkinson S, McLeod MD, Heather AK (May 2008). "Structure-activity relationships of synthetic progestins in a yeast-based in vitro androgen bioassay". The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. 110 (1–2): 39–47. doi:10.1016/j.jsbmb.2007.10.008. PMID18395441. S2CID5612000.
^ abcdePaulsen CA, Leach RB, Lanman J, Goldston N, Maddock WO, Heller CG (October 1962). "Inherent estrogenicity of norethindrone and norethynodrel: comparison with other synthetic progestins and progesterone". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 22 (10): 1033–1039. doi:10.1210/jcem-22-10-1033. PMID13942007.
^ abcTroop RC, Possanza GJ (September 1962). "Gonadal influences on the pituitary-adrenal axis". Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics. 98 (3): 444–449. doi:10.1016/0003-9861(62)90210-2. PMID13922599.
^ abFritz MA, Speroff L (28 March 2012). Clinical Gynecologic Endocrinology and Infertility. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 963–964. ISBN978-1-4511-4847-3. The discovery of ethinyl substitution and oral potency led (at the end of the 1930s) to the preparation of ethisterone, an orally active derivative of testosterone. In 1951, it was demonstrated that removal of the 19-carbon from ethisterone to form norethindrone did not destroy the oral activity, and most importantly, it changed the major hormonal effect from that of an androgen to that of a progestational agent. Accordingly, the progestational derivatives of testosterone were designated as 19-nortestosterones (denoting the missing 19-carbon).
^ abcLauritzen C, Studd JW (22 June 2005). Current Management of the Menopause. CRC Press. p. 45. ISBN978-0-203-48612-2. Ethisterone, the first orally effective progestagen, was synthesized by Inhoffen and Hohlweg in 1938. Norethisterone, a progestogen still used worldwide, was synthesized by Djerassi in 1951. But this progestogen was not used immediately and in 1953 Colton discovered norethynodrel, used by Pincus in the first oral contraceptive. Numerous other progestogens were subsequently synthesized, e.g., lynestrenol and ethynodiol diacetate, which were, in fact, prhormones converted in vivo to norethisterone. All these progestogens were also able to induce androgenic effects when high doses were used. More potent progestogens were synthesized in the 1960s, e.g. norgestrel, norgestrienone. These progestogens were also more androgenic.
^ abRoth K (2014). Chemische Leckerbissen. John Wiley & Sons. p. 69. ISBN978-3-527-33739-2. Im Prinzip hatten Hohlweg und Inhoffen die Lösung schon 1938 in der Hand, denn ihr Ethinyltestosteron (11) war eine oral wirksame gestagene Verbindung und Schering hatte daraus bereits 1939 ein Medikament (Proluton C®) entwickelt.
^Schedl HP, Delea C, Bartter FC (August 1959). "Structure-activity relationships of anabolic steroids: role of the 19-methyl group". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 19 (8): 921–935. doi:10.1210/jcem-19-8-921. PMID14442516.
^ abcdeBarbieri RL, Ryan KJ (October 1981). "Danazol: endocrine pharmacology and therapeutic applications". American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 141 (4): 453–463. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(81)90611-6. PMID7025640.
^Kuhl H, Wiegratz I (August 2007). "Can 19-nortestosterone derivatives be aromatized in the liver of adult humans? Are there clinical implications?". Climacteric. 10 (4): 344–353. doi:10.1080/13697130701380434. PMID17653961. S2CID20759583.
^Paulsen CA (March 1965). "Progestin metabolism: Special reference to estrogenic pathways". Metabolism. 14 (3): SUPPL:313–SUPPL:319. doi:10.1016/0026-0495(65)90018-1. PMID14261416.
^Salmon UJ, Salmon AA (1940). "Effect of Pregneninolone (17-Ethinyl Testosterone) on Genital Tract of Immature Female Rats". Experimental Biology and Medicine. 43 (4): 709–711. doi:10.3181/00379727-43-11311P. ISSN1535-3702. S2CID83694494.
^Pugeat MM, Dunn JF, Nisula BC (July 1981). "Transport of steroid hormones: interaction of 70 drugs with testosterone-binding globulin and corticosteroid-binding globulin in human plasma". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 53 (1): 69–75. doi:10.1210/jcem-53-1-69. PMID7195405.
^Roche Review ... Hoffman-La Roche, and Roche-organon. 1940. Hohlweg, Naturwiss., 1938, 26:96, added the ethinyl radical to testosterone and obtained pregneninolone. This substance has been referred to in the literature as Δ4 pregnen-in-20-on-3-ol-17; Δ4 pregnene-in, 17-ol, 3-one; ethinyl testosterone; anhydro-oxy-progesterone; anhydro-hydroxy-progesterone; and pregneninolone.
Djerassi C (January 2006). "Chemical birth of the pill. 1992". American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 194 (1): 290–298. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2005.06.010. PMID16389046.
Inhoffen HH, Logemann W, Hohlweg W, Serini A (May 4, 1938). "Untersuchungen in der Sexualhormon-Reihe (Investigations in the sex hormone series)". Ber Dtsch Chem Ges. 71 (5): 1024–32. doi:10.1002/cber.19380710520.
Petrow V (December 1970). "The contraceptive progestagens". Chemical Reviews. 70 (6): 713–726. doi:10.1021/cr60268a004. PMID4098492.
Quinkert G (2004). "Hans Herloff Inhoffen in His Times (1906-1992)". European Journal of Organic Chemistry. 2004 (17): 3727–48. doi:10.1002/ejoc.200300813.
Sneader W (2005). "Hormone analogues". Drug discovery : a history. Hoboken NJ: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 188–225. ISBN0-471-89980-1.