Abstract

Healthy adult males received either [ 3H]-equilin intravenously (one subject) or a larger mass of unlabelled equilin orally (three subjects). Blood samples were taken at 20, 40, 60, 90 and 120 min and every h therafter until eight h after injection. Urine was collected in 24 h aliquots for five days from all subjects. The half-life of the disappearance of the unconjugated radioactivity from blood was 30 min and that in the conjugated sulfate fraction was 5 1 2 h . Approximately 50% of the injected radioactivity was recovered in the urine over 5 days. After extraction, hydrolysis and fractionation, most (83%) of the radioactive material found in the urine was present in the glucuronide fraction while only 2 and 6% were present in the unconjugated and sulfate fractions, respectively. The three fractions were combined for further isolation and identification of the metabolites. Radiochemically pure equilin, equilenin, 17β-dihydro-equilin and 17β-dihydroequilenin were isolated and identified but the largest fraction of radioactivity (70.5%) was present in the form of metabolites which are more polar than any of the known ring B unsaturated estrogens. These appear to be polyhydroxy 17-reduced ring B unsaturated estrogens. These results indicate that the ring B unsaturated estrogen equilin is being metabolized in man in a somewhat similar manner to that of the classical estrogen estrone. Knowledge of the formation of 17β-dihydroequilin from equilin in man is of importance because this estrogen is approximately 8 times more potent as a uterotrophic agent than the commonly used estrogen, equilin.

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