Pharmacodynamics of estradiol

Last updated

The pharmacology of estradiol , an estrogen medication and naturally occurring steroid hormone, concerns its pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, and various routes of administration. [1] [2] [3]

Contents

Estradiol is a naturally occurring and bioidentical estrogen, or an agonist of the estrogen receptor, the biological target of estrogens like endogenous estradiol. [1] Due to its estrogenic activity, estradiol has antigonadotropic effects and can inhibit fertility and suppress sex hormone production in both women and men. [4] [5] Estradiol differs from non-bioidentical estrogens like conjugated estrogens and ethinylestradiol in various ways, with implications for tolerability and safety. [1]

Estradiol can be taken by mouth, held under the tongue, as a gel or patch that is applied to the skin, in through the vagina, by injection into muscle or fat, or through the use of an implant that is placed into fat, among other routes. [1]

Mechanism of action

Estradiol is an estrogen, or an agonist of the nuclear estrogen receptors (ERs), the estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) and the estrogen receptor beta (ERβ). [1] [2] [6] In one study, the EC50 Tooltip half-maximal effective concentration value of estradiol for the human ERα was 50 pM (0.05 nM) and for the human ERβ was 200 pM (0.2 nM). [2] [7] Estradiol is also an agonist of the membrane estrogen receptors (mERs), including the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) (3–6 nM), [8] Gq-coupled membrane estrogen receptor (Gq-mER), ER-X, and ERx. [9] [10] It is far more potent as an estrogen than are other natural and bioidentical estrogens like estrone and estriol. [1] Given by subcutaneous injection in mice, estradiol is about 10-fold more potent than estrone and about 100-fold more potent than estriol. [11] In addition, much of the estrogenic potency of estrone in vivo is actually due to conversion into estradiol. [1]

Estradiol has little to no affinity for other steroid hormone receptors, including the androgen, progesterone, glucocorticoid, and mineralocorticoid receptors. [12] [13] [14] It has weak affinity for the androgen receptor, with about 8% of relative binding affinity of testosterone according to one study, [15] and shows agonistic activity at this receptor. [16] However, estrogens circulate in the picomolar (10−12 M) range while androgens circulate in the nanomolar (10−9 M) to micromolar (10−6 M) range, [17] [18] and in accordance with this, estradiol is active as an estrogen in target tissues at approximately 1,000-fold lower concentrations than is testosterone. [19] In addition, while estradiol did show activation of the androgen receptor in vitro at very high concentrations, its efficacy as an androgen receptor agonist was of such low potency that it was not possible to calculate an EC50 Tooltip half-maximal effective concentration value for the activity. [16] As such, the weak activity of estradiol at the androgen receptor is unlikely to be of biological significance at normal physiological concentrations. [15] [16]

The affinities of estradiol for the ERs are high (around 0.1 nM), and there is a relatively low quantity of about 10,000 to 20,000 ERs in the cytoplasm per cell in estrogen target tissues. [20] Estradiol stays bound to the ERs for about 24 hours, which is longer than that of other estrogens such as estriol (6 hours). [1] A prolonged duration of binding to the ERs (e.g., 9 to 12 hours for endometrial effects), as with estradiol, is necessary for full estrogenic responses in various tissues. [1] The ERs downregulate with exposure to estradiol, and in accordance, the expression of the ERs is dependent on estradiol concentrations. [21] [22] Constant levels of estradiol may result in downregulation of the ERs and relatively diminished responses to estradiol, although this has not been assessed clinically. [21] Once bound to estradiol, the ERs are ubiquitinated and degraded by proteasomes, which is a major mechanism of ER downregulation. [22] The unbound ERα has an intracellular half-life of up to 5 days, but this shortens to 3–4 hours once bound to a ligand such as estradiol. [23] [22] Estrogen deprivation can easily increase sensitivity to estrogens like estradiol by 10,000-fold or more, demonstrating a profound capacity of the ERs for upregulation and downregulation. [24] This increase in sensitivity is mediated by a 100-fold increase in ERs, as well as other mechanisms such as changes in coactivator sensitivity and degree of phosphorylation of transactivation factors. [24] Progestogens like progesterone and androgens like testosterone downregulate the ERs in certain tissues such as the endometrium and breasts, among others. [25] [26] While progestogens may reduce the expression of ERs and progesterone receptors (PR) in the breasts of primates, the estrogen-induced proliferation of the mammary epithelium is not inhibited, but rather enhanced by progestogens. [1]

Estradiol is a steroid and a lipophilic compound. [1] [27] As a result, it readily enters cells via simple passive diffusion through the lipid bilayer of the cell membrane. [27] This is in contrast to hydrophilic estrogen conjugates such as estrone sulfate and estradiol glucuronide, which require active transport via specific membrane transport proteins to enter cells. [28] [29] [30] The ERs are nuclear receptors that are mostly present in the cell nucleus. [27] Upon binding of estradiol to an ER, the receptor dimerizes (combines) with another estradiol-bound ER. [1] [27] These ER dimers can be ERα–ERα or ERβ–ERβ homodimers or ERα–ERβ heterodimers. [1] Once in the dimerized state, the estradiol-bound ER–ER complex binds to short estrogen response elements (EREs) (of the minimal nucleotide sequence 5'-GGTCANNNTGACC-3', where N is any nucleotide) in the promoter regions of estrogen-responsive genes on chromosomes, in turn modulating their expression. [1] [27] [31] Some prominent examples ERE-containing and hence estrogen-modulated genes in humans include the genes encoding the proteins oxytocin, c-fos, c-myc, and transforming growth factor alpha (TGFα). [32]

