Megestrol acetate


Megestrol acetate, sold under the brand name Megace among others, is a progestin medication which is used mainly as an appetite stimulant to treat wasting syndromes such as cachexia. It is also used to treat breast cancer and endometrial cancer, and has been used in birth control. MGA is generally formulated alone, although it has been combined with estrogens in birth control formulations. It is usually taken by mouth.
Side effects of MGA include increased appetite, weight gain, vaginal bleeding, nausea, edema, low sex hormone levels, sexual dysfunction, osteoporosis, cardiovascular complications, glucocorticoid effects, and others. MGA is a progestin, or a synthetic progestogen, and hence is an agonist of the progesterone receptor, the biological target of progestogens like progesterone. It has weak partial androgenic activity, weak glucocorticoid activity, and no other important hormonal activity. Due to its progestogenic activity, MGA has antigonadotropic effects. The mechanism of action of the appetite stimulant effects of MGA is unknown.
MGA was discovered in 1959 and was introduced for medical use, specifically in birth control pills, in 1963. It may be considered a "first-generation" progestin. The medication was withdrawn in some countries in 1970 due to concerns about mammary toxicity observed in dogs, but this turned out not to apply to humans. MGA was approved for the treatment of endometrial cancer in 1971 and wasting syndromes in 1993. It is marketed widely throughout the world. It is available as a generic medication.

Medical uses

MGA is used mainly as an appetite stimulant to promote weight gain in a variety of situations. When given at very high dosages, it can substantially increase appetite in most individuals, even those with advanced cancer, and is often used to boost appetite and induce weight gain in patients with cancer or HIV/AIDS-associated cachexia. In addition to its effects on appetite, MGA appears to have antiemetic effects. MGA is also used as an antineoplastic agent in the treatment of breast cancer and endometrial cancer. It is significantly inferior to aromatase inhibitors in both clinical effectiveness and tolerability as a second-line therapy for breast cancer after tamoxifen failure. MGA was formerly used in combined oral contraceptives in combination with ethinylestradiol or mestranol, and has been used in a combined injectable contraceptive in combination with estradiol as well.
Although it has not been approved for these uses, MGA has been studied and/or used off-label for a variety of indications including menopausal hormone therapy and the treatment of hot flashes, gynecological/menstrual disorders, endometriosis, endometrial hyperplasia, ovarian cancer, prostate cancer, benign prostatic hyperplasia, male breast cancer, and precocious puberty. MGA can also be used to treat pattern hair loss in men, but its side effects generally make it unacceptable for this purpose.
Appetite stimulation is achieved with MGA with oral dosages of 400 to 800 mg/day. The optimal dosage with maximum effect for appetite stimulation has been determined to be 800 mg/day. The recommended oral dosage of MGA for breast cancer is 40 mg four times per day, while the medication is used at an oral dosage of 40 to 320 mg/day in divided doses for endometrial cancer. It has been used at far lower dosages in combination with an estrogen for contraceptive purposes.

Available forms

MGA is available as 5 mg, 20 mg, and 40 mg oral tablets and in oral suspensions of 40 mg/mL, 125 mg/mL, 625 mg/5 mL, and 820 mg/20 mL. It was used at doses of 1 mg, 2 mg, 4 mg, and 5 mg in combined oral contraceptives. MGA is formulated at a dose of 25 mg in combination with a dose of 3.75 mg estradiol in a microcrystalline aqueous suspension for use as a once-monthly combined injectable contraceptive in women.

Contraindications

s of MGA include hypersensitivity to MGA or any component of its formulation, known or suspected pregnancy, and breastfeeding. MGA is a teratogen in animals and may have the potential to cause fetal harm, such as decreased fetal weight and feminization of male fetuses.

