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  • Title: Protein binding of active ingredients and comparison of serum ethinyl estradiol, sex hormone-binding globulin, corticosteroid-binding globulin, and cortisol levels in women using a combination of gestodene/ethinyl estradiol (Femovan) or a combination of desogestrel/ethinyl estradiol (Marvelon) and single-dose ethinyl estradiol bioequivalence from both oral contraceptives.
    Author: Hümpel M, Täuber U, Kuhnz W, Pfeffer M, Brill K, Heithecker R, Louton T, Steinberg B, Seifert W, Schütt B.
    Journal: Am J Obstet Gynecol; 1990 Jul; 163(1 Pt 2):329-33. PubMed ID: 2142574.
    Abstract:
    Results from two clinical pharmacokinetic studies are given. The first study was an observational study in oral contraceptive users who took either a combination of gestodene and ethinyl estradiol (pill A, Femovan) or desogestrel and ethinyl estradiol (pill B, Marvelon). A total of 69 women (39 receiving pill A and 30 receiving pill B) were evaluated to determine serum ethinyl estradiol, sex hormone-binding globulin, corticosteroid-binding globulin, and cortisol levels. Samples were obtained on 1 day during the tenth to twenty-first days of pill intake. All women received the respective oral contraceptive for at least 3 months. The test power was such that an 80% difference of 1 standard deviation of each target variable would have been detected (alpha = 0.05; beta = 0.1). No statistically significant differences were found in sex hormone-binding globulin, corticosteroid-binding globulin, or cortisol serum levels between both groups. Time and height of maximum ethinyl estradiol levels were identical as was the area under the curves. Ex vivo protein-binding analysis of the progestins revealed a free portion of 0.6% for gestodene and 2.5% for 3-ketodesogestrel as the active metabolite of desogestrel. Sex hormone-binding globulin-bound portions were much higher for gestodene (75.3% +/- 9.1%) than for 3-ketodesogestrel (31.6% +/- 12%). The remaining fractions were bound to albumin. In a second study, ethinyl estradiol-bioequivalence from pills A and B was investigated in 18 women in a controlled, single-dose, randomized, crossover design. The area under the ethinyl estradiol serum levels were identical up to 4 hours after pill intake between both treatments. According to the relatively low variation in data in this group of women, a 10% difference in ethinyl estradiol-availability could have been detected. Both studies indicate that the pharmacokinetics of ethinyl estradiol were independent of the concomitantly administered progestin, that is, desogestel and gestodene.
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