Affinities of estrogen receptor ligands for the ERα and ERβ
Ligand Other names Relative binding affinities (RBA, %)a Absolute binding affinities (Ki, nM)aAction
ERα ERβ ERα ERβ
Estradiol E2; 17β-Estradiol1001000.115 (0.04–0.24)0.15 (0.10–2.08)Estrogen
Estrone E1; 17-Ketoestradiol16.39 (0.7–60)6.5 (1.36–52)0.445 (0.3–1.01)1.75 (0.35–9.24)Estrogen
Estriol E3; 16α-OH-17β-E212.65 (4.03–56)26 (14.0–44.6)0.45 (0.35–1.4)0.7 (0.63–0.7)Estrogen
Estetrol E4; 15α,16α-Di-OH-17β-E24.03.04.919Estrogen
Alfatradiol 17α-Estradiol20.5 (7–80.1)8.195 (2–42)0.2–0.520.43–1.2Metabolite
16-Epiestriol 16β-Hydroxy-17β-estradiol7.795 (4.94–63)50 ? ?Metabolite
17-Epiestriol 16α-Hydroxy-17α-estradiol55.45 (29–103)79–80 ? ?Metabolite
16,17-Epiestriol 16β-Hydroxy-17α-estradiol1.013 ? ?Metabolite
2-Hydroxyestradiol 2-OH-E222 (7–81)11–352.51.3Metabolite
2-Methoxyestradiol 2-MeO-E20.0027–2.01.0 ? ?Metabolite
4-Hydroxyestradiol 4-OH-E213 (8–70)7–561.01.9Metabolite
4-Methoxyestradiol 4-MeO-E22.01.0 ? ?Metabolite
2-Hydroxyestrone 2-OH-E12.0–4.00.2–0.4 ? ?Metabolite
2-Methoxyestrone 2-MeO-E1<0.001–<1<1 ? ?Metabolite
4-Hydroxyestrone 4-OH-E11.0–2.01.0 ? ?Metabolite
4-Methoxyestrone 4-MeO-E1<1<1 ? ?Metabolite
16α-Hydroxyestrone 16α-OH-E1; 17-Ketoestriol2.0–6.535 ? ?Metabolite
2-Hydroxyestriol 2-OH-E32.01.0 ? ?Metabolite
4-Methoxyestriol 4-MeO-E31.01.0 ? ?Metabolite
Estradiol sulfate E2S; Estradiol 3-sulfate<1<1 ? ?Metabolite
Estradiol disulfate Estradiol 3,17β-disulfate0.0004 ? ? ?Metabolite
Estradiol 3-glucuronide E2-3G0.0079 ? ? ?Metabolite
Estradiol 17β-glucuronide E2-17G0.0015 ? ? ?Metabolite
Estradiol 3-gluc. 17β-sulfate E2-3G-17S0.0001 ? ? ?Metabolite
Estrone sulfate E1S; Estrone 3-sulfate<1<1>10>10Metabolite
Estradiol benzoate EB; Estradiol 3-benzoate10 ? ? ?Estrogen
Estradiol 17β-benzoate E2-17B11.332.6 ? ?Estrogen
Estrone methyl ether Estrone 3-methyl ether0.145 ? ? ?Estrogen
ent-Estradiol 1-Estradiol1.31–12.349.44–80.07 ? ?Estrogen
Equilin 7-Dehydroestrone13 (4.0–28.9)13.0–490.790.36Estrogen
Equilenin 6,8-Didehydroestrone2.0–157.0–200.640.62Estrogen
17β-Dihydroequilin 7-Dehydro-17β-estradiol7.9–1137.9–1080.090.17Estrogen
17α-Dihydroequilin 7-Dehydro-17α-estradiol18.6 (18–41)14–320.240.57Estrogen
17β-Dihydroequilenin 6,8-Didehydro-17β-estradiol35–6890–1000.150.20Estrogen
17α-Dihydroequilenin 6,8-Didehydro-17α-estradiol20490.500.37Estrogen
Δ8-Estradiol 8,9-Dehydro-17β-estradiol68720.150.25Estrogen
Δ8-Estrone 8,9-Dehydroestrone19320.520.57Estrogen
Ethinylestradiol EE; 17α-Ethynyl-17β-E2120.9 (68.8–480)44.4 (2.0–144)0.02–0.050.29–0.81Estrogen
Mestranol EE 3-methyl ether ?2.5 ? ?Estrogen
Moxestrol RU-2858; 11β-Methoxy-EE35–435–200.52.6Estrogen
Methylestradiol 17α-Methyl-17β-estradiol7044 ? ?Estrogen
Diethylstilbestrol DES; Stilbestrol129.5 (89.1–468)219.63 (61.2–295)0.040.05Estrogen
Hexestrol Dihydrodiethylstilbestrol153.6 (31–302)60–2340.060.06Estrogen
Dienestrol Dehydrostilbestrol37 (20.4–223)56–4040.050.03Estrogen
Benzestrol (B2) 114 ? ? ?Estrogen
Chlorotrianisene TACE1.74 ?15.30 ?Estrogen
Triphenylethylene TPE0.074 ? ? ?Estrogen
Triphenylbromoethylene TPBE2.69 ? ? ?Estrogen
Tamoxifen ICI-46,4743 (0.1–47)3.33 (0.28–6)3.4–9.692.5SERM
Afimoxifene 4-Hydroxytamoxifen; 4-OHT100.1 (1.7–257)10 (0.98–339)2.3 (0.1–3.61)0.04–4.8SERM
Toremifene 4-Chlorotamoxifen; 4-CT ? ?7.14–20.315.4SERM
Clomifene MRL-4125 (19.2–37.2)120.91.2SERM
Cyclofenil F-6066; Sexovid151–152243 ? ?SERM
Nafoxidine U-11,000A30.9–44160.30.8SERM
Raloxifene 41.2 (7.8–69)5.34 (0.54–16)0.188–0.5220.2SERM
Arzoxifene LY-353,381 ? ?0.179 ?SERM
Lasofoxifene CP-336,15610.2–16619.00.229 ?SERM
Ormeloxifene Centchroman ? ?0.313 ?SERM
Levormeloxifene 6720-CDRI; NNC-460,0201.551.88 ? ?SERM
Ospemifene Deaminohydroxytoremifene0.82–2.630.59–1.22 ? ?SERM
Bazedoxifene  ? ?0.053 ?SERM
Etacstil GW-56384.3011.5 ? ?SERM
ICI-164,384 63.5 (3.70–97.7)1660.20.08Antiestrogen
Fulvestrant ICI-182,78043.5 (9.4–325)21.65 (2.05–40.5)0.421.3Antiestrogen
Propylpyrazoletriol PPT49 (10.0–89.1)0.120.4092.8ERα agonist
16α-LE2 16α-Lactone-17β-estradiol14.6–570.0890.27131ERα agonist
16α-Iodo-E2 16α-Iodo-17β-estradiol30.22.30 ? ?ERα agonist
Methylpiperidinopyrazole MPP110.05 ? ?ERα antagonist
Diarylpropionitrile DPN0.12–0.256.6–1832.41.7ERβ agonist
8β-VE2 8β-Vinyl-17β-estradiol0.3522.0–8312.90.50ERβ agonist
Prinaberel ERB-041; WAY-202,0410.2767–72 ? ?ERβ agonist
ERB-196 WAY-202,196 ?180 ? ?ERβ agonist
Erteberel SERBA-1; LY-500,307 ? ?2.680.19ERβ agonist
SERBA-2  ? ?14.51.54ERβ agonist
Coumestrol 9.225 (0.0117–94)64.125 (0.41–185)0.14–80.00.07–27.0Xenoestrogen
Genistein 0.445 (0.0012–16)33.42 (0.86–87)2.6–1260.3–12.8Xenoestrogen
Equol 0.2–0.2870.85 (0.10–2.85) ? ?Xenoestrogen
Daidzein 0.07 (0.0018–9.3)0.7865 (0.04–17.1)2.085.3Xenoestrogen
Biochanin A 0.04 (0.022–0.15)0.6225 (0.010–1.2)1748.9Xenoestrogen
Kaempferol 0.07 (0.029–0.10)2.2 (0.002–3.00) ? ?Xenoestrogen
Naringenin 0.0054 (<0.001–0.01)0.15 (0.11–0.33) ? ?Xenoestrogen
8-Prenylnaringenin 8-PN4.4 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
Quercetin <0.001–0.010.002–0.040 ? ?Xenoestrogen
Ipriflavone <0.01<0.01 ? ?Xenoestrogen
Miroestrol 0.39 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
Deoxymiroestrol 2.0 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
β-Sitosterol <0.001–0.0875<0.001–0.016 ? ?Xenoestrogen
Resveratrol <0.001–0.0032 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
α-Zearalenol 48 (13–52.5) ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
β-Zearalenol 0.6 (0.032–13) ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
Zeranol α-Zearalanol48–111 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
Taleranol β-Zearalanol16 (13–17.8)140.80.9Xenoestrogen
Zearalenone ZEN7.68 (2.04–28)9.45 (2.43–31.5) ? ?Xenoestrogen
Zearalanone ZAN0.51 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
Bisphenol A BPA0.0315 (0.008–1.0)0.135 (0.002–4.23)19535Xenoestrogen
Endosulfan EDS<0.001–<0.01<0.01 ? ?Xenoestrogen
Kepone Chlordecone0.0069–0.2 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
o,p'-DDT 0.0073–0.4 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
p,p'-DDT 0.03 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
Methoxychlor p,p'-Dimethoxy-DDT0.01 (<0.001–0.02)0.01–0.13 ? ?Xenoestrogen
HPTE Hydroxychlor; p,p'-OH-DDT1.2–1.7 ? ? ?Xenoestrogen
Testosterone T; 4-Androstenolone<0.0001–<0.01<0.002–0.040>5000>5000Androgen
Dihydrotestosterone DHT; 5α-Androstanolone0.01 (<0.001–0.05)0.0059–0.17221–>500073–1688Androgen
Nandrolone 19-Nortestosterone; 19-NT0.010.2376553Androgen
Dehydroepiandrosterone DHEA; Prasterone0.038 (<0.001–0.04)0.019–0.07245–1053163–515Androgen
5-Androstenediol A5; Androstenediol6173.60.9Androgen
4-Androstenediol 0.50.62319Androgen
4-Androstenedione A4; Androstenedione<0.01<0.01>10000>10000Androgen
3α-Androstanediol 3α-Adiol0.070.326048Androgen
3β-Androstanediol 3β-Adiol3762Androgen
Androstanedione 5α-Androstanedione<0.01<0.01>10000>10000Androgen
Etiocholanedione 5β-Androstanedione<0.01<0.01>10000>10000Androgen
Methyltestosterone 17α-Methyltestosterone<0.0001 ? ? ?Androgen
Ethinyl-3α-androstanediol 17α-Ethynyl-3α-adiol4.0<0.07 ? ?Estrogen
Ethinyl-3β-androstanediol 17α-Ethynyl-3β-adiol505.6 ? ?Estrogen
Progesterone P4; 4-Pregnenedione<0.001–0.6<0.001–0.010 ? ?Progestogen
Norethisterone NET; 17α-Ethynyl-19-NT0.085 (0.0015–<0.1)0.1 (0.01–0.3)1521084Progestogen
Norethynodrel 5(10)-Norethisterone0.5 (0.3–0.7)<0.1–0.221453Progestogen
Tibolone 7α-Methylnorethynodrel0.5 (0.45–2.0)0.2–0.076 ? ?Progestogen
Δ4-Tibolone 7α-Methylnorethisterone0.069–<0.10.027–<0.1 ? ?Progestogen
3α-Hydroxytibolone 2.5 (1.06–5.0)0.6–0.8 ? ?Progestogen
3β-Hydroxytibolone 1.6 (0.75–1.9)0.070–0.1 ? ?Progestogen
Footnotes:a = (1) Binding affinity values are of the format "median (range)" (# (#–#)), "range" (#–#), or "value" (#) depending on the values available. The full sets of values within the ranges can be found in the Wiki code. (2) Binding affinities were determined via displacement studies in a variety of in-vitro systems with labeled estradiol and human ERα and ERβ proteins (except the ERβ values from Kuiper et al. (1997), which are rat ERβ). Sources: See template page.
Relative affinities of estrogens for steroid hormone receptors and blood proteins
Estrogen Relative binding affinities (%)
ER Tooltip Estrogen receptor AR Tooltip Androgen receptor PR Tooltip Progesterone receptor GR Tooltip Glucocorticoid receptor MR Tooltip Mineralocorticoid receptor SHBG Tooltip Sex hormone-binding globulin CBG Tooltip Corticosteroid binding globulin
Estradiol 1007.92.60.60.138.7–12<0.1
Estradiol benzoate  ? ? ? ? ?<0.1–0.16<0.1
Estradiol valerate 2 ? ? ? ? ? ?
Estrone 11–35<1<1<1<12.7<0.1
Estrone sulfate 22 ? ? ? ? ?
Estriol 10–15<1<1<1<1<0.1<0.1
Equilin 40 ? ? ? ? ?0
Alfatradiol 15<1<1<1<1 ? ?
Epiestriol 20<1<1<1<1 ? ?
Ethinylestradiol 100–1121–315–251–3<10.18<0.1
Mestranol 1 ? ? ? ?<0.1<0.1
Methylestradiol 671–33–251–3<1 ? ?
Moxestrol 12<0.10.83.2<0.1<0.2<0.1
Diethylstilbestrol  ? ? ? ? ?<0.1<0.1
Notes: Reference ligands (100%) were progesterone for the PR Tooltip progesterone receptor, testosterone for the AR Tooltip androgen receptor, estradiol for the ER Tooltip estrogen receptor, dexamethasone for the GR Tooltip glucocorticoid receptor, aldosterone for the MR Tooltip mineralocorticoid receptor, dihydrotestosterone for SHBG Tooltip sex hormone-binding globulin, and cortisol for CBG Tooltip Corticosteroid-binding globulin. Sources: See template.
Affinities and estrogenic potencies of estrogen esters and ethers at the estrogen receptors
Estrogen Other names RBA Tooltip Relative binding affinity (%)a REP (%)b
ER ERα ERβ
Estradiol E2100100100
Estradiol 3-sulfate E2S; E2-3S ?0.020.04
Estradiol 3-glucuronide E2-3G ?0.020.09
Estradiol 17β-glucuronide E2-17G ?0.0020.0002
Estradiol benzoate EB; Estradiol 3-benzoate101.10.52
Estradiol 17β-acetate E2-17A31–4524 ?
Estradiol diacetate EDA; Estradiol 3,17β-diacetate ?0.79 ?
Estradiol propionate EP; Estradiol 17β-propionate19–262.6 ?
Estradiol valerate EV; Estradiol 17β-valerate2–110.04–21 ?
Estradiol cypionate EC; Estradiol 17β-cypionate ?c4.0 ?
Estradiol palmitate Estradiol 17β-palmitate0 ? ?
Estradiol stearate Estradiol 17β-stearate0 ? ?
Estrone E1; 17-Ketoestradiol115.3–3814
Estrone sulfate E1S; Estrone 3-sulfate20.0040.002
Estrone glucuronide E1G; Estrone 3-glucuronide ?<0.0010.0006
Ethinylestradiol EE; 17α-Ethynylestradiol10017–150129
Mestranol EE 3-methyl ether11.3–8.20.16
Quinestrol EE 3-cyclopentyl ether ?0.37 ?
Footnotes:a = Relative binding affinities (RBAs) were determined via in-vitro displacement of labeled estradiol from estrogen receptors (ERs) generally of rodent uterine cytosol. Estrogen esters are variably hydrolyzed into estrogens in these systems (shorter ester chain length -> greater rate of hydrolysis) and the ER RBAs of the esters decrease strongly when hydrolysis is prevented. b = Relative estrogenic potencies (REPs) were calculated from half-maximal effective concentrations (EC50) that were determined via in-vitro β‐galactosidase (β-gal) and green fluorescent protein (GFP) production assays in yeast expressing human ERα and human ERβ. Both mammalian cells and yeast have the capacity to hydrolyze estrogen esters. c = The affinities of estradiol cypionate for the ERs are similar to those of estradiol valerate and estradiol benzoate (figure). Sources: See template page.
Selected biological properties of endogenous estrogens in rats
Estrogen ER Tooltip Estrogen receptor RBA Tooltip relative binding affinity (%) Uterine weight (%) Uterotrophy LH Tooltip Luteinizing hormone levels (%) SHBG Tooltip Sex hormone-binding globulin RBA Tooltip relative binding affinity (%)
Control100100
Estradiol (E2) 100506 ± 20+++12–19100
Estrone (E1) 11 ± 8490 ± 22+++ ?20
Estriol (E3) 10 ± 4468 ± 30+++8–183
Estetrol (E4) 0.5 ± 0.2 ?Inactive ?1
17α-Estradiol 4.2 ± 0.8 ? ? ? ?
2-Hydroxyestradiol 24 ± 7285 ± 8+b31–6128
2-Methoxyestradiol 0.05 ± 0.04101Inactive ?130
4-Hydroxyestradiol 45 ± 12 ? ? ? ?
4-Methoxyestradiol 1.3 ± 0.2260++ ?9
4-Fluoroestradiol a180 ± 43 ?+++ ? ?
2-Hydroxyestrone 1.9 ± 0.8130 ± 9Inactive110–1428
2-Methoxyestrone 0.01 ± 0.00103 ± 7Inactive95–100120
4-Hydroxyestrone 11 ± 4351++21–5035
4-Methoxyestrone 0.13 ± 0.04338++65–9212
16α-Hydroxyestrone 2.8 ± 1.0552 ± 42+++7–24<0.5
2-Hydroxyestriol 0.9 ± 0.3302+b ? ?
2-Methoxyestriol 0.01 ± 0.00 ?Inactive ?4
Notes: Values are mean ± SD or range. ERRBA = Relative binding affinity to estrogen receptors of rat uterine cytosol. Uterine weight = Percentage change in uterine wet weight of ovariectomized rats after 72 hours with continuous administration of 1 μg/hour via subcutaneously implanted osmotic pumps. LH levels = Luteinizing hormone levels relative to baseline of ovariectomized rats after 24 to 72 hours of continuous administration via subcutaneous implant. Footnotes:a = Synthetic (i.e., not endogenous). b = Atypical uterotrophic effect which plateaus within 48 hours (estradiol's uterotrophy continues linearly up to 72 hours). Sources: See template.

Effects in the body and brain

The ERs are expressed widely throughout the body, including in the breasts, uterus, vagina, prostate gland, fat, skin, bone, liver, pituitary gland, hypothalamus, and elsewhere throughout the brain. [33] Through activation of the ERs (as well as the mERs), estradiol has many effects, including the following:

Estrogen has also been found to increase the secretion of oxytocin and to increase the expression of its receptor, the oxytocin receptor, in the brain. [18] In women, a single dose of estradiol has been found to be sufficient to increase circulating oxytocin concentrations. [45]

Potencies of oral estrogens [data sources 1]
CompoundDosage for specific uses (mg usually) [lower-alpha 1]
ETD [lower-alpha 2] EPD [lower-alpha 2] MSD [lower-alpha 2] MSD [lower-alpha 3] OID [lower-alpha 3] TSD [lower-alpha 3]
Estradiol (non-micronized) 30≥120–3001206--
Estradiol (micronized) 6–1260–8014–421–2>5>8
Estradiol valerate 6–1260–8014–421–2->8
Estradiol benzoate -60–140----
Estriol ≥20120–150 [lower-alpha 4] 28–1261–6>5-
Estriol succinate -140–150 [lower-alpha 4] 28–1262–6--
Estrone sulfate 1260422--
Conjugated estrogens 5–1260–808.4–250.625–1.25>3.757.5
Ethinylestradiol 200 μg1–2280 μg20–40 μg100 μg100 μg
Mestranol 300 μg1.5–3.0300–600 μg25–30 μg>80 μg-
Quinestrol 300 μg2–4500 μg25–50 μg--
Methylestradiol -2----
Diethylstilbestrol 2.520–30110.5–2.0>53
DES dipropionate -15–30----
Dienestrol 530–40420.5–4.0--
Dienestrol diacetate 3–530–60----
Hexestrol -70–110----
Chlorotrianisene ->100-->48-
Methallenestril -400----
Sources and footnotes:
  1. Dosages are given in milligrams unless otherwise noted.
  2. 1 2 3 Dosed every 2 to 3 weeks
  3. 1 2 3 Dosed daily
  4. 1 2 In divided doses, 3x/day; irregular and atypical proliferation.
Relative oral potencies of estrogens
Estrogen HF Tooltip Hot flashes VE Tooltip Vaginal epithelium UCa Tooltip Urinary calcium FSH Tooltip Follicle-stimulating hormone LH Tooltip Luteinizing hormone HDL Tooltip High-density lipoprotein-C Tooltip Cholesterol SHBG Tooltip Sex hormone-binding globulin CBG Tooltip Corticosteroid-binding globulin AGT Tooltip AngiotensinogenLiver
Estradiol 1.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.01.0
Estrone  ? ? ?0.30.3 ? ? ? ? ?
Estriol 0.30.30.10.30.30.2 ? ? ?0.67
Estrone sulfate  ?0.90.90.8–0.90.90.50.90.5–0.71.4–1.50.56–1.7
Conjugated estrogens 1.21.52.01.1–1.31.01.53.0–3.21.3–1.55.01.3–4.5
Equilin sulfate  ? ?1.0 ? ?6.07.56.07.5 ?
Ethinylestradiol 12015040060–150100400500–600500–6003502.9–5.0
Diethylstilbestrol  ? ? ?2.9–3.4 ? ?26–2825–37205.7–7.5
Sources and footnotes
Notes: Values are ratios, with estradiol as standard (i.e., 1.0). Abbreviations:HF = Clinical relief of hot flashes. VE = Increased proliferation of vaginal epithelium. UCa = Decrease in UCa Tooltip urinary calcium. FSH = Suppression of FSH Tooltip follicle-stimulating hormone levels. LH = Suppression of LH Tooltip luteinizing hormone levels. HDL-C, SHBG, CBG, and AGT = Increase in the serum levels of these liver proteins. Liver = Ratio of liver estrogenic effects to general/systemic estrogenic effects (hot flashes/gonadotropins). Sources: See template.
Potencies and durations of natural estrogens by intramuscular injection
EstrogenFormDose (mg)Duration by dose (mg)
EPDCICD
Estradiol Aq. soln. ?<1 d
Oil soln.40–601–2 ≈ 1–2 d
Aq. susp. ?3.50.5–2 ≈ 2–7 d; 3.5 ≈ >5 d
Microsph. ?1 ≈ 30 d
Estradiol benzoate Oil soln.25–351.66 ≈ 2–3 d; 5 ≈ 3–6 d
Aq. susp.2010 ≈ 16–21 d
Emulsion ?10 ≈ 14–21 d
Estradiol dipropionate Oil soln.25–305 ≈ 5–8 d
Estradiol valerate Oil soln.20–3055 ≈ 7–8 d; 10 ≈ 10–14 d;
40 ≈ 14–21 d; 100 ≈ 21–28 d
Estradiol benz. butyrate Oil soln. ?1010 ≈ 21 d
Estradiol cypionate Oil soln.20–305 ≈ 11–14 d
Aq. susp. ?55 ≈ 14–24 d
Estradiol enanthate Oil soln. ?5–1010 ≈ 20–30 d
Estradiol dienanthate Oil soln. ?7.5 ≈ >40 d
Estradiol undecylate Oil soln. ?10–20 ≈ 40–60 d;
25–50 ≈ 60–120 d
Polyestradiol phosphate Aq. soln.40–6040 ≈ 30 d; 80 ≈ 60 d;
160 ≈ 120 d
Estrone Oil soln. ?1–2 ≈ 2–3 d
Aq. susp. ?0.1–2 ≈ 2–7 d
Estriol Oil soln. ?1–2 ≈ 1–4 d
Polyestriol phosphate Aq. soln. ?50 ≈ 30 d; 80 ≈ 60 d
Notes and sources
Notes: All aqueous suspensions are of microcrystalline particle size. Estradiol production during the menstrual cycle is 30–640 µg/d (6.4–8.6 mg total per month or cycle). The vaginal epithelium maturation dosage of estradiol benzoate or estradiol valerate has been reported as 5 to 7 mg/week. An effective ovulation-inhibiting dose of estradiol undecylate is 20–30 mg/month. Sources: See template.

