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Wikipedia

Segesterone acetate

Segesterone acetate (SGA), sold under the brand names Nestorone, Elcometrine, and Annovera, is a progestin medication which is used in birth control and in the treatment of endometriosis in the United States, Brazil, and other South American countries.[1][4][7] It is available both alone and in combination with an estrogen.[1][4][7] It is not effective by mouth and must be given by other routes, most typically as a vaginal ring or implant that is placed into fat.[1][4][8]

Segesterone acetate
Clinical data
Trade namesNestorone, Elcometrine, Annovera
Other namesSGA; SA; Nestorone; Nestoron; Elcometrine; ST-1435; AC-6844; CS-0411; 16-Methylene-17α-acetoxy-19-norprogesterone; 16-Methylene-17α-acetoxy-19-norpregn-4-ene-3,20-dione
Routes of
administration
Subcutaneous implant, vaginal ring, transdermal patch[1]
Drug classProgestogen; Progestin; Progestogen ester
ATC code
  • None
Legal status
Legal status
  • In general: ℞ (Prescription only)
Pharmacokinetic data
BioavailabilityOral: 10%[1][2]
Protein binding95% (to albumin and not to SHBGTooltip sex hormone-binding globulin[1][3][4]
MetabolismHydroxylation (CYP3A4), reduction (5α-reductase)
Elimination half-lifeVaginal ring: 4.5 hours[4]
Parenteral: 24–72 hours[5][6]
Oral: 1–2 hours[1]
Identifiers
  • [(8R,9S,10R,13S,14S,17R)-17-acetyl-13-methyl-16-methylidene-3-oxo-2,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,14,15-decahydro-1H-cyclopenta[a]phenanthren-17-yl] acetate
CAS Number
  • 7759-35-5
PubChem CID
  • 108059
ChemSpider
  • 97161
UNII
  • 9AMX4Q13CC
KEGG
  • D10986
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:135563
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL3707377
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
  • DTXSID70998804
Chemical and physical data
FormulaC23H30O4
Molar mass370.489 g·mol−1
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
  • O=C4\C=C2/[C@@H]([C@H]1CC[C@@]3([C@](OC(=O)C)(C(=C)\C[C@H]3[C@@H]1CC2)C(=O)C)C)CC4
  • InChI=1S/C23H30O4/c1-13-11-21-20-7-5-16-12-17(26)6-8-18(16)19(20)9-10-22(21,4)23(13,14(2)24)27-15(3)25/h12,18-21H,1,5-11H2,2-4H3/t18-,19+,20+,21-,22-,23-/m0/s1
  • Key:CKFBRGLGTWAVLG-GOMYTPFNSA-N

Side effects of SGA are similar to those of other progestins. SGA is a progestin, or a synthetic progestogen, and hence is an agonist of the progesterone receptor, the biological target of progestogens like progesterone.[1][3][9][10] It has some affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor and has no other important hormonal activity.[1][3][9][10]

SGA was developed by the Population Council and was introduced for medical use by 2000.[7][11] It is under development in the United States and Europe as a gel in combination with estradiol or testosterone for use as a method of birth control in women and in men, respectively.[12][13][14][15] On August 10, 2018, a first-of-its-kind one-year contraceptive vaginal ring containing segesterone acetate in combination with ethinyl estradiol was approved in the United States.[4][16] It is marketed under the brand name Annovera and is reusable for up to one year as a method of birth control in women. Annovera does not require refrigeration which is very useful for low resource areas.[4][17]

Medical uses edit

SGA is used as a hormonal contraceptive and in the treatment of endometriosis.[1][4][7]

Available forms edit

Side effects edit

Side effects of SGA are similar to those of other progestins.[citation needed]

Pharmacology edit

Pharmacodynamics edit

SGA acts primarily as a high-affinity agonist of the progesterone receptor (272% of the affinity of progesterone and 136% of that of promegestone).[3] It does not bind significantly to the androgen receptor, estrogen receptor, or mineralocorticoid receptor.[3][9] As such, SGA does not have estrogenic, androgenic, antiandrogenic, or antimineralocorticoid activity.[5] However, SGA does have significant affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor (38% of that of dexamethasone), but in spite of its relatively high affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor, it either does not have any glucocorticoid effects or shows glucocorticoid effects only at exceptionally high doses in animals.[1][3][10] SGA has no antiglucocorticoid activity in animals either.[10] The ovulation-inhibiting dosage of parenteral SGA has been reported to be 150 μg per day, while the endometrial transformation dosage has been reported to be 600 μg per cycle.[5] SGA has antigonadotropic effects and functional antiestrogenic effects via its progestogenic activity similarly to other progestogens.[3][5] In healthy young men, SGA alone at a dose of 2 to 3 mg/day as a transdermal gel (delivering 200–300 μg/day SGA) for 2 weeks suppressed testosterone levels from ~581 ng/dL to ~276 ng/dL (–52%).[18]

