Cedars M I, Judd H L
Obstet Gynecol Clin North Am. 1987 Mar;14(1):269-98.
Thus, the effects that a specific estrogen has on the liver is the summation of several mechanisms, including the first pass mechanism and the enhanced delivery of circulating estrogens to this organ. For example, the major estrogen in conjugated estrogen is estrone sulfate. Based on the present data, very little circulating estrone sulfate is available to the brain or uterus (Fig. 25). Since most of the hypothalamus is behind the blood-brain barrier, it is unlikely estrone sulfate exerts a direct action on gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons to reduce its secretion and, subsequently, gonadotropin levels. Estrone sulfate also does not interact with the estrogen receptor. It is possible the small amount of estrone sulfate that crosses the blood-brain barrier is converted to unconjugated estrogens locally and these could have function. More likely, the major mechanism by which estrone sulfate suppresses GnRH release is through conversion to unconjugated estrogens, principally estrone, in the liver. The large extraction of estrone sulfate by the liver allows accessibility of the hepatocyte for this conversion. Based on this concept, conjugated estrogen must enter the liver to be converted to its active forms. The route of administration then should have little impact on changing the relative potency of this preparation on hepatic and nonhepatic markers of estrogen action. For ethinyl estradiol, the preparation is orally active because it is rapidly and almost completely absorbed from the stomach and undergoes limited hepatic metabolism before entry into the general circulation (Fig. 26). This limited hepatic metabolism reduces the impact of the first pass mechanism on ethinyl estradiol. Thus, the enhanced hepatic action of ethinyl estradiol is principally related to the greater entry of this estrogen into the liver than other organs (Fig. 27). Consequently, the route of administration should have little impact on the exaggerated hepatic actions of this estrogen. Orally administered estradiol undergoes substantial hepatic metabolism to less active forms, principally estrogen conjugates. The amount of estradiol leaving the liver following oral administration is substantially less than that which enters it through the portal vein. The systemic administration of estradiol avoids this initial hepatic metabolism. Furthermore, only 25 per cent of nonorally administered estrogen will go to the liver at each pass, and nonhepatic tissues would be exposed to a greater extent than after oral administration. Thus, peripheral administration of estradiol reduces the exaggerated hepatic responses in comparison to nonhepatic actions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
因此,特定雌激素对肝脏的作用是多种机制的总和,包括首过效应机制以及循环雌激素向该器官的增强递送。例如,结合雌激素中的主要雌激素是硫酸雌酮。根据目前的数据,循环中的硫酸雌酮很少能进入大脑或子宫(图25)。由于下丘脑的大部分位于血脑屏障之后,硫酸雌酮不太可能直接作用于促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)神经元以减少其分泌,进而降低促性腺激素水平。硫酸雌酮也不与雌激素受体相互作用。有可能少量穿过血脑屏障的硫酸雌酮在局部被转化为未结合的雌激素,而这些雌激素可能具有功能。更有可能的是,硫酸雌酮抑制GnRH释放的主要机制是在肝脏中转化为未结合的雌激素,主要是雌酮。肝脏对硫酸雌酮的大量摄取使得肝细胞能够进行这种转化。基于这一概念,结合雌激素必须进入肝脏才能转化为其活性形式。给药途径对改变该制剂对雌激素作用的肝脏和非肝脏标志物的相对效力应该影响很小。对于乙炔雌二醇,该制剂口服有活性,因为它能迅速且几乎完全从胃中吸收,在进入体循环之前仅经历有限的肝脏代谢(图26)。这种有限的肝脏代谢减少了首过效应机制对乙炔雌二醇的影响。因此,乙炔雌二醇增强的肝脏作用主要与该雌激素比其他器官更多地进入肝脏有关(图27)。因此,给药途径对这种雌激素夸张的肝脏作用应该影响很小。口服的雌二醇会经历大量肝脏代谢,转化为活性较低的形式,主要是雌激素结合物。口服给药后离开肝脏的雌二醇量远少于通过门静脉进入肝脏的量。雌二醇的全身给药避免了这种初始肝脏代谢。此外,每次非口服给药的雌激素只有25%会进入肝脏,非肝脏组织比口服给药后会更多地暴露于雌激素。因此,与非肝脏作用相比,雌二醇的外周给药减少了夸张的肝脏反应。(摘要截断于400字)