Effects on sex-hormone levels

Antigonadotropic effects

Estrogens are powerful antigonadotropins at sufficiently high concentrations. [40] [65] [66] [4] [5] By exerting negative feedback on the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis (HPG axis), they are able to suppress the secretion of the gonadotropins, LH and FSH, and thereby inhibit gonadal sex hormone production and circulating sex hormone levels as well as fertility (ovulation in women and spermatogenesis in men). [40] [65] [66] Clinical studies have found that in men treated with them, estrogens can maximally suppress testosterone levels by about 95% or well into the castrate/female range (<50 ng/dL). [4] [5] This is equivalent to the reduction in testosterone levels achieved by orchiectomy and gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogue (GnRH analogue) therapy, corresponding to a complete shutdown of gonadal testosterone production. [67] [68] In addition, it is greater than that achieved with high-dose progestogens like cyproterone acetate and gestonorone caproate, which can maximally suppress testosterone levels in men by about 75%. [69] [70] [71] [72] [73]

Inhibition of ovulation by estradiol monotherapy in women has been studied and demonstrated for oral estradiol, transdermal estradiol patches, subcutaneous estradiol implants, and intramuscular estradiol undecylate injections. [74] [75] [76] [77] [78] [79] A study of ovulation inhibition in women found that oral non-micronized estradiol was 55% effective at 1 mg/day, 61% effective at 2 mg/day, and 88% effective at 5 mg/day. [79] [80]

Suppression of testosterone levels by estradiol to within the castrate/female range (<50 ng/dL) in men requires relatively high levels of estradiol and has been associated with circulating levels of 200 to 300 pg/mL and above. [81] [5] However, although the castrate range in men has been defined as testosterone concentrations of less than 50 ng/dL, mean levels of testosterone with surgical castration are actually about 15 ng/dL. [82] To achieve such levels of testosterone with estradiol therapy, higher concentrations of estradiol of about 500 pg/mL have been necessary to produce the requisite maximal suppression of testosterone production. [4] Injected estradiol esters like polyestradiol phosphate, estradiol valerate, and estradiol undecylate, as well as high-dose estradiol transdermal patches, are used as a form of high-dose estrogen therapy to suppress testosterone levels into the castrate range in men with prostate cancer. [3] [83] [84] [85] [5] [71] High dosages of estradiol in various forms and routes are also used to suppress testosterone levels in transgender women. [86] [87] [88] The suppression of testosterone levels by estradiol in men is rapid. [89] A single intramuscular injection of 2 mg aqueous estradiol suppressed testosterone levels in young men from 760 ng/dL at baseline to 295 ng/dL (60% reduction) after 24 hours and to a maximum of 123 ng/dL (85% reduction) after 36 hours. [89]

Lower dosages and concentrations of estradiol can also significantly suppress gonadotropin secretion and testosterone levels in men and transgender women. [90] [91] A retrospective study of oral estradiol monotherapy in transgender women found that dosages of 1 to 8 mg/day increased mean estradiol levels to about 50 to 150 pg/mL and suppressed mean testosterone levels to about 10 to 120 ng/dL. [92] However, there was high interindividual variability in the estradiol and testosterone levels achieved, and testosterone levels were insufficiently suppressed in many even at 8 mg/day. [92] In another study, a dosage of 1 mg/day oral micronized estradiol in healthy older men, which increased circulating estradiol levels by a relatively high amount of 6-fold (to 159 pg/mL), estrone levels by 15-fold (to 386 pg/mL), and SHBG levels by 17%, was found to suppress total testosterone levels by 27% (to 436 ng/dL) and free testosterone levels by 34% (to 11.8 ng/dL). [90] [91] A pharmacodynamic study of testosterone suppression by polyestradiol phosphate in men with prostate cancer found that estradiol levels of about 135 pg/mL (500 pmol/L) would decrease testosterone levels by 50% (from 430 ng/dL to 215 ng/dL), while estradiol levels of about 410 to 545 pg/mL (1500–2000 pmol/L) would decrease testosterone levels well into the castrate range to about 6 to 12 ng/dL (0.2–0.4 nmol/L). [93]

Oral conjugated estrogens at a dosage of 7.5 mg/day has been found to suppress total testosterone levels in men to an equivalent extent as 3 mg/day oral diethylstilbestrol, which is the minimum dosage of diethylstilbestrol required to consistently suppress total testosterone levels into the castrate range (<50 ng/dL). [94] The equivalent dosage in the case of oral estradiol has not been reported. However, on the basis of the results of one study, it appears to be greater than 8 mg/day. [92] In addition, oral estradiol is known to have similar or slightly lower antigonadotropic potency than oral conjugated estrogens; the potencies of oral conjugated estrogens in terms of suppression of LH and FSH levels are 1.0 and 1.1–1.3 relative to oral estradiol, respectively. [1] [95]

In addition to their antigonadotropic effects, high doses of estrogens appear to have direct toxic effects in the testes. [96] [97] [98] [99] [100] [101] [102] [103] Following long-term therapy (>3 years) with high-dose estrogen therapy, testosterone levels fail to return to normal upon discontinuation of treatment in men with prostate cancer. [96] [97] [98] [99] [100] [101] [102] [103] Long-lasting suppression of pituitary gland function, persisting after estrogen discontinuation, may also be involved. [103] With shorter-term estrogen therapy, testicular morphology has been reported to return to normal within 18 to 24 months following estrogen discontinuation. [104]

Progonadotropic effects

Generally, estrogens are antigonadotropic and inhibit gonadotropin secretion. [109] [110] However, in women, a sharp increase in estradiol levels to about 200 to 500 pg/mL occurs at the end of the follicular phase (mid-cycle) during the normal menstrual cycle and paradoxically triggers a surge in LH and FSH secretion. [109] [111] [110] This occurs when estradiol concentrations reach levels of about 250 to 300 pg/mL. [112] During the mid-cycle surge, LH levels increase by 3- to 12-fold and FSH levels increase by 2- to 4-fold. [113] [114] [115] The surge lasts about 24 to 36 hours and triggers ovulation, the rupture of the dominant ovarian follicle and the release of the egg from the ovary into the oviduct. [109] This estrogen-mediated gonadotropin surge effect has also been found to occur with exogenous estrogen, including in transgender women on hormone therapy and pre-hormone therapy transgender men acutely challenged with a high dose of an estrogen, but does not occur in men, pre-hormone therapy transgender women, or transgender men on hormone therapy, hence indicating a hormonally-based sex difference. [116] Progestogens have antiestrogenic actions on the progonadotropic effects of estrogens [117] and a sufficient amount of progesterone (corresponding to levels greater than 2 ng/mL) or a progestin prevents the mid-cycle estradiol-induced surge in gonadotropin levels in women. [118] [119] This is how progestins prevent ovulation and in part mediate their contraceptive effects in women. [119]

Effects on adrenal androgen levels

In addition to their antigonadotropic effects, estrogens at high concentrations can significantly decrease androgen production by the adrenal glands. [3] [120] [121] A study found that treatment with a high dosage of ethinylestradiol (100 μg/day) reduced circulating adrenal androgen levels by 27 to 48% in transgender women. [3] [120] [121] Another study found similar effects in men with prostate cancer, with levels of the adrenal androgens dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S), and androstenedione (A4) all decreasing significantly more with high-dose estrogen therapy (oral ethinylestradiol plus intramuscular polyestradiol phosphate) than with orchiectomy (by 33–39% and 10–26%, respectively). [122]

However, studies have found that these effects occur with high-dose oral and synthetic estrogens such as ethinylestradiol and estramustine phosphate but minimally with the parenteral bioidentical estrogens polyestradiol phosphate and estradiol undecylate, suggesting that decreases in adrenal androgen levels are secondary to changes in liver protein synthesis rather than due to a direct action in the adrenal cortex, and that such changes will only occur in the context of strong hepatic impact. [122] [97] [123] Cortisol levels were unchanged in the other groups (e.g., orchiectomy, GnRH agonist therapy, and parenteral estrogen therapy) in this study, but increased by 300 to 400% in the oral and synthetic estrogen groups, likely secondary to increases in hepatic corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) production and compensatory upregulation of adrenal corticosteroid synthesis. [123]

Changes in levels of weak adrenal androgens are of relevance as these androgens serve as circulating reservoir of precursors that are transformed in tissues into potent androgens like testosterone and dihydrotestosterone and into estrogens. [124] [125] [126] [127]

Effects on liver protein synthesis

Estradiol and other estrogens modulate liver protein synthesis via activation of hepatic ERs. [1] Estradiol increases the production and by extension circulating levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG), angiotensinogen (AGT), pregnancy zone protein (PZP), coagulation factors, and numerous other hepatic proteins. [1] Conversely, estradiol decreases hepatic synthesis and by extension circulating levels of insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). [1] The effects of estradiol on liver protein synthesis are moderated by route of administration, with oral administration having 4- or 5-fold stronger effects on liver protein synthesis than doses by the transdermal route with equivalent general/systemic estrogenic potency. [1] The influences of estradiol on liver protein synthesis have a variety of effects in the body, with implications for the bioavailability of androgens and the cardiovascular system. [1]

The influence of 2 mg/day oral estradiol on levels of hepatic proteins such as SHBG, CBG, and AGT is much lower than that with 10 μg/day oral ethinylestradiol. [128] [68] Vaginal micronized estradiol at 0.25 mg/day increased SHBG levels by about 10% after 2 weeks of therapy in women. [129] [130] Estradiol-containing birth control pills, which contain 1 to 3 mg/day estradiol or estradiol valerate, have been found to increase SHBG levels by 1.5-fold. [131] [132] Both oral estradiol valerate at 6 mg/day and intramuscular estradiol valerate at 10 mg every 10 days have been found to increase SHBG levels by 2.5- to 3-fold in transgender women. [133] [134] [135] For comparison, combined birth control pills containing ethinylestradiol and a progestin with minimal androgenic or antiandrogenic activity have been found to increase SHBG levels by about 3- to 4-fold. [136] High-dose polyestradiol phosphate by intramuscular injection has been found to increase SHBG levels by about 1.5-fold. [4] [68]

Estradiol valerate in oil solution by intramuscular injection has been studied in the treatment of prostate cancer. [137] [138] [139] [140] Although parenteral estradiol has diminished effects on liver protein synthesis and by extension coagulation and cardiovascular risk compared to oral estradiol and non-bioidentical estrogens, a property attributable to its absence of disproportionate effects on the liver, sufficient doses of parenteral estradiol can nonetheless result in high estradiol concentrations in the liver and may increase coagulation and cardiovascular risk similarly. [137] [138] [140] Estradiol valerate at a dose of 10 to 40 mg by intramuscular injection once every 2 weeks in men with prostate cancer has been found to increase markers of coagulation and plasminogen system activation such as levels of thrombin–antithrombin complex and quantitative D-dimers. [137] [138] [140] Administration of daily prophylactic anticoagulation in the form of low molecular-weight heparin was able to successfully return these hemostasis markers to baseline. [137] [140] Doses of estradiol valerate of 10 to 40 mg by intramuscular injection have also been used to limit bleeding in women with hemorrhage due to dysfunctional uterine bleeding, although this is due primarily to stimulation of uterine growth. [141] :318 [142] :60

Biochemical parameters affected by estrogen therapy
Proteins, general Coagulation factors
CompoundEffectCompoundEffect
α1-Antitrypsin + Antithrombin III
Albumin C-reactive protein +
Alkaline phosphatase + Coagulation factor II +
Angiotensinogen + Coagulation factor VII +
Bilirubin + Coagulation factor VIII +
Ceruloplasmin + Coagulation factor IX +
Corticosteroid-binding globulin (transcortin)+ Coagulation factor X +
χ-Glutamyl transpeptidase + Coagulation factor XII +
Growth hormone + Fibrinogen +
Growth hormone-binding protein + Plasminogen +
Insulin-like growth factor 1 Protein C +
Haptoglobin Prothrombin time
Leucyl aminopeptidase + Lipids
α2-Microglobulin +CompoundEffect
Orosomucoid1-acid glycoprotein) Apolipoprotein A +
Pregnancy zone protein + High-density lipoprotein +
Retinol-binding protein + Low-density lipoprotein
Sex hormone-binding globulin + Lecithin +
Thyroxine-binding globulin + Total lipids +
Transferrin + Triglycerides +
Key: + = Increased. − = Decreased. Sources: See template.