Pharmacokinetics edit

SGA is only weakly active orally, and is instead given as a subcutaneous implant.[8] The oral bioavailability of SGA has been reported to be only 10%.[1][2] However, it has also been reported that the medication is more than 100-fold as potent when delivered via subcutaneous implant relative to oral administration in rats.[1][3] It has been estimated that SGA administered at a dose of 2 to 3 mg/day in the form of a transdermal gel delivers approximately 200 to 300 μg/day SGA based on a transdermal bioavailability of about 10 to 12%.[18] SGA is bound to albumin.[1][3] It does not bind to sex hormone-binding globulin.[1][3] Segesterone, the deacetylated form of SGA, is a metabolite of the medication.[19] The biological half-life of parenteral SGA has been reported to be 24 to 72 hours.[5][6] One study specifically reported a biological half-life of 26.8 hours.[6] It has been reported that the biological half-life of SGA with oral administration is only 1 to 2 hours.[1] In contrast to all of the preceding however, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) label for Annovera, a one-year vaginal ring containing ethinylestradiol and SGA, lists a circulating half-life of SGA of 4.5 hours.[4]

Chemistry edit

SGA, also known as 16-methylene-17α-acetoxy-19-norprogesterone or as 16-methylene-17α-acetoxy-19-norpregn-4-ene-3,20-dione, is a synthetic norpregnane steroid and a derivative of progesterone. It is a combined derivative of 17α-hydroxyprogesterone and 19-norprogesterone, or a derivative of gestronol (17α-hydroxy-19-norprogesterone). The medication is the C17α acetate ester of segesterone, which, in contrast, was never marketed.[19] Other 19-norprogesterone derivatives include demegestone, gestonorone caproate (norhydroxyprogesterone caproate), nomegestrol acetate, promegestone, and trimegestone.[3] SGA is a derivative of 16-methylene-17α-hydroxyprogesterone acetate, and is the analogue of methenmadinone acetate without the C19 methyl group or the C6 double bond.[20] A derivative of SGA with even greater progestogenic potency in comparison to SGA is 18-methylsegesterone acetate.[21][22][23]

History edit

SGA was developed by the Population Council.[11] It has been marketed since at least 2000.[7]

Society and culture edit

Generic names edit

Segesterone acetate is the generic name of the drug and its USANTooltip United States Adopted Name.[24][25] It is also known by its brand names nestorone and elcometrine,[26] as well as by its former developmental code names ST-1435, AC-6844, and CS-0411.[citation needed]

Brand names edit

SGA is marketed alone under the brand names Nestorone and Elcometrine and in combination with ethinylestradiol under the brand name Annovera.[4][7]

Availability edit

SGA is available alone in several South American countries, including Brazil.[1] It is available in the United States as a contraceptive vaginal ring in combination with ethinylestradiol.[4]

Research edit

A combination of SGA and the estrogen estradiol is under development in a transdermal gel formulation for use as a contraceptive in women by the Population Council in conjunction with Antares Pharma in the United States and Europe.[12][14] As of December 2017, it is in phase III clinical trials for this indication.[12] The medication has the tentative brand name NestraGel.[12] A combination of SGA and the estrogen ethinylestradiol in a vaginal ring formulation for use as a one-year contraceptive was developed by the Population Council in multiple regions including Latin America, Europe, and Australia.[17] It completed phase III clinical trials and [17] was approved in the United States in August 2018.[4][16]

