8 research outputs found

    Return to fertility after extended chemical castration with a GnRH antagonist

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    BACKGROUND: Antagonistic analogues of GnRH for the treatment of prostate cancer may be used clinically in persons for whom return to fertility after such treatment is important or desirable. The purpose of this study was, therefore, to evaluate the effects of a long term treatment with orntide, a GnRH antagonist, on testosterone levels and fertility in male rats. METHODS: Two groups of male rats received either 120-day orntide microspheres (8.8 mg orntide/kg/120 days) or vehicle alone (control group). Serum orntide and testosterone levels in both groups were monitored at certain intervals for 9 months from the initiation of treatment. After recovery of normal serum testosterone levels in the treated animals, each rat was housed with two proven breeder, but drug-naive, females. RESULTS: All mates of treated rats achieved pregnancy as rapidly as the mates of control rats although two of the control rats did not sire a litter with either female and one sired only one litter. The mean size of the litters of treated (12.3 offspring per litter) and control (10.6 offspring per litter) were similar. All offspring were grossly normal morphologically and behaviorally during the time to weaning. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that lack of fertility due to testosterone suppression is reversible after cessation of treatment with this GnRH antagonist

    Return to fertility after extended chemical castration with a GnRH antagonist

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    Abstract Background Antagonistic analogues of GnRH for the treatment of prostate cancer may be used clinically in persons for whom return to fertility after such treatment is important or desirable. The purpose of this study was, therefore, to evaluate the effects of a long term treatment with orntide, a GnRH antagonist, on testosterone levels and fertility in male rats. Methods Two groups of male rats received either 120-day orntide microspheres (8.8 mg orntide/kg/120 days) or vehicle alone (control group). Serum orntide and testosterone levels in both groups were monitored at certain intervals for 9 months from the initiation of treatment. After recovery of normal serum testosterone levels in the treated animals, each rat was housed with two proven breeder, but drug-naive, females. Results All mates of treated rats achieved pregnancy as rapidly as the mates of control rats although two of the control rats did not sire a litter with either female and one sired only one litter. The mean size of the litters of treated (12.3 offspring per litter) and control (10.6 offspring per litter) were similar. All offspring were grossly normal morphologically and behaviorally during the time to weaning. Conclusions These results suggest that lack of fertility due to testosterone suppression is reversible after cessation of treatment with this GnRH antagonist.</p

    A novelin vitro release technique for peptide-containing biodegradable microspheres

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    The purpose of this study was to develop and evaluate a dialysisin vitro release technique for peptide-containing poly(d, 1-lactide-coglycolide) (PLGA) microspheres (ms) that would correlate within vitro data. Using a luteinizing hormone- releasing hormone analogue (LHRH), Orntide acetate, solubility and stability were determined in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (PB), pH 7.4, and in 0.1 M acetate buffer (AB), pH 4.0, with highperformance liquid chromotography (HPLC), and peptide permeability through a dialysis membrane (molecular weight cut-off 300,000) was determined. Orntide ms were prepared by a dispersion/solvent extraction/evaporation method and characterized for drug content (HPLC), particle size distribution (laser diffraction method), and surface morphology (scanning electron microscopy).In vitro release was studied in PB using a conventional extraction method and with a new dialysis method in AB. Gravimetric analyses of polymer mass loss and matrix hydration, and peptide adsorption to blank PLGA ms (50∶50, Mw 28 022) were carried out in PB and AB upon incubation at 37°C. Serum Orntide and testosterone levels in rats after administration of Orntide ms were determined by radioimmunoassay. Orntide acetate solubility was influenced by pH; approximately 2.3 mg/mL dissolved in PB and >18 mg/mL in AB. Stability was pH- and temperature-dependent. The peptide was very stable at pH 4.0, 4°C, but degraded rapidly at pH 7.4,37°C. Peptide permeability through the dialysis membrane was accelerated by agitation and>95% equilibrium was reached within 48 hours. The overall release rate was higher with the dialysis method. Mass loss of the Orntide ms was faster in AB (50% loss in 3 weeks: 95% in 35 days) than in PB (65% in 35 days). In contrast, hydration after 35 days was 4-fold higher in PB. The nonspecific adsorption to blank ms was greater in PB (128 μ g Orntide/10 mg PLGA) compared with AB (<5 μ g Orntide/10 mg PLGA). Administration of 30-day Orntide PLGA ms to rats resulted in an initial serum Orntide level of 21 ng/mL after 6 hours and a Cmax of 87 ng/mL after 6 days. Testesterone levels were suppressed immediately after ms administration (3 mg Orntide/Kg) from 5.2 ng/mL to 0.3 ng/mL (after 24 hours) and remained suppressed for 38 days. Orntide acetate solubility and degradation kinetics were markedly influenced by pH of the buffer systems and mass loss; matrix hydration, as well as the nonspecific adsorption to blank ms, was pH-dependent. Thein vitro release profile obtained with the dialysis method in AB correlated well with thein vivo data, therepy providing a more reliable prediction ofin vivo performance
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