Other effects

Estrogens have been reported to downregulate androgen receptor expression in adipose tissue, and may thereby inhibit the effects of androgens on fat distribution. [143] [144] [145]

Differences from other estrogens

Changes in levels of estrogen-sensitive proteins after treatment with oral estradiol or oral ethinylestradiol in postmenopausal women. FSH is a pituitary protein and represents general/systemic estrogenic effect, while SHBG and PZPTooltip pregnancy zone protein are hepatic proteins and represent liver estrogenic effect. Levels of estrogen-sensitive proteins with oral estradiol valerate and ethinylestradiol in postmenopausal women.png
Changes in levels of estrogen-sensitive proteins after treatment with oral estradiol or oral ethinylestradiol in postmenopausal women. FSH is a pituitary protein and represents general/systemic estrogenic effect, while SHBG and PZP Tooltip pregnancy zone protein are hepatic proteins and represent liver estrogenic effect.
SHBG levels in men with 1) intramuscular injection of 320 mg polyestradiol phosphate once every 4 weeks alone; 2) the combination of intra- muscular injection of 80 mg polyestradiol phosphate once every 4 weeks plus 150 mg/day oral ethinylestradiol; 3) orchiectomy only. SHBG levels with polyestradiol phosphate, ethinylestradiol, and orchiectomy.png
SHBG levels in men with 1) intramuscular injection of 320 mg polyestradiol phosphate once every 4 weeks alone; 2) the combination of intra- muscular injection of 80 mg polyestradiol phosphate once every 4 weeks plus 150 μg/day oral ethinylestradiol; 3) orchiectomy only.

Estradiol has relatively low oral bioavailability of about 5%. [1] In addition, there is considerable interindividual variability in levels of estradiol achieved with oral estradiol. [1] In contrast to estradiol, the synthetic estrogen ethinylestradiol has about 45% oral bioavailability, around 80- to 200-fold greater systemic oral estrogenic potency, roughly 500- to 1,500-fold greater hepatic oral estrogenic potency, and less interindividual variability in circulating estrogen levels achieved. [68] [1] [147] [148] [149] [150] [151] An oral dose of ethinylestradiol that is approximately 100-fold lower than that of estradiol achieves similar maximal circulating estrogen concentrations (e.g., 50 pg/mL ethinylestradiol with a single 20 μg dose of ethinylestradiol relative to 40 pg/mL estradiol with a single 2 mg dose of micronized estradiol or estradiol valerate). [1] These differences are due to the introduction of an ethynyl group at the C17α position in ethinylestradiol (also known as 17α-ethynylestradiol), which results in steric hindrance and greatly diminishes the first-pass metabolism of ethinylestradiol relative to estradiol with oral administration. [1] Estradiol and ethinylestradiol have similar affinities for and efficacies as agonists of the ERs, [1] [2] and the systemic estrogenic potency of estradiol and ethinylestradiol is similar when they are administered by the intravenous route. [152]

Synthetic estrogens like ethinylestradiol and diethylstilbestrol and the natural but animal-derived conjugated estrogens have disproportionate effects on liver protein synthesis relative to their effects in other tissues when compared to estradiol. [1] At doses via the oral route with comparable systemic estrogenic potency, conjugated estrogens have about 1.3 to 4.5 times the hepatotropic potency (i.e., potency in modulating liver protein synthesis) of estradiol, ethinylestradiol has about 2.9 to 5.0 times the hepatotropic potency of estradiol, and diethylstilbestrol shows about 5.7 to 7.5 times the hepatotropic potency of estradiol (all measured via a small selection of estrogen-modulated hepatic proteins that included HDL cholesterol, SHBG Tooltip sex hormone-binding globulin, CBG Tooltip corticosteroid-binding globulin, and angiotensinogen). [1] The greater hepatotropic potency of these estrogens relative to estradiol is related to susceptibility to hepatic metabolism. [1] Whereas estradiol is metabolized and thereby inactivated rapidly upon entry into the liver, other estrogens like ethinylestradiol and diethylstilbestrol are resistant to hepatic metabolism and persist in the liver for a longer amount of time. [1] This is reflected in the biological half-lives of these estrogens; the blood half-life of estradiol is about 1 to 2 hours, while the half-lives of ethinylestradiol and diethylstilbestrol are approximately 20 hours and 24 hours, respectively. [153] [154] [151] In accordance with its long half-life, ethinylestradiol passes through the liver many times prior to its elimination. [155] Because humans are not adapted to efficiently metabolize conjugated estrogens (which are equine (horse) estrogens) and synthetic estrogens like ethinylestradiol and diethylstilbestrol, these estrogens are not properly inactivated in the liver, with markedly disproportionate hepatic estrogenic effects resulting. [1]

In addition to differences in hepatotropic potency between estradiol and other estrogens, there are differences in hepatotropic potency between different routes of administration of estradiol. [1] Due to the first pass through the liver, oral estradiol results in disproportionate and unphysiological hepatic estradiol levels that are 4- to 5-fold higher than in the circulation. [156] [1] Conversely, parenteral routes of estradiol, such as transdermal, vaginal, and injection, bypass the first pass through the liver and produce levels of estradiol in the circulation and liver that are comparable. [156] [1] As an example of the reduced hepatic impact of parenteral estradiol relative to oral estradiol, a study found that 1 mg/day oral estradiol significantly increased SHBG levels by 45%, while 50 μg/day transdermal estradiol increased SHBG levels non-significantly by only 12% (with these dosages being roughly equivalent in systemic estrogenic potency). [157] [158] [159] As such, not only do oral non-bioidentical estrogens like ethinylestradiol and conjugated estrogens have substantially greater potency in the liver than does oral estradiol, oral estradiol has considerably greater potency in the liver than does parenteral estradiol. [1] Thus, the hepatotropic effects of oral non-bioidentical estrogens like ethinylestradiol are massive in comparison to parenteral estradiol (see the graph above/to the right), which in contrast to these estrogens has very weak or even absent effects on liver protein synthesis at normal therapeutic dosages. [1] [81] [68] [3] Whereas high-dosage 320 mg/month intramuscular polyestradiol phosphate increased SHBG levels to 166% in men with prostate cancer, the combination of 80 mg/month intramuscular polyestradiol phosphate and high-dosage 150 μg/day oral ethinylestradiol increased levels of SHBG to 617%, an almost 8-fold difference in increase and almost 4-fold difference in absolute levels between the two treatment regimens. [4] [81] [160]

The effects of estrogens on liver protein synthesis, such as on the synthesis of coagulation factors, lipoproteins, and triglycerides, can cause an increased risk of thromboembolic and cardiovascular complications, which in turn can result in increased mortality. [68] The risk of thromboembolic and cardiovascular complications is significantly increased in postmenopausal women taking oral conjugated estrogens as a component of menopausal hormone therapy. [1] [161] [162] Both oral estradiol and oral esterified estrogens have been found to have a significantly lower risk of thromboembolic and cardiovascular complications than oral conjugated estrogens, and transdermal estradiol appears to have no such risks at all. [1] [163] [161] [162] Widely employed in the past, oral synthetic estrogens like ethinylestradiol and diethylstilbestrol are no longer used in menopausal hormone therapy due to their high risks of thromboembolic and cardiovascular complications. [164] Studies have found a markedly increased 5-year risk of cardiovascular mortality of 14 to 26% in men treated with high-dosage oral synthetic estrogens like ethinylestradiol and diethylstilbestrol for prostate cancer. [68] With diethylstilbestrol, there is an up to 35% incidence of cardiovascular toxicity and an up to 15% incidence of venous thromboembolism. [165] In a small study comparing high-dosage 320 mg/month intramuscular polyestradiol phosphate versus the combination of 80 mg/month polyestradiol phosphate with high-dosage 150 μg/day oral ethinylestradiol for prostate cancer, there was a 25% incidence of cardiovascular complications over the course of a year in the group that was also treated with ethinylestradiol, whereas there were no cardiovascular complications in the polyestradiol phosphate-only group. [81] In accordance, another study found no change in levels of coagulation factor VII, a protein of particular importance in the cardiovascular side effects of estrogens, with 240 mg/month intramuscular polyestradiol phosphate. [166] In spite of the markedly reduced impact of parenteral estradiol on the liver compared to other estrogens however, high dosages of parenteral estradiol, producing high levels of circulating estradiol, can still result in important and undesirable changes in liver protein synthesis as with other estrogens. [40] A high dosage of 320 mg/month polyestradiol phosphate has been found to result in significantly increased cardiovascular morbidity (due to non-fatal ischemic heart events and heart decompensation) in men with prostate cancer in two large studies, though cardiovascular mortality was notably not increased. [40] [167]

In addition to the liver, ethinylestradiol shows disproportionate estrogenic effects in the uterus. [1] [43] [168] This is due to its inability to be inactivated by uterine 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17β-HSD). [1] [43] [168] Because of its disproportionate effects in the uterus, ethinylestradiol is associated with a significantly lower incidence of vaginal bleeding and spotting than is estradiol, particularly in combination with progestogens (which induce 17β-HSD expression and hence estradiol metabolism in the uterus), [1] and is an important contributing factor in why ethinylestradiol, among other reasons and in spite of its inferior safety profile, has been widely used in oral contraceptives instead of estradiol. [132] [131] Although ethinylestradiol has increased effects in the uterus relative to estradiol, it is similarly not associated with an increase in the risk of endometrial hyperplasia and endometrial cancer when used in combination with a progestogen, but instead with a significant decrease. [1] [169]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Progestogen (medication)</span> Medication producing effects similar to progesterone

A progestogen, also referred to as a progestagen, gestagen, or gestogen, is a type of medication which produces effects similar to those of the natural female sex hormone progesterone in the body. A progestin is a synthetic progestogen. Progestogens are used most commonly in hormonal birth control and menopausal hormone therapy. They can also be used in the treatment of gynecological conditions, to support fertility and pregnancy, to lower sex hormone levels for various purposes, and for other indications. Progestogens are used alone or in combination with estrogens. They are available in a wide variety of formulations and for use by many different routes of administration. Examples of progestogens include natural or bioidentical progesterone as well as progestins such as medroxyprogesterone acetate and norethisterone.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ethinylestradiol</span> Estrogen medication

Ethinylestradiol (EE) is an estrogen medication which is used widely in birth control pills in combination with progestins. In the past, EE was widely used for various indications such as the treatment of menopausal symptoms, gynecological disorders, and certain hormone-sensitive cancers. It is usually taken by mouth but is also used as a patch and vaginal ring.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estradiol valerate</span> Chemical compound

Estradiol valerate (EV), sold for use by mouth under the brand name Progynova and for use by injection under the brand names Delestrogen and Progynon Depot among others, is an estrogen medication. It is used in hormone therapy for menopausal symptoms and low estrogen levels, hormone therapy for transgender people, and in hormonal birth control. It is also used in the treatment of prostate cancer. The medication is taken by mouth or by injection into muscle or fat once every 1 to 4 weeks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Norethisterone acetate</span> Chemical compound

Norethisterone acetate (NETA), also known as norethindrone acetate and sold under the brand name Primolut-Nor among others, is a progestin medication which is used in birth control pills, menopausal hormone therapy, and for the treatment of gynecological disorders. The medication available in low-dose and high-dose formulations and is used alone or in combination with an estrogen. It is ingested orally.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polyestradiol phosphate</span> Chemical compound

Polyestradiol phosphate (PEP), sold under the brand name Estradurin, is an estrogen medication which is used primarily in the treatment of prostate cancer in men. It is also used in women to treat breast cancer, as a component of hormone therapy to treat low estrogen levels and menopausal symptoms, and as a component of feminizing hormone therapy for transgender women. It is given by injection into muscle once every four weeks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estramustine phosphate</span> Chemical compound

Estramustine phosphate (EMP), also known as estradiol normustine phosphate and sold under the brand names Emcyt and Estracyt, is a dual estrogen and chemotherapy medication which is used in the treatment of prostate cancer in men. It is taken multiple times a day by mouth or by injection into a vein.

Feminizing hormone therapy, also known as transfeminine hormone therapy, is hormone therapy and sex reassignment therapy to change the secondary sex characteristics of transgender people from masculine or androgynous to feminine. It is a common type of transgender hormone therapy and is used to treat transgender women and non-binary transfeminine individuals. Some, in particular intersex people, but also some non-transgender people, take this form of therapy according to their personal needs and preferences.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dienogest</span> Chemical compound

Dienogest, sold under the brand name Visanne among others, is a progestin medication which is used in birth control pills and in the treatment of endometriosis. It is also used in menopausal hormone therapy and to treat heavy periods. Dienogest is available both alone and in combination with estrogens. It is taken by mouth.

Combined injectable contraceptives (CICs) are a form of hormonal birth control for women. They consist of monthly injections of combined formulations containing an estrogen and a progestin to prevent pregnancy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estradiol benzoate</span> Chemical compound

Estradiol benzoate (EB), sold under the brand name Progynon-B among others, is an estrogen medication which is used in hormone therapy for menopausal symptoms and low estrogen levels in women, in hormone therapy for transgender women, and in the treatment of gynecological disorders. It is also used in the treatment of prostate cancer in men. Estradiol benzoate is used in veterinary medicine as well. When used clinically, the medication is given by injection into muscle usually two to three times per week.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estradiol undecylate</span> Chemical compound

Estradiol undecylate, also known as estradiol undecanoate and formerly sold under the brand names Delestrec and Progynon Depot 100 among others, is an estrogen medication which has been used in the treatment of prostate cancer in men. It has also been used as a part of hormone therapy for transgender women. Although estradiol undecylate has been used in the past, it was discontinued. The medication has been given by injection into muscle usually once a month.