A combination of SGA and the androgen testosterone is under development as a transdermal gel formulation for use as a hormonal contraceptive in men by the Population Council.[13][15] As of December 2017, it is in phase II clinical studies for this purpose.[15][27] In a trial, 100 couples used segesterone/testosterone dermal gel as the sole contraception method, which resulted in no pregnancy. Side effects were described as mild, comprising acne, weight gain and nocturnal sweating.[28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Lemke TL, Williams DA, Roche VT, Zito SW (24 January 2012). "Chapter 41: Women's Health". Foye's Principles of Medicinal Chemistry. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 1403. ISBN 978-1-60913-345-0. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  2. ^ a b Sitruk-Ware R (15 May 2001). "Progestins and the cardiovascular system". In Genazzani AR (ed.). Hormone Replacement Therapy and Cardiovascular Disease: The Current Status of Research and Practice. CRC Press. pp. 95–. ISBN 978-1-84214-038-3.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Kuhl H (August 2005). "Pharmacology of estrogens and progestogens: influence of different routes of administration". Climacteric. 8 (Suppl 1): 3–63. doi:10.1080/13697130500148875. PMID 16112947. S2CID 24616324.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "ANNOVERATM (segesterone acetate and ethinyl estradiol vaginal system)" (PDF). Population Council. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e Rabe T, Goeckenjan M, Ahrendt HJ, Crosignani PG, Dinger JC, Mueck AO, et al. (October 2011). "Oral Contraceptive Pills: Combinations, Dosages and the Rationale behind 50 Years or Oral Hormonal Contraceptive Development" (PDF). Journal für Reproduktionsmedizin und Endokrinologie-Journal of Reproductive Medicine and Endocrinology. 8 (1): 58–129.
  6. ^ a b c Fraser IS, Weisberg E, Kumar N, Kumar S, Humberstone AJ, McCrossin L, et al. (December 2007). "An initial pharmacokinetic study with a Metered Dose Transdermal Systemfor delivery of the progestogen Nestorone as a possible future contraceptive". Contraception. 76 (6): 432–438. doi:10.1016/j.contraception.2007.08.006. PMID 18061700.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Croxatto HB (2000). "Progestin implants". Steroids. 65 (10–11): 681–685. doi:10.1016/S0039-128X(00)00124-0. PMID 11108876. S2CID 42296395.
  8. ^ a b Rajagopalan S, Mukherjee D, Mohler ER (31 August 2004). Manual of Vascular Diseases. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 803. ISBN 978-0-7817-4499-7. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  9. ^ a b c Hussain R, El-Etr M, Gaci O, Rakotomamonjy J, Macklin WB, Kumar N, et al. (October 2011). "Progesterone and Nestorone facilitate axon remyelination: a role for progesterone receptors". Endocrinology. 152 (10): 3820–3831. doi:10.1210/en.2011-1219. PMC 6285137. PMID 21828184.
  10. ^ a b c d Kumar N, Koide SS, Tsong Y, Sundaram K (2000). "Nestorone: a progestin with a unique pharmacological profile". Steroids. 65 (10–11): 629–636. doi:10.1016/S0039-128X(00)00119-7. PMID 11108869. S2CID 13722269.
  11. ^ a b Prasad, P. V., & Shrivastav, T. G. (2015). Nestorone®: A new hope for Gynecologists, Andrologists and Neurologists. of, 3, 2.
