Abstract

Combined hormone replacement therapy with oestrogens plus the synthetic progestin medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) is associated with an increased risk of thrombosis. However, the mechanisms of this pro-thrombotic effect are largely unknown. The purpose of this study was to: (i) compare the pro-thrombotic effect of MPA with another synthetic progestin, norethisterone acetate (NET-A), (ii) determine if MPA's pro-thrombotic effect can be antagonized by the progesterone and glucocorticoid receptor antagonist mifepristone and (iii) elucidate underlying mechanisms by comparing aortic gene expression after chronic MPA with that after NET-A treatment. Female apolipoprotein E-deficient mice were ovariectomized and treated with placebo, MPA, a combination of MPA + mifepristone or NET-A for 90 days on a Western-type diet. Arterial thrombosis was measured in vivo in a photothrombosis model. Aortic gene expression was analysed using microarrays; GeneOntology and KEGG pathway analyses were conducted. MPA's pro-thrombotic effects were prevented by mifepristone, while NET-A did not affect arterial thrombosis. Aortic gene expression analysis showed, for the first time, that gestagens induce similar effects on a set of genes potentially promoting thrombosis. However, in NET-A-treated mice other genes with potentially anti-thrombotic effects were also affected, which might counterbalance the effects of the pro-thrombotic genes. The pro-thrombotic effects of synthetic progestins appear to be compound-specific, rather than representing a class effect of gestagens. Furthermore, the different thrombotic responses elicited by MPA and NET-A might be attributed to a more balanced, 'homeostatic' gene expression induced in NET-A- as compared with MPA-treated mice.

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