An estrogen ester is an ester of an estrogen, most typically of estradiol but also of other estrogens such as estrone, estriol, and even nonsteroidal estrogens like diethylstilbestrol. Esterification renders estradiol into a prodrug of estradiol with increased resistance to first-pass metabolism, slightly improving its oral bioavailability. In addition, estrogen esters have increased lipophilicity, which results in a longer duration when given by intramuscular or subcutaneous injection due to the formation of a long-lasting local depot in muscle and fat. Conversely, this is not the case with intravenous injection or oral administration. Estrogen esters are rapidly hydrolyzed into their parent estrogen by esterases once they have been released from the depot. Because estradiol esters are prodrugs of estradiol, they are considered to be natural and bioidentical forms of estrogen.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cyproterone acetate</span> Chemical compound

Cyproterone acetate (CPA), sold alone under the brand name Androcur or with ethinylestradiol under the brand names Diane or Diane-35 among others, is an antiandrogen and progestin medication used in the treatment of androgen-dependent conditions such as acne, excessive body hair growth, early puberty, and prostate cancer, as a component of feminizing hormone therapy for transgender individuals, and in birth control pills. It is formulated and used both alone and in combination with an estrogen. CPA is taken by mouth one to three times per day.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ethinylestradiol sulfonate</span> Estrogenic drug

Ethinylestradiol sulfonate (EES), sold under the brand names Deposiston and Turisteron among others, is an estrogen medication which has been used in birth control pills for women and in the treatment of prostate cancer in men. It has also been investigated in the treatment of breast cancer in women. The medication was combined with norethisterone acetate in birth control pills. EES is taken by mouth once per week.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estradiol (medication)</span> Steroidal hormone medication

Estradiol (E2) is a medication and naturally occurring steroid hormone. It is an estrogen and is used mainly in menopausal hormone therapy and to treat low sex hormone levels in women. It is also used in hormonal birth control for women, in feminizing hormone therapy for transgender women, and in the treatment of hormone-sensitive cancers like prostate cancer in men and breast cancer in women, among other uses. Estradiol can be taken by mouth, held and dissolved under the tongue, as a gel or patch that is applied to the skin, in through the vagina, by injection into muscle or fat, or through the use of an implant that is placed into fat, among other routes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">High-dose estrogen therapy</span> Type of hormone therapy

High-dose estrogen therapy (HDE) is a type of hormone therapy in which high doses of estrogens are given. When given in combination with a high dose of progestogen, it has been referred to as pseudopregnancy. It is called this because the estrogen and progestogen levels achieved are in the range of the very high levels of these hormones that occur during pregnancy. HDE and pseudopregnancy have been used in medicine for a number of hormone-dependent indications, such as breast cancer, prostate cancer, and endometriosis, among others. Both natural or bioidentical estrogens and synthetic estrogens have been used and both oral and parenteral routes may be used.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estrogen (medication)</span> Type of medication

An estrogen (E) is a type of medication which is used most commonly in hormonal birth control and menopausal hormone therapy, and as part of feminizing hormone therapy for transgender women. They can also be used in the treatment of hormone-sensitive cancers like breast cancer and prostate cancer and for various other indications. Estrogens are used alone or in combination with progestogens. They are available in a wide variety of formulations and for use by many different routes of administration. Examples of estrogens include bioidentical estradiol, natural conjugated estrogens, synthetic steroidal estrogens like ethinylestradiol, and synthetic nonsteroidal estrogens like diethylstilbestrol. Estrogens are one of three types of sex hormone agonists, the others being androgens/anabolic steroids like testosterone and progestogens like progesterone.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estetrol (medication)</span> Estrogen medication

Estetrol (E4) is an estrogen medication and naturally occurring steroid hormone which is used in combination with a progestin in combined birth control pills and is under development for various other indications. These investigational uses include menopausal hormone therapy to treat symptoms such as vaginal atrophy, hot flashes, and bone loss and the treatment of breast cancer and prostate cancer. It is taken by mouth.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">EC508</span> Chemical compound

EC508, also known as estradiol 17β-(1- -L-proline), is an estrogen which is under development by Evestra for use in menopausal hormone therapy and as a hormonal contraceptive for the prevention of pregnancy in women. It is an orally active estrogen ester – specifically, a C17β sulfonamide–proline ester of the natural and bioidentical estrogen estradiol – and acts as a prodrug of estradiol in the body. However, unlike oral estradiol and conventional oral estradiol esters such as estradiol valerate, EC508 undergoes little or no first-pass metabolism, has high oral bioavailability, and does not have disproportionate estrogenic effects in the liver. As such, it has a variety of desirable advantages over oral estradiol, similarly to parenteral estradiol, but with the convenience of oral administration. EC508 is a candidate with the potential to replace not only oral estradiol in clinical practice, but also ethinylestradiol in oral contraceptives. Evestra intends to seek Investigational New Drug status for EC508 in the second quarter of 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pharmacokinetics of estradiol</span>