  12. ^ a b c d "Elcometrine/Estradiol - Population Council/Therapeutics MD - AdisInsight".
  13. ^ a b Ilani N, Roth MY, Amory JK, Swerdloff RS, Dart C, Page ST, et al. (October 2012). "A new combination of testosterone and nestorone transdermal gels for male hormonal contraception". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 97 (10): 3476–3486. doi:10.1210/jc.2012-1384. PMC 3462927. PMID 22791756.
  14. ^ a b "Nestorone®/Estradiol Transdermal Gel Contraception | Population Council".
  15. ^ a b c "Nestorone®/Testosterone Transdermal Gel for Male Contraception | Population Council". 14 September 2022.
  16. ^ a b "FDA approves new vaginal ring for one year of birth control". Food and Drug Administration. 24 March 2020.
  17. ^ a b c "The Nestorone®/Ethinyl Estradiol One-Year Vaginal Contraceptive System". Population Council.
  18. ^ a b Zitzmann M, Rohayem J, Raidt J, Kliesch S, Kumar N, Sitruk-Ware R, Nieschlag E (May 2017). "Impact of various progestins with or without transdermal testosterone on gonadotropin levels for non-invasive hormonal male contraception: a randomized clinical trial". Andrology. 5 (3): 516–526. doi:10.1111/andr.12328. PMID 28189123. S2CID 41502711.
  19. ^ a b Prasad PV, Bashir M, Sitruk-Ware R, Kumar N (March 2010). "Single-dose pharmacokinetics of Nestorone, a potential female-contraceptive". Steroids. 75 (3): 252–264. doi:10.1016/j.steroids.2009.12.011. PMID 20064539. S2CID 205253216.
  20. ^ Milne GW (1 November 2017). Ashgate Handbook of Endocrine Agents and Steroids. Taylor & Francis. pp. 158–. ISBN 978-1-351-74347-1.
  21. ^ Tuba Z, Bardin CW, Dancsi A, Francsics-Czinege E, Molnár C, Csörgei J, et al. (May 2000). "Synthesis and biological activity of a new progestogen, 16-methylene-17alpha-hydroxy-18-methyl-19-norpregn-4-ene-3, 20-dione acetate". Steroids. 65 (5): 266–274. doi:10.1016/S0039-128X(99)00109-9. PMID 10751638. S2CID 37188669.
  22. ^ Sitruk-Ware R, Small M, Kumar N, Tsong YY, Sundaram K, Jackanicz T (November 2003). "Nestorone: clinical applications for contraception and HRT". Steroids. 68 (10–13): 907–913. doi:10.1016/S0039-128X(03)00140-5. PMID 14667982. S2CID 34984413.
  23. ^ Kumar N, Fagart J, Liere P, Mitchell SJ, Knibb AR, Petit-Topin I, et al. (January 2017). "Nestorone® as a Novel Progestin for Nonoral Contraception: Structure-Activity Relationships and Brain Metabolism Studies". Endocrinology. 158 (1): 170–182. doi:10.1210/en.2016-1426. PMC 5412978. PMID 27824503.
  24. ^ "Segesterone acetate" (PDF). Population Council, Inc. American Medical Association.
  25. ^ . ChemIDplus. Archived from the original on 2016-08-11. Retrieved 2016-06-17.
  26. ^ Negwer M, Scharnow HG (2001). Organic-chemical drugs and their synonyms: (an international survey). Wiley-VCH. ISBN 978-3-527-30247-5. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  27. ^ Clinical trial number NCT03452111 for "Clinical Evaluation of Daily Application of Nestorone® (NES) and Testosterone (T) Combination Gel for Male Contraception" at ClinicalTrials.gov
  28. ^ Stöckel M (2022-06-13). "Verhütung für den Mann: Das Hormon-Gel lässt hoffen" [Contraception for men: The hormone gel inspires hope] (in German). Swiss Radio and Television SRF. Retrieved 2022-06-15.