Side effects

The most common side effect of MGA is weight gain, with an incidence of 15 to 70% at the high dosages used to treat breast cancer. Other side effects include vaginal bleeding, nausea, and edema, as well as others such as dizziness and shortness of breath. MGA can cause hypogonadism and associated symptoms like diminished secondary sexual characteristics, sexual dysfunction, osteoporosis, and reversible infertility in men and premenopausal women. Combining MGA with an androgen/anabolic steroid like oxandrolone, nandrolone decanoate, or testosterone in men can alleviate MGA-associated symptoms of hypoandrogenism as well as further increase appetite and weight gain. Less common but more serious side effects of MGA include cardiovascular/thromboembolic complications such as thrombophlebitis. It may also cause glucocorticoid side effects such as Cushing syndrome-like symptoms, steroid diabetes, and adrenal insufficiency at high dosages. Case reports of deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, jaundice, intrahepatic cholestasis, and meningiomas in association with high-dosage MGA have been published.

Overdose

MGA has been studied at very high dosages of as much as 1,600 mg/day with no serious adverse effects observed. No clear increase in rate or severity of side effects have been observed up to 1,600 mg/day MGA except for weight gain, mild increases in blood pressure, and some fluid retention. In post-marketing experience, limited reports of overdose have been received. Signs and symptoms described in these reports have included diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, shortness of breath, cough, unsteady gait, listlessness, and chest pain. There is no specific antidote for overdose of MGA. Treatment should be supportive and based on symptoms. MGA has not been assessed for dialyzability. However, due to its low solubility, it is thought that dialysis would not be useful for treating MGA overdose.

Interactions

s of MGA include significantly decreased exposure to indinavir, which may necessitate an increased dosage of the medication. When MGA is co-administered with zidovudine and rifabutin, there is no significant change in exposure to these medications and no dosage adjustment is necessary.

Pharmacology

Pharmacodynamics

MGA has progestogenic activity, antigonadotropic effects, weak partial androgenic activity, and weak glucocorticoid activity.

Progestogenic activity

MGA is a progestogen, or an agonist of the progesterone receptor. It has about 65% of the affinity of promegestone and 130% of the affinity of progesterone for the PR. Like other progestogens, MGA has functional antiestrogenic effects in certain tissues such as the endometrium and has antigonadotropic effects. The total endometrial transformation dose of MGA is 50 mg per cycle.

Antigonadotropic and anticorticotropic effects

MGA has antigonadotropic effects in humans at sufficient doses, capable of profoundly suppressing circulating androgen and estrogen concentrations. The antigonadotropic effects of MGA are the result of activation of the PR, which suppresses the secretion of the gonadotropins – peptide hormones responsible for signaling the body to produce not only progesterone but also the androgens and the estrogens – from the pituitary gland as a form of negative feedback inhibition, and hence downregulates the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis, resulting in decreased levels of the sex hormones and interference with fertility. As such, MGA has functional antiandrogenic and antiestrogenic effects as well as contraceptive effects via its antigonadotropic effects.
The precise ovulation-inhibiting dosage of MGA is unknown. However, doses of 1 to 5 mg MGA were previously used in combined birth control pills in combination with the estrogen ethinylestradiol or mestranol. MGA is an effective contraceptive by itself at dosages of 0.35 to 0.5 mg/day, but is not effective at a dosage of 0.25 mg/day. MGA alone does not inhibit ovulation at a dosage of 0.5 mg/day, nor does it fully inhibit ovulation at a dosage of 0.7 mg/day or even at a dosage of 5 mg/day. The combination of 2 to 5 mg/day MGA and 100 μg/day mestranol has been found to consistently inhibit ovulation, whereas either medication alone did not completely inhibit ovulation in all women.
Suppression of testosterone levels by MGA is responsible for its effectiveness in the treatment of conditions like prostate cancer and benign prostatic hyperplasia. In one study, 120 to 160 mg/day MGA suppressed testosterone levels in men by 72%. However, a recovery or "escape" of testosterone levels, gradually returning to near-normal values, has been observed in most men after 2 to 6 months of MGA therapy, and this has limited the usefulness of the medication. The combination of a lower dosage of MGA and a low oral dosage of an estrogen such as estradiol, diethylstilbestrol or ethinylestradiol is able to suppress testosterone levels into the castrate range in men, maintain this suppression long-term, and achieve equivalent effectiveness to high-dosage estrogen monotherapy in the treatment of prostate cancer with comparatively greatly reduced toxicity and side effects. In spite of these results however, this combination has been very rarely used to treat prostate cancer in the United States.
The antigonadotropic as well as anticorticotropic effects of MGA may be involved in its effectiveness in the treatment of postmenopausal breast cancer via substantially decreasing gonadal and adrenal production of sex steroids and by extension circulating levels of estrogens, by about 80%.