The pharmacology of estradiol, an estrogen medication and naturally occurring steroid hormone, concerns its pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, and various routes of administration.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Kuhl H (2005). "Pharmacology of estrogens and progestogens: influence of different routes of administration" (PDF). Climacteric. 8 (Suppl 1): 3–63. doi:10.1080/13697130500148875. PMID   16112947. S2CID   24616324.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Michael Oettel; Ekkehard Schillinger (6 December 2012). Estrogens and Antiestrogens I: Physiology and Mechanisms of Action of Estrogens and Antiestrogens. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 121, 226, 235–237. ISBN   978-3-642-58616-3.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Michael Oettel; Ekkehard Schillinger (6 December 2012). Estrogens and Antiestrogens II: Pharmacology and Clinical Application of Estrogens and Antiestrogen. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 163–178, 235–237, 252–253, 261–276, 538–543. ISBN   978-3-642-60107-1.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Stege R, Carlström K, Collste L, Eriksson A, Henriksson P, Pousette A (1988). "Single drug polyestradiol phosphate therapy in prostatic cancer". Am. J. Clin. Oncol. 11 (Suppl 2): S101–3. doi:10.1097/00000421-198801102-00024. PMID   3242384. S2CID   32650111.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ockrim JL, Lalani EN, Laniado ME, Carter SS, Abel PD (2003). "Transdermal estradiol therapy for advanced prostate cancer--forward to the past?". J. Urol. 169 (5): 1735–7. doi:10.1097/01.ju.0000061024.75334.40. PMID   12686820.
  6. Escande A, Pillon A, Servant N, Cravedi JP, Larrea F, Muhn P, Nicolas JC, Cavaillès V, Balaguer P (2006). "Evaluation of ligand selectivity using reporter cell lines stably expressing estrogen receptor alpha or beta". Biochem. Pharmacol. 71 (10): 1459–69. doi:10.1016/j.bcp.2006.02.002. PMID   16554039.
  7. Barkhem T, Carlsson B, Nilsson Y, Enmark E, Gustafsson J, Nilsson S (July 1998). "Differential response of estrogen receptor alpha and estrogen receptor beta to partial estrogen agonists/antagonists". Mol. Pharmacol. 54 (1): 105–12. doi:10.1124/mol.54.1.105. PMID   9658195.
  8. Prossnitz ER, Arterburn JB (July 2015). "International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. XCVII. G Protein-Coupled Estrogen Receptor and Its Pharmacologic Modulators". Pharmacol. Rev. 67 (3): 505–40. doi:10.1124/pr.114.009712. PMC   4485017 . PMID   26023144.
  9. Soltysik K, Czekaj P (April 2013). "Membrane estrogen receptors – is it an alternative way of estrogen action?". J. Physiol. Pharmacol. 64 (2): 129–42. PMID   23756388.
  10. Prossnitz ER, Barton M (May 2014). "Estrogen biology: New insights into GPER function and clinical opportunities". Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 389 (1–2): 71–83. doi:10.1016/j.mce.2014.02.002. PMC   4040308 . PMID   24530924.
  11. A. Labhart (6 December 2012). Clinical Endocrinology: Theory and Practice. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 548, 551. ISBN   978-3-642-96158-8.
  12. Ojasoo T, Raynaud JP (November 1978). "Unique steroid congeners for receptor studies". Cancer Res. 38 (11 Pt 2): 4186–98. PMID   359134.
  13. Ojasoo T, Delettré J, Mornon JP, Turpin-VanDycke C, Raynaud JP (1987). "Towards the mapping of the progesterone and androgen receptors". J. Steroid Biochem. 27 (1–3): 255–69. doi:10.1016/0022-4731(87)90317-7. PMID   3695484.
  14. Raynaud JP, Bouton MM, Moguilewsky M, Ojasoo T, Philibert D, Beck G, Labrie F, Mornon JP (January 1980). "Steroid hormone receptors and pharmacology". J. Steroid Biochem. 12: 143–57. doi:10.1016/0022-4731(80)90264-2. PMID   7421203.
  15. 1 2 Raynaud, J.P.; Ojasoo, T.; Bouton, M.M.; Philibert, D. (1979). Drug Design. pp. 169–214. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-060308-4.50010-X. ISBN   9780120603084.
  16. 1 2 3 Blankvoort BM, de Groene EM, van Meeteren-Kreikamp AP, Witkamp RF, Rodenburg RJ, Aarts JM (November 2001). "Development of an androgen reporter gene assay (AR-LUX) utilizing a human cell line with an endogenously regulated androgen receptor". Anal. Biochem. 298 (1): 93–102. doi:10.1006/abio.2001.5352. PMID   11673900.
  17. Eberhard Nieschlag; Hermann M. Behre; Susan Nieschlag (26 July 2012). Testosterone: Action, Deficiency, Substitution. Cambridge University Press. pp. 495–. ISBN   978-1-107-01290-5.
  18. 1 2 Goldstein I, Meston CM, Davis S, Traish A (17 November 2005). Women's Sexual Function and Dysfunction: Study, Diagnosis and Treatment. CRC Press. pp. 205–, 540. ISBN   978-1-84214-263-9.
  19. Robert Marcus; David W. Dempster; Jane A. Cauley; David Feldman (13 June 2013). Osteoporosis. Academic Press. pp. 1117–. ISBN   978-0-12-398252-0. Altogether, men make 20-fold more androgens than do women; the proportion of androgen converted to E2 is 200-fold more in women; and E2 is 1000-fold more potent than androgens (on a molar basis) on target tissues [28]. Thus, circulating estrogen levels are measured in picograms, and testosterone levels are measured in nanograms.
  20. Thomas, John A.; Keenan, Edward J. (1986). "Estrogens and Antiestrogenic Drugs". Principles of Endocrine Pharmacology. pp. 135–165. doi:10.1007/978-1-4684-5036-1_7. ISBN   978-0-306-42143-3. Cytoplasmic estrogen receptors characteristically exhibit high affinity for estradiol-17J3, with an equilibrium dissociation constant of 0.1 nM. The number of these sites in target tissues is generally low, approximating 10,000-20,000 sites per cell.
  21. 1 2 Wibowo E, Schellhammer P, Wassersug RJ (January 2011). "Role of estrogen in normal male function: clinical implications for patients with prostate cancer on androgen deprivation therapy". J. Urol. 185 (1): 17–23. doi:10.1016/j.juro.2010.08.094. PMID   21074215. In cell culture37 and gonadectomized rodents48 the addition of E can induce the autoregulation of ERs. This finding suggests that the ER expression depends on the level of serum E and to maintain an effective cellular response to E2 regulation of the ER is crucial. Prolonged E2 administration at a constant dose may not be maximally effective for patients with PCa. As a result of continuous exposure, ERs may be down-regulated, attenuating their effectiveness. Thus, cyclical rather than continuous administration of E may be preferable.
  22. 1 2 3 Nawaz Z, Lonard DM, Dennis AP, Smith CL, O'Malley BW (March 1999). "Proteasome-dependent degradation of the human estrogen receptor". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96 (5): 1858–62. Bibcode:1999PNAS...96.1858N. doi: 10.1073/pnas.96.5.1858 . PMC   26701 . PMID   10051559.
  23. Miller, Colette (October 2015). "A brief on the structure and function of estrogen receptor alpha (BCMB8010 Enzyme Project)". doi:10.13140/RG.2.1.4082.5044. ERα is relatively stable in the cell with a half-life of up to 5 days, however once bound to ligand this time shortens to 3-4 hours.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  24. 1 2 Kloosterboer, Helenius; Schoonen, Willem; Verheul, Herman (2008). Breast Cancer. Vol. 17. pp. 343–366. doi:10.3109/9781420058734-19. ISBN   978-1-4200-5872-7. PMC   3267821 . PMID   22234628. Steroid deprivation, for instance, can have a major impact on the growth stimulation by E2. Estrogen sensitivity can be increased easily by four log-units or more (Masamura et al., 1995; Chan et al., 2002) (Fig. 1). This effect may be explained, at least partly, by a 100-fold higher level of ER(s) (Zajchowski et al., 1993), but coactivator sensitivity as well as the degree of phosphorylation of transactivation factors (TAF-1 and/or TAF-2) may also be crucial.{{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  25. Mauvais-Jarvis P, Kuttenn F, Gompel A (1986). "Antiestrogen action of progesterone in breast tissue". Breast Cancer Res. Treat. 8 (3): 179–88. doi:10.1007/BF01807330. PMID   3297211. S2CID   17511105.
  26. Zhou J, Ng S, Adesanya-Famuiya O, Anderson K, Bondy CA (September 2000). "Testosterone inhibits estrogen-induced mammary epithelial proliferation and suppresses estrogen receptor expression". FASEB J. 14 (12): 1725–30. doi: 10.1096/fj.99-0863com . PMID   10973921. S2CID   17172449.
  27. 1 2 3 4 5 Weigel, Nancy L.; Smith, Carolyn L. (2016). "Estrogen and Progesterone Action". Endocrinology: Adult and Pediatric. pp. 2207–2215.e3. doi:10.1016/B978-0-323-18907-1.00127-X. ISBN   9780323189071.
  28. Purohit A, Woo LW, Potter BV (July 2011). "Steroid sulfatase: a pivotal player in estrogen synthesis and metabolism" (PDF). Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 340 (2): 154–60. doi:10.1016/j.mce.2011.06.012. PMID   21693170. S2CID   14296237.
  29. Africander D, Storbeck KH (May 2018). "Steroid metabolism in breast cancer: Where are we and what are we missing?". Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 466: 86–97. doi:10.1016/j.mce.2017.05.016. PMID   28527781. S2CID   4547808.
  30. Mueller JW, Gilligan LC, Idkowiak J, Arlt W, Foster PA (October 2015). "The Regulation of Steroid Action by Sulfation and Desulfation". Endocr. Rev. 36 (5): 526–63. doi:10.1210/er.2015-1036. PMC   4591525 . PMID   26213785.
  31. Klinge CM (July 2001). "Estrogen receptor interaction with estrogen response elements". Nucleic Acids Res. 29 (14): 2905–19. doi:10.1093/nar/29.14.2905. PMC   55815 . PMID   11452016.
  32. Christian Behl (22 June 2001). Estrogen — Mystery Drug for the Brain?: The Neuroprotective Activities of the Female Sex Hormone. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 41–. ISBN   978-3-211-83539-5.
  33. 1 2 Fritz F. Parl (2000). Estrogens, Estrogen Receptor and Breast Cancer. IOS Press. pp. 4, 111. ISBN   978-0-9673355-4-4.
  34. Jennifer E. Dietrich (18 June 2014). Female Puberty: A Comprehensive Guide for Clinicians. Springer. pp. 53–. ISBN   978-1-4939-0912-4.
  35. Randy Thornhill; Steven W. Gangestad (25 September 2008). The Evolutionary Biology of Human Female Sexuality. Oxford University Press. pp. 145–. ISBN   978-0-19-988770-5.
  36. Raine-Fenning NJ, Brincat MP, Muscat-Baron Y (2003). "Skin aging and menopause : implications for treatment". Am J Clin Dermatol. 4 (6): 371–8. doi:10.2165/00128071-200304060-00001. PMID   12762829. S2CID   20392538.
  37. Chris Hayward (31 July 2003). Gender Differences at Puberty. Cambridge University Press. pp. 22–. ISBN   978-0-521-00165-6.
  38. Shlomo Melmed; Kenneth S. Polonsky; P. Reed Larsen; Henry M. Kronenberg (11 November 2015). Williams Textbook of Endocrinology. Elsevier Health Sciences. pp. 1105–. ISBN   978-0-323-34157-8.
  39. Richard E. Jones; Kristin H. Lopez (28 September 2013). Human Reproductive Biology. Academic Press. pp. 19–. ISBN   978-0-12-382185-0.
  40. 1 2 3 4 5 Waun Ki Hong; James F. Holland (2010). Holland-Frei Cancer Medicine 8. PMPH-USA. pp. 753–. ISBN   978-1-60795-014-1.
  41. Ethel Sloane (2002). Biology of Women. Cengage Learning. pp. 496–. ISBN   978-0-7668-1142-3.
  42. Tekoa L. King; Mary C. Brucker (25 October 2010). Pharmacology for Women's Health. Jones & Bartlett Learning. pp. 1022–. ISBN   978-0-7637-5329-0.
  43. 1 2 3 Rogerio A. Lobo (5 June 2007). Treatment of the Postmenopausal Woman: Basic and Clinical Aspects. Academic Press. pp. 177, 217–226, 770–771. ISBN   978-0-08-055309-2.
  44. David Warshawsky; Joseph R. Landolph Jr. (31 October 2005). Molecular Carcinogenesis and the Molecular Biology of Human Cancer. CRC Press. pp. 457–. ISBN   978-0-203-50343-0.
  45. Acevedo-Rodriguez A, Mani SK, Handa RJ (2015). "Oxytocin and Estrogen Receptor β in the Brain: An Overview". Frontiers in Endocrinology. 6: 160. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2015.00160 . PMC   4606117 . PMID   26528239.
  46. Lauritzen C (September 1990). "Clinical use of oestrogens and progestogens". Maturitas. 12 (3): 199–214. doi:10.1016/0378-5122(90)90004-P. PMID   2215269.
  47. Lauritzen C (June 1977). "[Estrogen thearpy in practice. 3. Estrogen preparations and combination preparations]" [Estrogen therapy in practice. 3. Estrogen preparations and combination preparations]. Fortschritte Der Medizin (in German). 95 (21): 1388–92. PMID   559617.
  48. Wolf AS, Schneider HP (12 March 2013). Östrogene in Diagnostik und Therapie. Springer-Verlag. pp. 78–. ISBN   978-3-642-75101-1.
  49. Göretzlehner G, Lauritzen C, Römer T, Rossmanith W (1 January 2012). Praktische Hormontherapie in der Gynäkologie. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 44–. ISBN   978-3-11-024568-4.
  50. Knörr K, Beller FK, Lauritzen C (17 April 2013). Lehrbuch der Gynäkologie. Springer-Verlag. pp. 212–213. ISBN   978-3-662-00942-0.
  51. Horský J, Presl J (1981). "Hormonal Treatment of Disorders of the Menstrual Cycle". In Horsky J, Presl J (eds.). Ovarian Function and its Disorders: Diagnosis and Therapy. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 309–332. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-8195-9_11. ISBN   978-94-009-8195-9.
  52. Pschyrembel W (1968). Praktische Gynäkologie: für Studierende und Ärzte. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 598–599. ISBN   978-3-11-150424-7.
  53. Lauritzen CH (January 1976). "The female climacteric syndrome: significance, problems, treatment". Acta Obstetricia Et Gynecologica Scandinavica. Supplement. 51: 47–61. doi:10.3109/00016347509156433. PMID   779393.
  54. Lauritzen C (1975). "The Female Climacteric Syndrome: Significance, Problems, Treatment". Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica. 54 (s51): 48–61. doi:10.3109/00016347509156433. ISSN   0001-6349.
  55. Kopera H (1991). "Hormone der Gonaden". Hormonelle Therapie für die Frau. Kliniktaschenbücher. pp. 59–124. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-95670-6_6. ISBN   978-3-540-54554-5. ISSN   0172-777X.
  56. Scott WW, Menon M, Walsh PC (April 1980). "Hormonal Therapy of Prostatic Cancer". Cancer. 45 (Suppl 7): 1929–1936. doi:10.1002/cncr.1980.45.s7.1929. PMID   29603164.
  57. Leinung MC, Feustel PJ, Joseph J (2018). "Hormonal Treatment of Transgender Women with Oral Estradiol". Transgender Health. 3 (1): 74–81. doi:10.1089/trgh.2017.0035. PMC   5944393 . PMID   29756046.
  58. Ryden AB (1950). "Natural and synthetic oestrogenic substances; their relative effectiveness when administered orally". Acta Endocrinologica. 4 (2): 121–39. doi:10.1530/acta.0.0040121. PMID   15432047.
  59. Ryden AB (1951). "The effectiveness of natural and synthetic oestrogenic substances in women". Acta Endocrinologica. 8 (2): 175–91. doi:10.1530/acta.0.0080175. PMID   14902290.
  60. Kottmeier HL (1947). "Ueber blutungen in der menopause: Speziell der klinischen bedeutung eines endometriums mit zeichen hormonaler beeinflussung: Part I". Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica. 27 (s6): 1–121. doi:10.3109/00016344709154486. ISSN   0001-6349. There is no doubt that the conversion of the endometrium with injections of both synthetic and native estrogenic hormone preparations succeeds, but the opinion whether native, orally administered preparations can produce a proliferation mucosa changes with different authors. PEDERSEN-BJERGAARD (1939) was able to show that 90% of the folliculin taken up in the blood of the vena portae is inactivated in the liver. Neither KAUFMANN (1933, 1935), RAUSCHER (1939, 1942) nor HERRNBERGER (1941) succeeded in bringing a castration endometrium into proliferation using large doses of orally administered preparations of estrone or estradiol. Other results are reported by NEUSTAEDTER (1939), LAUTERWEIN (1940) and FERIN (1941); they succeeded in converting an atrophic castration endometrium into an unambiguous proliferation mucosa with 120–300 oestradiol or with 380 oestrone.
  61. Rietbrock N, Staib AH, Loew D (11 March 2013). Klinische Pharmakologie: Arzneitherapie. Springer-Verlag. pp. 426–. ISBN   978-3-642-57636-2.
  62. Martinez-Manautou J, Rudel HW (1966). "Antiovulatory Activity of Several Synthetic and Natural Estrogens". In Robert Benjamin Greenblatt (ed.). Ovulation: Stimulation, Suppression, and Detection. Lippincott. pp. 243–253.
  63. Herr F, Revesz C, Manson AJ, Jewell JB (1970). "Biological Properties of Estrogen Sulfates". Chemical and Biological Aspects of Steroid Conjugation. pp. 368–408. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-49793-3_8. ISBN   978-3-642-49506-9.