segesterone, acetate, sold, under, brand, names, nestorone, elcometrine, annovera, progestin, medication, which, used, birth, control, treatment, endometriosis, united, states, brazil, other, south, american, countries, available, both, alone, combination, wit. Segesterone acetate SGA sold under the brand names Nestorone Elcometrine and Annovera is a progestin medication which is used in birth control and in the treatment of endometriosis in the United States Brazil and other South American countries 1 4 7 It is available both alone and in combination with an estrogen 1 4 7 It is not effective by mouth and must be given by other routes most typically as a vaginal ring or implant that is placed into fat 1 4 8 Segesterone acetateClinical dataTrade namesNestorone Elcometrine AnnoveraOther namesSGA SA Nestorone Nestoron Elcometrine ST 1435 AC 6844 CS 0411 16 Methylene 17a acetoxy 19 norprogesterone 16 Methylene 17a acetoxy 19 norpregn 4 ene 3 20 dioneRoutes ofadministrationSubcutaneous implant vaginal ring transdermal patch 1 Drug classProgestogen Progestin Progestogen esterATC codeNoneLegal statusLegal statusIn general Prescription only Pharmacokinetic dataBioavailabilityOral 10 1 2 Protein binding95 to albumin and not to SHBGTooltip sex hormone binding globulin 1 3 4 MetabolismHydroxylation CYP3A4 reduction 5a reductase Elimination half lifeVaginal ring 4 5 hours 4 Parenteral 24 72 hours 5 6 Oral 1 2 hours 1 IdentifiersIUPAC name 8R 9S 10R 13S 14S 17R 17 acetyl 13 methyl 16 methylidene 3 oxo 2 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 14 15 decahydro 1H cyclopenta a phenanthren 17 yl acetateCAS Number7759 35 5PubChem CID108059ChemSpider97161UNII9AMX4Q13CCKEGGD10986ChEBICHEBI 135563ChEMBLChEMBL3707377CompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID70998804Chemical and physical dataFormulaC 23H 30O 4Molar mass370 489 g mol 13D model JSmol Interactive imageSMILES O C4 C C2 C H C H 1CC C 3 C OC O C C C C C H 3 C H 1CC2 C O C C CC4InChI InChI 1S C23H30O4 c1 13 11 21 20 7 5 16 12 17 26 6 8 18 16 19 20 9 10 22 21 4 23 13 14 2 24 27 15 3 25 h12 18 21H 1 5 11H2 2 4H3 t18 19 20 21 22 23 m0 s1Key CKFBRGLGTWAVLG GOMYTPFNSA NSide effects of SGA are similar to those of other progestins SGA is a progestin or a synthetic progestogen and hence is an agonist of the progesterone receptor the biological target of progestogens like progesterone 1 3 9 10 It has some affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor and has no other important hormonal activity 1 3 9 10 SGA was developed by the Population Council and was introduced for medical use by 2000 7 11 It is under development in the United States and Europe as a gel in combination with estradiol or testosterone for use as a method of birth control in women and in men respectively 12 13 14 15 On August 10 2018 a first of its kind one year contraceptive vaginal ring containing segesterone acetate in combination with ethinyl estradiol was approved in the United States 4 16 It is marketed under the brand name Annovera and is reusable for up to one year as a method of birth control in women Annovera does not require refrigeration which is very useful for low resource areas 4 17 Contents 1 Medical uses 1 1 Available forms 2 Side effects 3 Pharmacology 3 1 Pharmacodynamics 3 2 Pharmacokinetics 4 Chemistry 5 History 6 Society and culture 6 1 Generic names 6 2 Brand names 6 3 Availability 7 Research 8 See also 9 ReferencesMedical uses editSGA is used as a hormonal contraceptive and in the treatment of endometriosis 1 4 7 Available forms edit See also Ethinylestradiol segesterone acetateSide effects editSee also Progestin Side effects Side effects of SGA are similar to those of other progestins citation needed Pharmacology editPharmacodynamics edit SGA acts primarily as a high affinity agonist of the progesterone receptor 272 of the affinity of progesterone and 136 of that of promegestone 3 It does not bind significantly to the androgen receptor estrogen receptor or mineralocorticoid receptor 3 9 As such SGA does not have estrogenic androgenic antiandrogenic or antimineralocorticoid activity 5 However SGA does have significant affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor 38 of that of dexamethasone but in spite of its relatively high affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor it either does not have any glucocorticoid effects or shows glucocorticoid effects only at exceptionally high doses in animals 1 3 10 SGA has no antiglucocorticoid activity in animals either 10 The ovulation inhibiting dosage of parenteral SGA has been reported to be 150 mg per day while the endometrial transformation dosage has been reported to be 600 mg per cycle 5 SGA has antigonadotropic effects and functional antiestrogenic effects via its progestogenic activity similarly to other progestogens 3 5 In healthy young men SGA alone at a dose of 2 to 3 mg day as a transdermal gel delivering 200 300 mg day SGA for 