Contraception
Volume 79, Issue 4 , Pages 272-281, April 2009

Profile of the progesterone derivative chlormadinone acetate — Pharmocodynamic properties and therapeutic applications

Anemo-Menopause Centre, 06000 Nice, France

Received 6 May 2008; received in revised form 27 October 2008; accepted 28 October 2008. published online 19 January 2009.

Abstract 

Chlormadinone acetate (CMA) is a derivative of progesterone (17α-acetoxy-6-chloro-4,6-pregnadiene-3,20-dione), first synthesized in 1961 and is used as an orally effective progestogen in hormone replacement therapy (HRT), and in combination with ethinyl estradiol (EE) in contraception since 1999. Chlormadinone acetate has a strong progestogenic effect — about one-third higher than that of progesterone — and may vary depending on the previous effect of an estrogen, i.e., estrogens may promote the formation of progesterone receptors and proliferation of the endometrium. Like progesterone, it is anti-estrogenic and has no partial androgenic effect (at the doses used for contraception and HRT). In contrast to progesterone, it has a slight glucocorticoid effect, a pronounced anti-androgenic effect and no anti-mineralocorticoid effect. No pregnancy-maintaining effect of CMA has been demonstrated in humans.

The anti-androgenic effect of CMA is presumed to be the result of both its binding to androgen receptors — competitively inhibiting the effect of endogenous testosterone and dihydrotestosterone — and the competitive inhibition of 5α-reductase. In this respect, dosing of CMA is crucial; agonistic effects are observed when doses are increased from those optimal for an antagonistic effect.

Chlormadinone acetate has a strong anti-gonadotropic effect, through negative feedback on gonadotropin secretion, and has been used for more than 20 years alone for contraception in arterial risk patients. The clinical and metabolic tolerability of CMA has been demonstrated in numerous clinical studies with duration of treatment of up to 2.5 years.

The more recent application of CMA as an oral contraceptive in combination with EE (Neo Eunomin®, Belara®) has proven highly successful, with studies reporting excellent contraceptive efficacy, high tolerability and adherence due to a good side effect profile and positive effects on preexisting dysmenorrhea, skin and hair conditions.

Keywords: Chlormadinone acetate, Oral contraceptive, Anti-androgenic efficacy

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 This review was sponsored by Grünenthal GmbH, Aachen, Germany.

PII: S0010-7824(08)00548-9

doi:10.1016/j.contraception.2008.10.017

Contraception
Volume 79, Issue 4 , Pages 272-281, April 2009