  64. Duncan CJ, Kistner RW, Mansell H (October 1956). "Suppression of ovulation by trip-anisyl chloroethylene (TACE)". Obstetrics and Gynecology. 8 (4): 399–407. PMID   13370006.
  65. 1 2 Scherr DS, Pitts WR (2003). "The nonsteroidal effects of diethylstilbestrol: the rationale for androgen deprivation therapy without estrogen deprivation in the treatment of prostate cancer". J. Urol. 170 (5): 1703–8. doi:10.1097/01.ju.0000077558.48257.3d. PMID   14532759.
  66. 1 2 Coss, Christopher C.; Jones, Amanda; Parke, Deanna N.; Narayanan, Ramesh; Barrett, Christina M.; Kearbey, Jeffrey D.; Veverka, Karen A.; Miller, Duane D.; Morton, Ronald A.; Steiner, Mitchell S.; Dalton, James T. (2012). "Preclinical Characterization of a Novel Diphenyl Benzamide Selective ERα Agonist for Hormone Therapy in Prostate Cancer". Endocrinology. 153 (3): 1070–1081. doi: 10.1210/en.2011-1608 . ISSN   0013-7227. PMID   22294742.
  67. Novara G, Galfano A, Secco S, Ficarra V, Artibani W (2009). "Impact of surgical and medical castration on serum testosterone level in prostate cancer patients". Urol. Int. 82 (3): 249–55. doi: 10.1159/000209352 . PMID   19440008. S2CID   24771328.
  68. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 von Schoultz B, Carlström K, Collste L, Eriksson A, Henriksson P, Pousette A, Stege R (1989). "Estrogen therapy and liver function--metabolic effects of oral and parenteral administration". Prostate. 14 (4): 389–95. doi:10.1002/pros.2990140410. PMID   2664738. S2CID   21510744.
  69. Wein AJ, Kavoussi LR, Novick AC, Partin AW, Peters CA (25 August 2011). Campbell-Walsh Urology: Expert Consult Premium Edition: Enhanced Online Features and Print, 4-Volume Set. Elsevier Health Sciences. pp. 2938–. ISBN   978-1-4160-6911-9.
  70. Knuth UA, Hano R, Nieschlag E (1984). "Effect of flutamide or cyproterone acetate on pituitary and testicular hormones in normal men". J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 59 (5): 963–9. doi:10.1210/jcem-59-5-963. PMID   6237116.
  71. 1 2 Jacobi GH, Altwein JE, Kurth KH, Basting R, Hohenfellner R (1980). "Treatment of advanced prostatic cancer with parenteral cyproterone acetate: a phase III randomised trial". Br J Urol. 52 (3): 208–15. doi:10.1111/j.1464-410x.1980.tb02961.x. PMID   7000222.
  72. Sander S, Nissen-Meyer R, Aakvaag A (1978). "On gestagen treatment of advanced prostatic carcinoma". Scand. J. Urol. Nephrol. 12 (2): 119–21. doi:10.3109/00365597809179977. PMID   694436.
  73. Kjeld JM, Puah CM, Kaufman B, Loizou S, Vlotides J, Gwee HM, Kahn F, Sood R, Joplin GF (1979). "Effects of norgestrel and ethinyloestradiol ingestion on serum levels of sex hormones and gonadotrophins in men". Clin. Endocrinol. (Oxf). 11 (5): 497–504. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2265.1979.tb03102.x. PMID   519881. S2CID   5836155.
  74. Watson NR, Studd JW, Riddle AF, Savvas M (October 1988). "Suppression of ovulation by transdermal oestradiol patches". BMJ. 297 (6653): 900–1. doi:10.1136/bmj.297.6653.900. PMC   1834440 . PMID   3140971.
  75. Sitruk-Ware R (June 1995). "Transdermal application of steroid hormones for contraception". J. Steroid Biochem. Mol. Biol. 53 (1–6): 247–51. doi:10.1016/0960-0760(95)00055-5. PMID   7626463. S2CID   30461300.
  76. Studd, J. (2012). "Treatment of premenstrual disorders by suppression of ovulation by transdermal estrogens". Menopause International. 18 (2): 65–67. doi:10.1258/mi.2012.012015. ISSN   1754-0453. PMID   22611224. S2CID   8914354.
  77. Toppozada M (June 1977). "The clinical use of monthly injectable contraceptive preparations". Obstet Gynecol Surv. 32 (6): 335–47. doi:10.1097/00006254-197706000-00001. PMID   865726.
  78. el-Mahgoub S, Karim M (February 1972). "Depot estrogen as a monthly contraceptive in nulliparous women with mild uterine hypoplasia". Am. J. Obstet. Gynecol. 112 (4): 575–6. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(72)90319-5. PMID   5008627.
  79. 1 2 Jorge Martinez-Manautou; Harry W. Rudel (1966). "Antiovulatory Activity of Several Synthetic and Natural Estrogens". In Robert Benjamin Greenblatt (ed.). Ovulation: Stimulation, Suppression, and Detection. Lippincott. pp. 243–253. ISBN   9780397590100.
  80. Herr, F.; Revesz, C.; Manson, A. J.; Jewell, J. B. (1970). "Biological Properties of Estrogen Sulfates". Chemical and Biological Aspects of Steroid Conjugation. pp. 368–408. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-49793-3_8 (inactive 2 November 2024). ISBN   978-3-642-49506-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
  81. 1 2 3 4 5 Stege R, Gunnarsson PO, Johansson CJ, Olsson P, Pousette A, Carlström K (May 1996). "Pharmacokinetics and testosterone suppression of a single dose of polyestradiol phosphate (Estradurin) in prostatic cancer patients". Prostate. 28 (5): 307–10. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-0045(199605)28:5<307::AID-PROS6>3.0.CO;2-8. PMID   8610057. S2CID   33548251.
  82. Gokhan Ozyigit; Ugur Selek (1 August 2017). Principles and Practice of Urooncology: Radiotherapy, Surgery and Systemic Therapy. Springer. pp. 334–. ISBN   978-3-319-56114-1. The castrate level was defined as testosterone being less than 50 ng/dL (1.7 nmol/L), many years ago. However contemporary laboratory testing methods showed that the mean value after surgical castration is 15 ng/dL [1]. Thus, recently the level is defined as being less than 20 ng/dL (1 nmol/L).
  83. Lycette JL, Bland LB, Garzotto M, Beer TM (2006). "Parenteral estrogens for prostate cancer: can a new route of administration overcome old toxicities?". Clin Genitourin Cancer. 5 (3): 198–205. doi:10.3816/CGC.2006.n.037. PMID   17239273.
  84. Altwein, J. (1983). "Controversial Aspects of Hormone Manipulation in Prostatic Carcinoma". Cancer of the Prostate and Kidney. pp. 305–316. doi:10.1007/978-1-4684-4349-3_38. ISBN   978-1-4684-4351-6.
  85. Ockrim JL; Lalani el-N; Kakkar AK; Abel PD (August 2005). "Transdermal estradiol therapy for prostate cancer reduces thrombophilic activation and protects against thromboembolism". J. Urol. 174 (2): 527–33, discussion 532–3. doi:10.1097/01.ju.0000165567.99142.1f. PMID   16006886.
  86. Moore E, Wisniewski A, Dobs A (2003). "Endocrine treatment of transsexual people: a review of treatment regimens, outcomes, and adverse effects". J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 88 (8): 3467–73. doi: 10.1210/jc.2002-021967 . PMID   12915619.
  87. Tangpricha V, den Heijer M (2017). "Oestrogen and anti-androgen therapy for transgender women". Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 5 (4): 291–300. doi:10.1016/S2213-8587(16)30319-9. PMC   5366074 . PMID   27916515.
  88. Deutsch MB, Bhakri V, Kubicek K (2015). "Effects of cross-sex hormone treatment on transgender women and men". Obstet Gynecol. 125 (3): 605–10. doi:10.1097/AOG.0000000000000692. PMC   4442681 . PMID   25730222.
  89. 1 2 3 4 Jones TM, Fang VS, Landau RL, Rosenfield R (December 1978). "Direct inhibition of Leydig cell function by estradiol". J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 47 (6): 1368–73. doi:10.1210/jcem-47-6-1368. PMID   122429.
  90. 1 2 Taxel P, Kennedy D, Fall P, Willard A, Shoukri K, Clive J, Raisz LG (2000). "The effect of short-term treatment with micronized estradiol on bone turnover and gonadotrophins in older men". Endocr. Res. 26 (3): 381–98. doi:10.3109/07435800009066175. PMID   11019903. S2CID   45695901.
  91. 1 2 Dukes, M.N.G. (2002). Sex hormones and related compounds, including hormonal contraceptives. Side Effects of Drugs Annual. Vol. 25. pp. 478–502. doi:10.1016/S0378-6080(02)80047-2. ISBN   9780444506740. ISSN   0378-6080.
  92. 1 2 3 4 5 Leinung MC, Feustel PJ, Joseph J (2018). "Hormonal Treatment of Transgender Women with Oral Estradiol". Transgend Health. 3 (1): 74–81. doi:10.1089/trgh.2017.0035. PMC   5944393 . PMID   29756046.
  93. Johansson CJ, Gunnarsson PO (June 2000). "Pharmacodynamic model of testosterone suppression after intramuscular depot estrogen therapy in prostate cancer". Prostate. 44 (1): 26–30. doi:10.1002/1097-0045(20000615)44:1<26::AID-PROS4>3.0.CO;2-P. PMID   10861754. S2CID   30678644.
  94. Scott WW, Menon M, Walsh PC (April 1980). "Hormonal Therapy of Prostatic Cancer". Cancer. 45 (Suppl 7): 1929–1936. doi: 10.1002/cncr.1980.45.s7.1929 . PMID   29603164. S2CID   4492779.
  95. Alfred S. Wolf; H.P.G. Schneider (12 March 2013). Östrogene in Diagnostik und Therapie. Springer-Verlag. pp. 78–. ISBN   978-3-642-75101-1.
  96. 1 2 Salam MA (2003). Principles & Practice of Urology: A Comprehensive Text. Universal-Publishers. pp. 684–. ISBN   978-1-58112-412-5. Estrogens act primarily through negative feedback at the hypothalamic-pituitary level to reduce LH secretion and testicular androgen synthesis. [...] Interestingly, if the treatment with estrogens is discontinued after 3 yr. of uninterrupted exposure, serum testosterone may remain at castration levels for up to another 3 yr. This prolonged suppression is thought to result from a direct effect of estrogens on the Leydig cells.
  97. 1 2 3 Cox RL, Crawford ED (December 1995). "Estrogens in the treatment of prostate cancer". J. Urol. 154 (6): 1991–8. doi:10.1016/S0022-5347(01)66670-9. PMID   7500443.
  98. 1 2 Tomić R, Bergman B (October 1987). "Hormonal effects of cessation of estrogen treatment for prostatic carcinoma". J. Urol. 138 (4): 801–3. doi:10.1016/S0022-5347(17)43379-9. PMID   3116281.
  99. 1 2 Tomić R, Bergman B, Damber JE (February 1983). "Testicular endocrine function after withdrawal of oestrogen treatment in patients with carcinoma of the prostate". Br J Urol. 55 (1): 42–7. doi:10.1111/j.1464-410X.1983.tb07077.x. PMID   6402048.
  100. 1 2 Daehlin L, Tomić R, Damber JE (1988). "Depressed testosterone release from testicular tissue in vitro after withdrawal of oestrogen treatment in patients with prostatic carcinoma". Scand. J. Urol. Nephrol. 22 (1): 11–3. doi:10.1080/00365599.1988.11690376. PMID   3387906.
  101. 1 2 Tomić R, Damber JE, Bergman B (1988). "Endocrine effects of oestrogen withdrawal in long-term treated patients with prostatic adenocarcinoma". Eur. Urol. 14 (1): 6–8. doi:10.1159/000472886. PMID   3342807.
  102. 1 2 Wortsman J, Hamidinia A, Winters SJ (June 1989). "Hypogonadism following long-term treatment with diethylstilbestrol". Am. J. Med. Sci. 297 (6): 365–8. doi:10.1097/00000441-198906000-00006. PMID   2500019. S2CID   22686874.
  103. 1 2 3 Tomić R (October 1987). "Pituitary function after orchiectomy in patients with or without earlier estrogen treatment for prostatic carcinoma". J. Endocrinol. Invest. 10 (5): 479–82. doi:10.1007/BF03348174. PMID   3123547. S2CID   25897203.
  104. Janet Brotherton (1976). Sex Hormone Pharmacology. Academic Press. p. 341. ISBN   978-0-12-137250-7.
  105. Stege R, Carlström K, Collste L, Eriksson A, Henriksson P, Pousette A (1988). "Single drug polyestradiol phosphate therapy in prostatic cancer". Am. J. Clin. Oncol. 11 (Suppl 2): S101–3. doi:10.1097/00000421-198801102-00024. PMID   3242384. S2CID   32650111.
  106. Langley RE, Godsland IF, Kynaston H, Clarke NW, Rosen SD, Morgan RC, Pollock P, Kockelbergh R, Lalani EN, Dearnaley D, Parmar M, Abel PD (August 2008). "Early hormonal data from a multicentre phase II trial using transdermal oestrogen patches as first-line hormonal therapy in patients with locally advanced or metastatic prostate cancer". BJU Int. 102 (4): 442–5. doi:10.1111/j.1464-410X.2008.07583.x. PMC   2564109 . PMID   18422771. Available information suggests that for preparations delivering 100 μg/day of oestradiol transdermally (including the Progynova [TS forte] patches used in the original pilot study [5]) [...]
  107. Ockrim J, Lalani E, Abel P (October 2006). "Therapy Insight: parenteral estrogen treatment for prostate cancer--a new dawn for an old therapy". Nat Clin Pract Oncol. 3 (10): 552–63. doi:10.1038/ncponc0602. PMID   17019433. S2CID   6847203.
  108. Jacobi, G.H.; Altwein, J.E. (1979). "Bromocriptin als Palliativtherapie beim fortgeschrittenen Prostatakarzinom:Experimentelles und klinisches Profil eines Medikamentes" [Bromocriptine as Palliative Therapy in Advanced Prostate Cancer: Experimental and Clinical Profile of a Drugjournal=Urologia Internationalis]. Urologia Internationalis. 34 (4): 266–290. doi:10.1159/000280272. PMID   89747.
  109. 1 2 3 McDowell, Julie (2010). Encyclopedia of Human Body Systems. ABC-CLIO. pp. 201–. ISBN   978-0-313-39175-0.
  110. 1 2 Herbison AE (June 1998). "Multimodal influence of estrogen upon gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurons". Endocr. Rev. 19 (3): 302–30. doi: 10.1210/edrv.19.3.0332 . PMID   9626556. For the greater part of the ovarian cycle, estrogen helps restrain LH secretion through what has been termed its "negative feedback" action. This has been shown to occur, in part, through an inhibition of GnRH secretion in several species (7, 11–13), but also involves potent actions of estrogen on the pituitary gonadotrophs (3, 4, 14). Estrogen also exhibits a "positive feedback" influence upon the GnRH neurons and pituitary gonadotrophs to generate the preovulatory LH surge.
  111. Jerome Frank Strauss; Robert L. Barbieri (1 January 2009). Yen and Jaffe's Reproductive Endocrinology: Physiology, Pathophysiology, and Clinical Management. Elsevier Health Sciences. pp. 807–. ISBN   978-1-4160-4907-4.
  112. Grunwald, K.; Rabe, T.; Runnebaum, B. (1997). "Physiology of the Menstrual Cycle". Manual on Assisted Reproduction. pp. 22–77. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-00763-1_3. ISBN   978-3-662-00765-5.
  113. Anand Kumar; Mona Sharma (24 July 2017). Basics of Human Andrology: A Textbook. Springer. pp. 395–. ISBN   978-981-10-3695-8.
  114. Miranda A. Farage; Howard I. Maibach (27 March 2017). The Vulva: Physiology and Clinical Management, Second Edition. CRC Press. pp. 139–. ISBN   978-1-4987-5245-9.
  115. Rogerio A. Lobo; David M Gershenson; Gretchen M Lentz; Fidel A Valea (22 June 2016). Comprehensive Gynecology E-Book. Elsevier Health Sciences. pp. 97–. ISBN   978-0-323-43003-6.
  116. Linda Garnets; Douglas Kimmel (6 May 2003). Psychological Perspectives on Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Experiences. Columbia University Press. pp. 62–. ISBN   978-0-231-50494-2.
  117. Römmler A, Baumgarten S, Schwartz U, Hammerstein J (June 1982). "Anti-estrogenic effects of contraceptive progestins on the dynamics of gonadotropin release". Contraception. 25 (6): 619–27. doi:10.1016/0010-7824(82)90063-4. PMID   6214371.
  118. Leon Speroff; Marc A. Fritz (2005). Clinical Gynecologic Endocrinology and Infertility. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 211–. ISBN   978-0-7817-4795-0.
  119. 1 2 Stefan Offermanns; W. Rosenthal (14 August 2008). Encyclopedia of Molecular Pharmacology. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 388–. ISBN   978-3-540-38916-3.
  120. 1 2 Andrew N. Margioris; George P. Chrousos (20 April 2001). Adrenal Disorders. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 84–. ISBN   978-1-59259-101-5.
  121. 1 2 Polderman KH, Gooren LJ, van der Veen EA (October 1995). "Effects of gonadal androgens and oestrogens on adrenal androgen levels". Clin. Endocrinol. (Oxf). 43 (4): 415–21. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2265.1995.tb02611.x. PMID   7586614. S2CID   6815423.
  122. 1 2 Stege R, Eriksson A, Henriksson P, Carlström K (August 1987). "Orchidectomy or oestrogen treatment in prostatic cancer: effects on serum levels of adrenal androgens and related steroids". Int. J. Androl. 10 (4): 581–7. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2605.1987.tb00357.x . PMID   2958420. Oestrogens at high doses (i.e. polyoestradiol phosphate + oral ethinyl oestradiol or high doses of diethyl stilboestrol phosphate) are reported to cause pronounced decreases in the circulating levels of DHA, DHAS and A-4 (Jonsson ef al., 1975; Leinonen et al., 1981). [...] With respect to oestrogen treatment, modest doses of polyoestradiol phosphate or oestradiol undecylate administered intramuscularly are reported to cause a slight decrease in A-4 and a slightly decreased, or unchanged, level of DHAS, while the levels of DHA remained unchanged (Jonsson et al., 1975; Luukkarinen et al., 1977; Leinonen ef al., 1981; Vermeulen et al., 1982a; Schurmeyer et al., 1986).