2 weeks suppressed testosterone levels from 581 ng dL to 276 ng dL 52 18 Pharmacokinetics edit SGA is only weakly active orally and is instead given as a subcutaneous implant 8 The oral bioavailability of SGA has been reported to be only 10 1 2 However it has also been reported that the medication is more than 100 fold as potent when delivered via subcutaneous implant relative to oral administration in rats 1 3 It has been estimated that SGA administered at a dose of 2 to 3 mg day in the form of a transdermal gel delivers approximately 200 to 300 mg day SGA based on a transdermal bioavailability of about 10 to 12 18 SGA is bound to albumin 1 3 It does not bind to sex hormone binding globulin 1 3 Segesterone the deacetylated form of SGA is a metabolite of the medication 19 The biological half life of parenteral SGA has been reported to be 24 to 72 hours 5 6 One study specifically reported a biological half life of 26 8 hours 6 It has been reported that the biological half life of SGA with oral administration is only 1 to 2 hours 1 In contrast to all of the preceding however the Food and Drug Administration FDA label for Annovera a one year vaginal ring containing ethinylestradiol and SGA lists a circulating half life of SGA of 4 5 hours 4 Chemistry editSee also List of progestogens Progestogen ester and List of progestogen esters SGA also known as 16 methylene 17a acetoxy 19 norprogesterone or as 16 methylene 17a acetoxy 19 norpregn 4 ene 3 20 dione is a synthetic norpregnane steroid and a derivative of progesterone It is a combined derivative of 17a hydroxyprogesterone and 19 norprogesterone or a derivative of gestronol 17a hydroxy 19 norprogesterone The medication is the C17a acetate ester of segesterone which in contrast was never marketed 19 Other 19 norprogesterone derivatives include demegestone gestonorone caproate norhydroxyprogesterone caproate nomegestrol acetate promegestone and trimegestone 3 SGA is a derivative of 16 methylene 17a hydroxyprogesterone acetate and is the analogue of methenmadinone acetate without the C19 methyl group or the C6 double bond 20 A derivative of SGA with even greater progestogenic potency in comparison to SGA is 18 methylsegesterone acetate 21 22 23 History editSGA was developed by the Population Council 11 It has been marketed since at least 2000 7 Society and culture editGeneric names edit Segesterone acetate is the generic name of the drug and its USANTooltip United States Adopted Name 24 25 It is also known by its brand names nestorone and elcometrine 26 as well as by its former developmental code names ST 1435 AC 6844 and CS 0411 citation needed Brand names edit SGA is marketed alone under the brand names Nestorone and Elcometrine and in combination with ethinylestradiol under the brand name Annovera 4 7 Availability edit SGA is available alone in several South American countries including Brazil 1 It is available in the United States as a contraceptive vaginal ring in combination with ethinylestradiol 4 Research editA combination of SGA and the estrogen estradiol is under development in a transdermal gel formulation for use as a contraceptive in women by the Population Council in conjunction with Antares Pharma in the United States and Europe 12 14 As of December 2017 it is in phase III clinical trials for this indication 12 The medication has the tentative brand name NestraGel 12 A combination of SGA and the estrogen ethinylestradiol in a vaginal ring formulation for use as a one year contraceptive was developed by the Population Council in multiple regions including Latin America Europe and Australia 17 It completed phase III clinical trials and 17 was approved in the United States in August 2018 4 16 A combination of SGA and the androgen testosterone is under development as a transdermal gel formulation for use as a hormonal contraceptive in men by the Population Council 13 15 As of December 2017 it is in phase II clinical studies for this purpose 15 27 In a trial 100 couples used segesterone testosterone dermal gel as the sole contraception method which resulted in no pregnancy Side effects were described as mild comprising acne weight gain and nocturnal sweating 28 See also editEthinylestradiol segesterone acetateReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Lemke TL Williams DA Roche VT Zito SW 24 January 2012 Chapter 41 Women s Health Foye s Principles of Medicinal Chemistry Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins p 1403 ISBN 978 1 60913 345 0 Retrieved 13 September 2012 a b Sitruk Ware R 15 May 2001 Progestins and the cardiovascular system In Genazzani AR ed Hormone Replacement Therapy and Cardiovascular Disease The Current Status of Research and Practice CRC Press pp 95 ISBN 978 1 84214 038 3 a b c d e f g h i j k Kuhl H August 2005 Pharmacology of estrogens and progestogens influence of different routes of administration Climacteric 8 Suppl 1 3 63 doi 10 1080 13697130500148875 PMID 16112947 