Androgenic and antiandrogenic activity

MGA is a weak partial agonist of the androgen receptor. It has been reported to bind to this receptor with 5% of the affinity of the anabolic steroid metribolone. Despite its weak intrinsic activity at the AR, at clinical doses in humans, MGA appears to behave, for all intents and purposes, purely as an antiandrogen. This is based on the fact that no virilizing side effects have been observed with the use of MGA in patients of either sex at dosages up to as high as 1,600 mg per day, the highest that has been assessed. Furthermore, MGA produces detectable androgenic effects in animals only at a dose that is the equivalent of approximately 200 times that typically used for the treatment of prostate cancer in men. However, the medication does have moderate androgenic effects on serum lipids in humans, causing a significant reduction of HDL cholesterol| and cholesterol levels and no change in triglyceride levels at a dosage of only 5 mg/day. The weak but significant androgenic activity of MGA may serve to limit its clinical effectiveness in the treatment of prostate cancer.

Glucocorticoid activity

MGA is an agonist of the glucocorticoid receptor, the biological target of glucocorticoids like cortisol. It has been found to possess 30% of the affinity of the corticosteroid dexamethasone for this receptor. MGA shows the lowest ratio of PR affinity to GR affinity of a broad selection of marketed progestins, suggesting that it may have among the highest relative glucocorticoid effect of the progestins used in medicine. MGA produces observable glucocorticoid effects, with one study finding that, in the dose range tested, it possessed about 50% of the eosinopenic and hyperglycemic activity of an equal amount of medroxyprogesterone acetate and about 25% that of hydrocortisone. Accordingly, manifestations of its glucocorticoid activity, including symptoms of Cushing's syndrome, steroid diabetes, and adrenal insufficiency, have been reported with the use of MGA in the literature, albeit sporadically.

Appetite stimulation

MGA is frequently used as an appetite stimulant to promote weight gain. The direct mechanism of appetite enhancement is unclear, but it is known that MGA induces a variety of downstream changes to cause the effect, including stimulation of the release of neuropeptide Y in the hypothalamus, neurosteroid-like modulation of calcium channels in the ventromedial hypothalamus, and inhibition of the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines including interleukin 1α, interleukin 1β, interleukin 6, and tumor necrosis factor α, all of which have been implicated in facilitation of appetite. Increased levels of insulin-like growth factor 1 may also be involved, specifically in its anabolic effects.

Miscellaneous

Unlike the case of the AR, MGA has no significant affinity for the ER. As such, it does not possess the capacity to directly activate the ER. Furthermore, unlike antiandrogens such as spironolactone and bicalutamide but similarly to cyproterone acetate, there is relatively little risk of indirectly mediated estrogenic side effects with MGA. This is because MGA strongly suppresses both androgen and estrogen levels at the same time. Similarly to the case of the ER, MGA has negligible affinity for the mineralocorticoid receptor, and hence does not possess mineralocorticoid or antimineralocorticoid activity.
MGA has been found to dose-dependently increase total and free IGF-1 levels up to a dosage of 120 mg/day. Total IGF-1 levels were described as "profoundly" increased, gradually increasing, significantly by 3 days of treatment, up to a maximum of 2.66-fold by 5 to 6 months of treatment. Free concentrations of IGF-1 were increased to a smaller extent, by 1.23–2.15-fold, and were described as increasing "moderately". It was suggested that the increase in IGF-1 levels with high-dosage MGA therapy may explain the anabolic effects of MGA in patients with cachexia.