  123. 1 2 Pousette A, Carlström K, Stege R (1989). "Androgens during different modes of endocrine treatment of prostatic cancer". Urol. Res. 17 (2): 95–8. doi:10.1007/BF00262027. PMID   2734983. S2CID   25309877.
  124. Labrie F, Martel C, Bélanger A, Pelletier G (April 2017). "Androgens in women are essentially made from DHEA in each peripheral tissue according to intracrinology". J. Steroid Biochem. Mol. Biol. 168: 9–18. doi:10.1016/j.jsbmb.2016.12.007. PMID   28153489. S2CID   2620899.
  125. Chang KH, Ercole CE, Sharifi N (September 2014). "Androgen metabolism in prostate cancer: from molecular mechanisms to clinical consequences". Br. J. Cancer. 111 (7): 1249–54. doi:10.1038/bjc.2014.268. PMC   4183835 . PMID   24867689.
  126. Labrie F, Bélanger A, Pelletier G, Martel C, Archer DF, Utian WH (June 2017). "Science of intracrinology in postmenopausal women". Menopause. 24 (6): 702–712. doi:10.1097/GME.0000000000000808. PMID   28098598. S2CID   3794402.
  127. Warner M, Gustafsson JA (January 2015). "DHEA - a precursor of ERβ ligands". J. Steroid Biochem. Mol. Biol. 145: 245–7. doi:10.1016/j.jsbmb.2014.08.003. PMID   25125389. S2CID   26043868.
  128. Mashchak CA, Lobo RA, Dozono-Takano R, Eggena P, Nakamura RM, Brenner PF, Mishell DR (November 1982). "Comparison of pharmacodynamic properties of various estrogen formulations". Am. J. Obstet. Gynecol. 144 (5): 511–8. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(82)90218-6. PMID   6291391.
  129. L'Hermite M (September 1990). "Risks of estrogens and progestogens" (PDF). Maturitas. 12 (3): 215–46. doi:10.1016/0378-5122(90)90005-q. PMID   2170823.
  130. Carlström K, Pschera H, Lunell NO (December 1988). "Serum levels of oestrogens, progesterone, follicle-stimulating hormone and sex-hormone-binding globulin during simultaneous vaginal administration of 17 beta-oestradiol and progesterone in the pre- and post-menopause". Maturitas. 10 (4): 307–16. doi:10.1016/0378-5122(88)90066-7. PMID   3147360.
  131. 1 2 Sitruk-Ware R, Nath A (June 2011). "Metabolic effects of contraceptive steroids". Rev Endocr Metab Disord. 12 (2): 63–75. doi:10.1007/s11154-011-9182-4. PMID   21538049. S2CID   23760705.
  132. 1 2 Fruzzetti F, Trémollieres F, Bitzer J (May 2012). "An overview of the development of combined oral contraceptives containing estradiol: focus on estradiol valerate/dienogest". Gynecol. Endocrinol. 28 (5): 400–8. doi:10.3109/09513590.2012.662547. PMC   3399636 . PMID   22468839.
  133. Mueller A, Dittrich R, Binder H, Kuehnel W, Maltaris T, Hoffmann I, Beckmann MW (July 2005). "High dose estrogen treatment increases bone mineral density in male-to-female transsexuals receiving gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist in the absence of testosterone". Eur. J. Endocrinol. 153 (1): 107–13. doi: 10.1530/eje.1.01943 . PMID   15994752.
  134. Mueller A, Binder H, Cupisti S, Hoffmann I, Beckmann MW, Dittrich R (March 2006). "Effects on the male endocrine system of long-term treatment with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists and estrogens in male-to-female transsexuals". Horm. Metab. Res. 38 (3): 183–7. doi:10.1055/s-2006-925198. PMID   16673210.
  135. Mueller A, Zollver H, Kronawitter D, Oppelt PG, Claassen T, Hoffmann I, Beckmann MW, Dittrich R (February 2011). "Body composition and bone mineral density in male-to-female transsexuals during cross-sex hormone therapy using gonadotrophin-releasing hormone agonist". Exp. Clin. Endocrinol. Diabetes. 119 (2): 95–100. doi:10.1055/s-0030-1255074. PMID   20625973.
  136. Odlind V, Milsom I, Persson I, Victor A (June 2002). "Can changes in sex hormone binding globulin predict the risk of venous thromboembolism with combined oral contraceptive pills?". Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand. 81 (6): 482–90. doi: 10.1034/j.1600-0412.2002.810603.x . PMID   12047300. S2CID   26054257.
  137. 1 2 3 4 Kohli, M.; Alikhan, M. A.; Spencer, H. J.; Carter, G. (2004). "Phase I trial of intramuscular estradiol valerate (I/M-E) in hormone refractory prostate cancer". Journal of Clinical Oncology. 22 (14_suppl): 4726. doi:10.1200/jco.2004.22.90140.4726. ISSN   0732-183X.
  138. 1 2 3 Kuhli M, McClellan J (2001). "Parenteral estrogen therapy in advanced prostate cancer: retrospective analysis of intramuscular estradiol valerate in "hormone refractory" prostate disease". Proc Am Soc Clin Oncol. 20: 2407a. ISSN   0736-7589.
  139. Ryan CJ, Small EJ (December 2003). "Role of secondary hormonal therapy in the management of recurrent prostate cancer". Urology. 62 (Suppl 1): 87–94. doi:10.1016/j.urology.2003.10.002. PMID   14747046. The use of parenteral estradiol [valerate] in patients with progressive disease after secondary hormonal therapy resulted in PSA decreases in 5 of 5 patients without metastatic disease in a pilot study. In this same study, parenteral estradiol in combination with chemotherapy was also administered.49
  140. 1 2 3 4 Kohli M (January 2006). "Phase II study of transdermal estradiol in androgen-independent prostate carcinoma". Cancer. 106 (1): 234–5, author reply 235. doi: 10.1002/cncr.21528 . PMID   16284988. S2CID   11047031. [...] we explored the effect of combination parenteral estrogen (intramuscular estradiol valerate) and chemotherapy on coagulation and plasminogen system activation in androgen independent stage in a Phase I trial.3 Our primary goal was to monitor coagulation and plasminogen system activation and was performed by using subclinical markers such as thrombin–antithrombin complex (TAT; reference range,1.0 – 4.1 μg/L) and quantitative D-dimer levels (QDD, range:0 – 250 ng/mL) as surrogate markers predictive for thrombohemorrhagic complications. Three escalating doses (10 mg, 20 mg, 40 mg) of intramuscular estradiol valerate were administered every 2 weeks in 12 patients. Before each estradiol valerate dose, these markers were measured, and patients with rising levels above baseline measurements were given once daily prophylaxis with 60 mg of low molecular weight heparin. We found that the majority of patients (10 of 12) had subclinical hemostatic activation as measured by rising plasma TAT and QDD levels after estradiol dosing, which returned to patient-specific baseline with daily prophylactic anticoagulation. No clinical thrombosis or hemorrhagic event was observed.
  141. Horský, Jan; Presl, Jiří (1981). "Hormonal Treatment of Disorders of the Menstrual Cycle". In J. Horsky; J. Presl (eds.). Ovarian Function and its Disorders. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 309–332. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-8195-9_11. ISBN   978-94-009-8195-9.
  142. George Morris Piersol (1975). The Cyclopedia of Medicine, Surgery, Specialties. F. A. Davis Company.
  143. Wajchenberg BL (December 2000). "Subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue: their relation to the metabolic syndrome". Endocr. Rev. 21 (6): 697–738. doi: 10.1210/edrv.21.6.0415 . PMID   11133069. The androgen receptor in female adipose tissue seems to have the same characteristics as that found in male adipose tissue whereas estrogen treatment down regulates the density of this receptor (34), which might be a mechanism whereby estrogens protect adipose tissue from androgen effects. [...] The possible mechanisms for the effects of estrogens on the determination of body fat distribution include the down-regulation of the androgen receptor, thereby preventing androgen effects (34) as mentioned earlier [...]
  144. Brown LM, Clegg DJ (October 2010). "Central effects of estradiol in the regulation of food intake, body weight, and adiposity". J. Steroid Biochem. Mol. Biol. 122 (1–3): 65–73. doi:10.1016/j.jsbmb.2009.12.005. PMC   2889220 . PMID   20035866. [...] estrogen down-regulates AR expression in subcutaneous fat [17].
  145. Bjorntorp P (January 1997), "Endocrine abnormalities in obesity", Diabetes Reviews, 5 (1): 52–68, ISSN   1066-9442, Transsexual women treated with testosterone accumulate visceral fat, but this seems to be the case only where an oophorectomy has been performed (119). [...] The observation that visceral fat accumulation occurs only in transsexual women who have had an oophorectomy (119) suggests that the remaining estrogen production before the oophorectomy (106) was protective. The androgen receptor in female adipose tissue seems to have the same characteristics as that found in male adipose tissue (85; M. Li and P. B., unpublished observations). However, estrogen treatment downregulates the density of this receptor (M. Li and P. B., unpublished observations), which might be a mechanism whereby estrogen protects adipose tissue from androgen effects. Therefore, when estrogen levels become sufficiently low, visceral fat accumulation may occur. The balance between androgens and estrogens therefore seems to be of significance; perhaps the lack of estrogen is more important than the relatively small androgen excess in hyperandrogenic women with visceral accumulation of body fat. [...] Furthermore, estrogen seems to downregulate the androgen receptor density (M. Li and P. B., unpublished observations) and may therefore prevent androgen effects. This possibility is suggested by recent observations indicating that, for androgens to promote visceral fat accumulation in women, oophorectomy seems necessary (119).
  146. 1 2 Ottosson UB, Carlström K, Johansson BG, von Schoultz B (1986). "Estrogen induction of liver proteins and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol: comparison between estradiol valerate and ethinyl estradiol". Gynecol. Obstet. Invest. 22 (4): 198–205. doi:10.1159/000298914. PMID   3817605.
  147. Stanczyk, Frank Z.; Archer, David F.; Bhavnani, Bhagu R. (2013). "Ethinyl estradiol and 17β-estradiol in combined oral contraceptives: pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and risk assessment". Contraception. 87 (6): 706–727. doi:10.1016/j.contraception.2012.12.011. ISSN   0010-7824. PMID   23375353.
  148. Fotherby K (August 1996). "Bioavailability of orally administered sex steroids used in oral contraception and hormone replacement therapy". Contraception. 54 (2): 59–69. doi:10.1016/0010-7824(96)00136-9. PMID   8842581.
  149. Victor Gomel; Malcolm G. Munro; Timothy C. Rowe (1990). Gynecology: a practical approach. Williams & Wilkins. p. 132,134. ISBN   978-0-683-03631-2. The synthetic estrogen, ethinyl estradiol, more commonly used in oral contraceptives, has a biological activity 100 times that of the native and conjugated substances.
  150. Nathaniel McConaghy (21 November 2013). Sexual Behavior: Problems and Management. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 177–. ISBN   978-1-4899-1133-9. Meyer et al. found that ethinyl estradiol was 75 to 100 times more potent than conjugated estrogen on the basis of the doses required to lower testosterone to the adult female range, 0.1 mg of the former and 7.5 to 10 mg of the latter being necessary.
  151. 1 2 Bruce Chabner; Dan Louis Longo (1996). Cancer Chemotherapy and Biotherapy: Principles and Practice. Lippincott-Raven Publishers. p. 186. ISBN   978-0-397-51418-2. Piperazine estrone sulfate and micronized estradiol were equipotent with respect to increases in SHBG, [...] With respect to decreased FSH, [...] ethinyl estradiol was 80 to 200-fold more potent than was piperazine estrone sulfate. [...] The initial half-life of DES is 80 minutes, with a secondary half-life of 24 hours.222
  152. Tommaso Falcone; William W. Hurd (2007). Clinical Reproductive Medicine and Surgery. Elsevier Health Sciences. pp. 22, 362, 388. ISBN   978-0-323-03309-1.
  153. Düsterberg B, Nishino Y (1982). "Pharmacokinetic and pharmacological features of oestradiol valerate". Maturitas. 4 (4): 315–24. doi:10.1016/0378-5122(82)90064-0. PMID   7169965.
  154. Goldzieher JW, Brody SA (1990). "Pharmacokinetics of ethinyl estradiol and mestranol". American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 163 (6 Pt 2): 2114–9. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(90)90550-Q. PMID   2256522.
  155. Elger W, Wyrwa R, Ahmed G, Meece F, Nair HB, Santhamma B, Killeen Z, Schneider B, Meister R, Schubert H, Nickisch K (January 2017). "Estradiol prodrugs (EP) for efficient oral estrogen treatment and abolished effects on estrogen modulated liver functions". J. Steroid Biochem. Mol. Biol. 165 (Pt B): 305–311. doi:10.1016/j.jsbmb.2016.07.008. PMID   27449818. S2CID   26650319.
  156. 1 2 Marc A. Fritz; Leon Speroff (28 March 2012). Clinical Gynecologic Endocrinology and Infertility. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 753–. ISBN   978-1-4511-4847-3.
  157. Notelovitz M (March 2006). "Clinical opinion: the biologic and pharmacologic principles of estrogen therapy for symptomatic menopause". MedGenMed. 8 (1): 85. PMC   1682006 . PMID   16915215.
  158. Goodman MP (February 2012). "Are all estrogens created equal? A review of oral vs. transdermal therapy". J Womens Health (Larchmt). 21 (2): 161–9. doi:10.1089/jwh.2011.2839. PMID   22011208.
  159. Nachtigall LE, Raju U, Banerjee S, Wan L, Levitz M (2000). "Serum estradiol-binding profiles in postmenopausal women undergoing three common estrogen replacement therapies: associations with sex hormone-binding globulin, estradiol, and estrone levels". Menopause. 7 (4): 243–50. doi:10.1097/00042192-200007040-00006. ISSN   1072-3714. PMID   10914617. S2CID   3076514.
  160. Carlström K, Collste L, Eriksson A, Henriksson P, Pousette A, Stege R, von Schoultz B (1989). "A comparison of androgen status in patients with prostatic cancer treated with oral and/or parenteral estrogens or by orchidectomy". Prostate. 14 (2): 177–82. doi:10.1002/pros.2990140210. PMID   2523531. S2CID   25516937.
  161. 1 2 Scarabin PY (December 2014). "Hormones and venous thromboembolism among postmenopausal women". Climacteric. 17 (Suppl 2): 34–7. doi:10.3109/13697137.2014.956717. PMID   25223916. S2CID   5084606.
  162. 1 2 Mohammed K, Abu Dabrh AM, Benkhadra K, Al Nofal A, Carranza Leon BG, Prokop LJ, Montori VM, Faubion SS, Murad MH (November 2015). "Oral vs Transdermal Estrogen Therapy and Vascular Events: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis". J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 100 (11): 4012–20. doi: 10.1210/jc.2015-2237 . PMID   26544651.
  163. Bińkowska M (October 2014). "Menopausal hormone therapy and venous thromboembolism". Prz Menopauzalny. 13 (5): 267–72. doi:10.5114/pm.2014.46468. PMC   4520375 . PMID   26327865.
  164. S. Campbell (6 December 2012). The Management of the Menopause & Post-Menopausal Years: The Proceedings of the International Symposium held in London 24–26 November 1975 Arranged by the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, The University of London. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 395–. ISBN   978-94-011-6165-7.
  165. Phillips I, Shah SI, Duong T, Abel P, Langley RE (2014). "Androgen Deprivation Therapy and the Re-emergence of Parenteral Estrogen in Prostate Cancer". Oncol Hematol Rev. 10 (1): 42–47. doi:10.17925/ohr.2014.10.1.42. PMC   4052190 . PMID   24932461.
  166. Henriksson P, Carlström K, Pousette A, Gunnarsson PO, Johansson CJ, Eriksson B, Altersgård-Brorsson AK, Nordle O, Stege R (1999). "Time for revival of estrogens in the treatment of advanced prostatic carcinoma? Pharmacokinetics, and endocrine and clinical effects, of a parenteral estrogen regimen". Prostate. 40 (2): 76–82. doi:10.1002/(sici)1097-0045(19990701)40:2<76::aid-pros2>3.0.co;2-q. PMID   10386467. S2CID   12240276.
  167. Russell N, Cheung A, Grossmann M (August 2017). "Estradiol for the mitigation of adverse effects of androgen deprivation therapy". Endocr. Relat. Cancer. 24 (8): R297–R313. doi: 10.1530/ERC-17-0153 . PMID   28667081.
  168. 1 2 Shellenberger, T. E. (1986). "Pharmacology of estrogens". The Climacteric in Perspective. pp. 393–410. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-4145-8_36. ISBN   978-94-010-8339-3. Ethinyl estradiol is a synthetic and comparatively potent estrogen. As a result of the alkylation in 17-C position it is not a substrate for 17β dehydrogenase, an enzyme which transforms natural estradiol-17β to the less potent estrone in target organs.
  169. Mueck AO, Seeger H, Rabe T (December 2010). "Hormonal contraception and risk of endometrial cancer: a systematic review". Endocr. Relat. Cancer. 17 (4): R263–71. doi: 10.1677/ERC-10-0076 . PMID   20870686.

Further reading