Benorterone, also known by its developmental code name SKF-7690 and as 17α-methyl-B-nortestosterone, is a steroidal antiandrogen which was studied for potential medical use but was never marketed.[2][3] It was the first known antiandrogen to be studied in humans.[1] It is taken by mouth or by application to skin.[1]
Pharmacology
Pharmacodynamics
Benorterone is an antiandrogen, or an antagonist of the androgen receptor (AR), the biological target of the androgensex hormonestestosterone and dihydrotestosterone.[3] In one study, the affinity of benorterone for the AR was found to be about 5-fold greater than that of cyproterone acetate in rat prostatecytosol; the Ki values were 0.7 nM for benorterone and 3.7 nM for cyproterone acetate, which were 243% and 46% of those of testosterone (Ki = 1.7 nM), respectively.[4][5] However, another study found that benorterone had only 11% of the affinity of dihydrotestosterone for the androgen receptor.[4] Although an antiandrogen, benorterone actually is a very weak partial agonist of the AR and has been reported to possess weak androgenic activity.[6] The same is true for cyproterone acetate and other steroidal antiandrogens.[7][8]
Unlike certain other steroidal antiandrogens such as cyproterone acetate, benorterone is not also a progestogen, instead being described as a selective and pure AR antagonist similarly to nonsteroidal antiandrogens such as flutamide and bicalutamide.[9][3] However, although it is described as not being a progestogen, benorterone was found to produce "a highly variable decrease in plasma testosterone levels," indicating that it has weak antigonadotropic effects.[3][10] The reasons for this are unclear, as other pure antiandrogens such as cyproterone (not cyproterone acetate) and flutamide do not do this and instead produce consistent increases in testosterone levels.[11] However, it is notable that the anabolic steroidmethyltestosterone, which benorterone differs from in chemical structure only by the removal of a carbonatom in the B ring, is aromatized into the estrogenmethylestradiol and has potentestrogenic activity.[12] Estrogens are antigonadotropic similarly to androgens and progestogens and are likewise able to suppress testosterone levels.[13] In accordance, the compound corresponding to what would be the aromatized form of benorterone, 17α-methyl-B-norestradiol, has been described and has been reported to possess estrogenic activity, although the aromatization of benorterone has not been assessed.[14]
A couple of studies found that prothrombin levels decreased by 50% in some patients treated with benorterone, although a causal relationship between this change and benorterone could not be shown.[3]
Benorterone was developed in the late 1950s, was first reported to possess antiandrogenic activity in 1964, and was investigated in clinical trials in the mid-to-late 1960s.[2][1][6] It was the first known antiandrogen to be studied in humans.[1] The drug was found to be effective in the treatment of acne, seborrhea, and hirsutism in women.[3][15][16] In addition, unlike progestogenic antiandrogens such as cyproterone acetate, it seldom produced side effects in women and did not affect menstruation.[3] However, in males, benorterone was not effective for acne, and produced high rates of gynecomastia (in 12 out of 13 or 92% of young men treated with 75 to 300 mg/day benorterone).[17][18][19] Shortly following the observance of this side effect, it was withdrawn from clinical studies.[3][1] Subsequently, cyproterone acetate, which has a greatly reduced risk of gynecomastia by virtue of its concomitant progestogenic and antigonadotropic actions (which results in suppression of estrogen levels), was developed instead and was introduced for medical use in 1973.[20] In addition, spironolactone, a steroidal antimineralocorticoid that was introduced for medical use in 1959, was discovered to possess potent antiandrogenic activity in 1969, and became widely used clinically as an antiandrogen after its first use in an androgen-dependent condition in 1978.[21][22][23]
Society and culture
Generic names
Benorterone is the generic name of the drug and its INNTooltip International Nonproprietary Name and USANTooltip United States Adopted Name.[2] It is also known by its developmental code names SKF-7690 and FC-612.[2]
References
^ abcdefgJacobs HS (1979). Advances in gynaecological endocrinology: proceedings of the Sixth Study Group of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, 18th and 19th October, 1978. The College. p. 367. ISBN978-0-87489-225-3. Limited clinical experience also exists with benorterone, the first anti-androgen tried in man, and with free cyproterone. In the late sixties benorterone was reported to give promising results in 93 androgenized women but was soon withdrawn from clinical trial, mainly because of the development of gynaecomastia in the male. As a big advantage compared with CPA, it was found to be effective not only orally but also topically. Free cyproterone, on the other hand, proved to be without clinical value for reasons that cannot be discussed here. Thus we are left with CPA as the only anti-androgen that is already on the market in several countries.
^Oettel M (6 December 2012). "Estrogens and Antiestrogens in the Male". In Oettel M, Schillinger E (eds.). Estrogens and Antiestrogens II: Pharmacology and Clinical Application of Estrogens and Antiestrogen. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 505–574 (543). ISBN978-3-642-60107-1.
^US 3377361, Fare LR, Kerwin JR, Kinney RW, "B-norestrogens", issued 9 April 1968, assigned to Smith Kline and French Laboratories Ltd.
^Zarate A, Mahesh VB, Greenblatt RB (December 1966). "Effect of an antiandrogen, 17-alpha-methyl-B-nortestosterone, on acne and hirsutism". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 26 (12): 1394–1398. doi:10.1210/jcem-26-12-1394. PMID4225258.
^Caplan RM (September 1967). "Gynecomastia from a non-estrogenic anti-androgen". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 27 (9): 1348–1349. doi:10.1210/jcem-27-9-1348. PMID4227085.
^Steelman SL, Brooks JR, Morgan ER, Patanelli DJ (October 1969). "Anti-androgenic activity of spironolactone". Steroids. 14 (4): 449–450. doi:10.1016/S0039-128X(69)80007-3. PMID5344274.
^Ober KP, Hennessy JF (November 1978). "Spironolactone therapy for hirsutism in a hyperandrogenic woman". Annals of Internal Medicine. 89 (5 Pt 1): 643–644. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-89-5-643. PMID717935.