S2CID 24616324 a b c d e f g h i j k l ANNOVERATM segesterone acetate and ethinyl estradiol vaginal system PDF Population Council U S Food and Drug Administration 2018 a b c d e Rabe T Goeckenjan M Ahrendt HJ Crosignani PG Dinger JC Mueck AO et al October 2011 Oral Contraceptive Pills Combinations Dosages and the Rationale behind 50 Years or Oral Hormonal Contraceptive Development PDF Journal fur Reproduktionsmedizin und Endokrinologie Journal of Reproductive Medicine and Endocrinology 8 1 58 129 a b c Fraser IS Weisberg E Kumar N Kumar S Humberstone AJ McCrossin L et al December 2007 An initial pharmacokinetic study with a Metered Dose Transdermal Systemfor delivery of the progestogen Nestorone as a possible future contraceptive Contraception 76 6 432 438 doi 10 1016 j contraception 2007 08 006 PMID 18061700 a b c d e f Croxatto HB 2000 Progestin implants Steroids 65 10 11 681 685 doi 10 1016 S0039 128X 00 00124 0 PMID 11108876 S2CID 42296395 a b Rajagopalan S Mukherjee D Mohler ER 31 August 2004 Manual of Vascular Diseases Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins p 803 ISBN 978 0 7817 4499 7 Retrieved 13 September 2012 a b c Hussain R El Etr M Gaci O Rakotomamonjy J Macklin WB Kumar N et al October 2011 Progesterone and Nestorone facilitate axon remyelination a role for progesterone receptors Endocrinology 152 10 3820 3831 doi 10 1210 en 2011 1219 PMC 6285137 PMID 21828184 a b c d Kumar N Koide SS Tsong Y Sundaram K 2000 Nestorone a progestin with a unique pharmacological profile Steroids 65 10 11 629 636 doi 10 1016 S0039 128X 00 00119 7 PMID 11108869 S2CID 13722269 a b Prasad P V amp Shrivastav T G 2015 Nestorone A new hope for Gynecologists Andrologists and Neurologists of 3 2 a b c d Elcometrine Estradiol Population Council Therapeutics MD AdisInsight a b Ilani N Roth MY Amory JK Swerdloff RS Dart C Page ST et al October 2012 A new combination of testosterone and nestorone transdermal gels for male hormonal contraception The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism 97 10 3476 3486 doi 10 1210 jc 2012 1384 PMC 3462927 PMID 22791756 a b Nestorone Estradiol Transdermal Gel Contraception Population Council a b c Nestorone Testosterone Transdermal Gel for Male Contraception Population Council 14 September 2022 a b FDA approves new vaginal ring for one year of birth control Food and Drug Administration 24 March 2020 a b c The Nestorone Ethinyl Estradiol One Year Vaginal Contraceptive System Population Council a b Zitzmann M Rohayem J Raidt J Kliesch S Kumar N Sitruk Ware R Nieschlag E May 2017 Impact of various progestins with or without transdermal testosterone on gonadotropin levels for non invasive hormonal male contraception a randomized clinical trial Andrology 5 3 516 526 doi 10 1111 andr 12328 PMID 28189123 S2CID 41502711 a b Prasad PV Bashir M Sitruk Ware R Kumar N March 2010 Single dose pharmacokinetics of Nestorone a potential female contraceptive Steroids 75 3 252 264 doi 10 1016 j steroids 2009 12 011 PMID 20064539 S2CID 205253216 Milne GW 1 November 2017 Ashgate Handbook of Endocrine Agents and Steroids Taylor amp Francis pp 158 ISBN 978 1 351 74347 1 Tuba Z Bardin CW Dancsi A Francsics Czinege E Molnar C Csorgei J et al May 2000 Synthesis and biological activity of a new progestogen 16 methylene 17alpha hydroxy 18 methyl 19 norpregn 4 ene 3 20 dione acetate Steroids 65 5 266 274 doi 10 1016 S0039 128X 99 00109 9 PMID 10751638 S2CID 37188669 Sitruk Ware R Small M Kumar N Tsong YY Sundaram K Jackanicz T November 2003 Nestorone clinical applications for contraception and HRT Steroids 68 10 13 907 913 doi 10 1016 S0039 128X 03 00140 5 PMID 14667982 S2CID 34984413 Kumar N Fagart J Liere P Mitchell SJ Knibb AR Petit Topin I et al January 2017 Nestorone as a Novel Progestin for Nonoral Contraception Structure Activity Relationships and Brain Metabolism Studies Endocrinology 158 1 170 182 doi 10 1210 en 2016 1426 PMC 5412978 PMID 27824503 Segesterone acetate PDF Population Council Inc American Medical Association 7759 35 5 CKFBRGLGTWAVLG GOMYTPFNSA N Segesterone acetate USAN Similar structures search synonyms formulas resource links and other chemical information ChemIDplus Archived from the original on 2016 08 11 Retrieved 2016 06 17 Negwer M Scharnow HG 2001 Organic chemical drugs and their synonyms an international survey Wiley VCH ISBN 978 3 527 30247 5 Retrieved 13 September 2012 Clinical trial number NCT03452111 for Clinical Evaluation of Daily Application of Nestorone NES and Testosterone T Combination Gel for Male Contraception at ClinicalTrials gov Stockel M 2022 06 13 Verhutung fur den Mann Das Hormon Gel lasst hoffen Contraception for men The hormone gel inspires hope in German Swiss Radio and Television SRF Retrieved 2022 06 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Segesterone acetate amp oldid 1188987982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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