Drug
An antigonadotropin is a drug which suppresses the activity and/or downstream effects of one or both of the gonadotropins , follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). This results in an inhibition of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis , and thus a decrease in the levels of the androgen , estrogen , and progestogen sex steroids in the body. Antigonadotropins also inhibit ovulation in women and spermatogenesis in men. They are used for a variety of purposes, including for the hormonal birth control , treatment of hormonally -sensitive cancers , to delay precocious puberty and puberty in transgender youth , as a form of chemical castration to reduce the sex drives of individuals with hypersexuality or pedophilia , and to treat estrogen-associated conditions in women such as menorrhagia and endometriosis , among others. High-dose antigonadotropin therapy has been referred to as medical castration .
The best-known and widely used antigonadotropins are the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogues (both agonists and antagonists ).[ 1] However, many other drugs have antigonadotropic properties as well, including compounds acting on sex steroid hormone receptors such as progestogens, androgens, and estrogens (due to negative feedback on the HPG axis),[ 2] [ 3] as well as steroid synthesis inhibitors such as danazol and gestrinone .[ 4] [ 5] Since progestins have relatively little effect on sexual differentiation compared to the other sex steroids, potent ones such as cyproterone acetate , medroxyprogesterone acetate , and chlormadinone acetate are often used at high doses specifically for their antigonadotropic effects.[ 2] [ 6] [ 7]
Danazol , gestrinone , and paroxypropione have all been classified specifically as antigonadotropins.[ 8]
Prolactin has antigonadotropic effects and hyperprolactinemia can cause hypogonadism .[ 9] [ 10]
Opioids have antigonadotropic effects and can reduce luteinizing hormone and testosterone levels in men.[ 11] [ 12] [ 13] A 2015 systematic review and meta-analysis found that opioid therapy decreased testosterone levels in men by about 165 ng/dL (5.7 nmol/L) on average, which was a reduction in testosterone level of almost 50%.[ 11] In contrast to opioids, opioid antagonists , like naltrexone , have progonadotropic effects, and can increase luteinizing hormone and testosterone levels.[ 14]
See also
References
^ Jonathan S. Berek; Emil Novak (2007). Berek and Novak's Gynecology . Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-7817-6805-4 . Retrieved 29 May 2012 .
^ a b de Lignières B, Silberstein S (April 2000). "Pharmacodynamics of oestrogens and progestogens" . Cephalalgia: An International Journal of Headache . 20 (3): 200–7. doi :10.1046/j.1468-2982.2000.00042.x . PMID 10997774 . S2CID 40392817 .
^ Gooren L (October 1989). "Androgens and estrogens in their negative feedback action in the hypothalamo-pituitary-testis axis: site of action and evidence of their interaction". Journal of Steroid Biochemistry . 33 (4B): 757–61. doi :10.1016/0022-4731(89)90488-3 . PMID 2689784 .
^ Jonathan S. Berek; Emil Novak (2007). Berek and Novak's Gynecology . Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 1167. ISBN 978-0-7817-6805-4 . Retrieved 29 May 2012 .
^ Singh H, Jindal DP, Yadav MR, Kumar M (1991). "Heterosteroids and drug research". Progress in Medicinal Chemistry . 28 : 233–300. doi :10.1016/s0079-6468(08)70366-7 . ISBN 9780444812759 . PMID 1843548 .
^ Bercovici JP (September 1987). "[Progestational contraception]". La Revue du Praticien (in French). 37 (38): 2277–8, 2281–4. PMID 3659794 .
^ Chassard D, Schatz B (2005). "[The antigonadrotropic activity of chlormadinone acetate in reproductive women]". Gynécologie, Obstétrique & Fertilité (in French). 33 (1–2): 29–34. doi :10.1016/j.gyobfe.2004.12.002 . PMID 15752663 .
^ George W.A. Milne (8 May 2018). Drugs: Synonyms and Properties: Synonyms and Properties . Taylor & Francis. pp. 674–. ISBN 978-1-351-78989-9 .
^ Bernard V, Young J, Binart N (June 2019). "Prolactin - a pleiotropic factor in health and disease". Nat Rev Endocrinol . 15 (6): 356–365. doi :10.1038/s41574-019-0194-6 . PMID 30899100 . S2CID 84846294 .
^ Saleem M, Martin H, Coates P (February 2018). "Prolactin Biology and Laboratory Measurement: An Update on Physiology and Current Analytical Issues" . Clin Biochem Rev . 39 (1): 3–16. PMC 6069739 . PMID 30072818 .
^ a b Bawor M, Bami H, Dennis BB, Plater C, Worster A, Varenbut M, Daiter J, Marsh DC, Steiner M, Anglin R, Coote M, Pare G, Thabane L, Samaan Z (April 2015). "Testosterone suppression in opioid users: a systematic review and meta-analysis" . Drug Alcohol Depend . 149 : 1–9. doi :10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.01.038 . PMID 25702934 .
^ Coluzzi F, Billeci D, Maggi M, Corona G (December 2018). "Testosterone deficiency in non-cancer opioid-treated patients" . J Endocrinol Invest . 41 (12): 1377–1388. doi :10.1007/s40618-018-0964-3 . PMC 6244554 . PMID 30343356 .
^ Smith HS, Elliott JA (July 2012). "Opioid-induced androgen deficiency (OPIAD)". Pain Physician . 15 (3 Suppl): ES145–56. PMID 22786453 .
^ Tenhola H, Sinclair D, Alho H, Lahti T (February 2012). "Effect of opioid antagonists on sex hormone secretion". J Endocrinol Invest . 35 (2): 227–30. doi :10.3275/8181 . PMID 22183092 . S2CID 31583157 .
External links
GnRH modulators (incl. analogues )
Gonadotropins
Others (indirect)
Progonadotropins Antigonadotropins
Sex steroid agonists (via negative feedback on the HPG axis ): Androgens /anabolic steroids (e.g., testosterone , nandrolone esters , oxandrolone )
D2 receptor antagonists (prolactin releasers ) (incl., domperidone , metoclopramide , risperidone , haloperidol , chlorpromazine , sulpiride )
Estrogens (incl., bifluranol , estradiol , estradiol esters , ethinylestradiol , diethylstilbestrol , paroxypropione )
Progestogens (incl. progestins , e.g., chlormadinone acetate , cyproterone acetate , hydroxyprogesterone caproate , gestonorone caproate , medroxyprogesterone acetate , megestrol acetate )
GnRH Tooltip Gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor Gonadotropin
LH/hCG Tooltip Luteinizing hormone/choriogonadotropin receptor FSH Tooltip Follicle-stimulating hormone receptor