Pharmacokinetics

The oral bioavailability of MGA is approximately 100%. After a single low oral dose of 4 mg MGA, peak serum concentrations of MGA were about 7 ng/dL and occurred after 3 hours. Following a single high oral dose of 160 mg micronized MGA in men, peak circulating levels of MGA were 125 ng/mL and occurred after 6.3 hours. This study found that micronized MGA at this dose showed considerably improved absorption relative to its conventional tablet form. In terms of plasma protein binding, MGA is bound mostly to albumin and is not bound to sex hormone-binding globulin or to corticosteroid-binding globulin. MGA metabolized in the liver mainly by hydroxylation of the C21, C2α, and C6 positions, as well as by reduction and conjugation. Its elimination half-life is 34 hours on average, with a range of 13 to 105 hours. MGA is excreted 57 to 78% in urine and 8 to 30% in feces.
At high doses, MGA appears to have far greater bioavailability and potency than medroxyprogesterone acetate, regardless of whether the route of administration of the latter is oral or parenteral. Following oral administration of 80 to 160 mg MGA or 500 to 1,000 mg medroxyprogesterone acetate, circulating levels of MGA were 2- to 10-fold higher than those of medroxyprogesterone acetate. Similar findings have been found for oral MGA relative to medroxyprogesterone acetate administered via intramuscular injection. MGA also reaches steady-state levels more quickly than medroxyprogesterone acetate. The improved potency of MGA compared to medroxyprogesterone acetate may be due to increased resistance to metabolism of MGA afforded by its C6 double bond.
The pharmacokinetics of MGA have been reviewed.

Chemistry

MGA, also known as 17α-acetoxy-6-dehydro-6-methylprogesterone or as 17α-acetoxy-6-methylpregna-4,6-diene-3,20-dione, is a synthetic pregnane steroid and a derivative of progesterone. It is specifically a derivative of 17α-hydroxyprogesterone with a methyl group at the C6 position, a double bond between the C6 and C7 positions, and an acetate ester at the C17α position. MGA is the C17α acetate ester of megestrol, which, in contrast to MGA, was never marketed. Analogues of MGA include other 17α-hydroxyprogesterone derivatives such as acetomepregenol, anagestone acetate, chlormadinone acetate, cyproterone acetate, hydroxyprogesterone caproate, medroxyprogesterone acetate, and nomegestrol acetate. MGA differs from medroxyprogesterone acetate only by its C6 double bond. Close analogues of MGA that were never marketed include cymegesolate and megestrol caproate.

Synthesis

of MGA have been published.

History

MGA was synthesized at Syntex in 1959. It was derived from medroxyprogesterone acetate, which had been synthesized at Syntex in 1957. MGA was the third synthetic derivative of progesterone to be developed for use as a medication, following hydroxyprogesterone caproate in 1954 and medroxyprogesterone acetate in 1957. The medication was introduced for medical use in combination with ethinylestradiol as an oral contraceptive in 1963 by British Drug Houses in the United Kingdom under the brand name Volidan, and this was followed by Serial 28 and Volidan 21 in 1964 and Nuvacon in 1967, all by British Drug Houses also in the United Kingdom. It was also marketed under the brand name Delpregnin by 1965, among others.
In the early 1970s, MGA was found to be associated with mammary tumors in beagle dogs, and along with several other progestogens, was withdrawn as an oral contraceptive from several markets including the United Kingdom, Canada, and Germany. It was also under investigation for use as a contraceptive in the United States, but development was discontinued in 1972 following the mammary toxicity findings in dogs, and MGA was never marketed as an oral contraceptive in the United States. Subsequent research, such as monkey studies, revealed that there is no similar risk in humans. Following its withdrawal from the market, MGA was eventually reintroduced for the treatment of hormone-sensitive cancers. In addition, MGA was marketed for veterinary use in dogs in 1969 in the United Kingdom and in 1974 in the United States.
Progesterone was first found to be effective in the treatment of endometrial hyperplasia in 1951, and progestins were first found to be effective in the treatment of endometrial cancer in 1959. MGA was reported to be effective in the treatment of endometrial hyperplasia in the mid-1960s. It first started to be studied as a treatment for endometrial cancer in 1967, with findings published in 1973. MGA was reportedly introduced for the treatment of endometrial cancer in the United States in 1971. Progesterone was studied in the treatment of breast cancer in 1951 and 1952, but with relatively modest results. MGA was first studied in the treatment of breast cancer in 1967, and was one of the first progestins to be evaluated for the treatment of this disease. A second study was conducted in 1974. A "breakthrough" and surge of interest in progestins for breast cancer occurred in 1978 when a study using a massive dosage of medroxyprogesterone acetate to treat breast cancer was published. A third study of MGA for breast cancer was published in 1980, and this was followed by additional studies in the 1980s and beyond. MGA was approved for the treatment of breast cancer in the United States by at least 1983.
Progestogens, including progesterone and ethisterone, were studied in the treatment prostate cancer in 1949. MGA was first studied in the treatment of prostate cancer in 1970. Additional studies were conducted in 1975 and 1978, followed by others thereafter. However, results of MGA therapy for prostate cancer have been "disappointing", and the medication has not been approved for the treatment of prostate cancer in the United States or elsewhere.
Clinical studies of very high dosages of MGA for breast cancer conducted in the 1980s observed markedly increased appetite and weight gain in treated patients despite them having advanced cancer. This led to potential interest in MGA as an appetite stimulant, and in 1986, a paper was published proposing the study and potential use of MGA in cachexia. MGA was subsequently studied for this indication and, following completion of phase III clinical trials, was approved as an oral suspension for the treatment of anorexia–cachexia syndrome due to cancer and other chronic conditions such as HIV/AIDS in the United States in 1993.

Society and culture

Generic names

Megestrol acetate is the generic name of the drug and its,,, and, while megestrol is the and and mégestrol the of megestrol, the free alcohol form of MGA. The medication is also known by its developmental code names BDH-1298, NSC-71423, and SC-10363.

Brand names

MGA is marketed under a variety of brand names throughout the world but is most commonly sold under the brand name Megace. It is also available under the brand name Megace ES in the United States and under the brand name Megace OS in Canada. For use in veterinary medicine, MGA is sold as Ovaban in the United States and as Ovarid in the United Kingdom.

Availability

MGA is available widely throughout the world, including in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, elsewhere throughout Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Latin America, Asia, and a few African countries. It does not appear to be marketed in Germany, Russia, South Africa, Japan, India, or Mexico, among other countries.

Generation

Progestins in birth control pills are sometimes grouped by generation. While the 19-nortestosterone progestins are consistently grouped into generations, the pregnane progestins that are or have been used in birth control pills are typically omitted from such classifications or are grouped simply as "miscellaneous" or "pregnanes". In any case, based on its date of introduction in such formulations of 1963, MGA could be considered a "first-generation" progestin.

Research

MGA has been studied in men in combination with testosterone as a male hormonal contraceptive to suppress spermatogenesis.

Veterinary use

MGA has been used in veterinary medicine under the brand name Ovaban in the treatment of medical conditions in cats and dogs. Due to its ability to suppress testosterone levels, MGA can control sexually dimorphic traits in males. As a result, MGA has been used to reduce dominance, inter-male aggression, mounting, urine spraying, and roaming in male dogs and cats.