Steingold K A, Cefalu W, Pardridge W, Judd H L, Chaudhuri G
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1986 Apr;62(4):761-6. doi: 10.1210/jcem-62-4-761.
Oral estrogen administration elicits greater effects on hepatic than on nonhepatic markers of estrogen action. This has important clinical implications, since the hepatic actions of estrogens are believed to account for several complications of this form of therapy. To date, the mechanism responsible has been attributed to the so-called first pass effect of the orally administered hormones. The present study was undertaken to examine the in vivo extraction from the circulation of all commercially available classes of estrogens used for replacement therapy. Influxes from the microcirculation into three important target organs of estrogen action, i.e. the brain, uterus, and liver, were assessed. This was accomplished by the use of previously described double isotope, single injection, timed tissue-sampling techniques. For the brain, two patterns of influx were found using different injection vehicles. The first was characterized by high extraction (80-100%) in the absence of plasma proteins. The only inhibitory effects on influx were exerted by plasma proteins. Estrogens displaying this pattern were estradiol, estrone, and ethinyl estradiol. The second pattern was characterized by very restricted influx in the absence of plasma proteins, and plasma protein binding had little or no additional effect. In the absence of plasma proteins, the percentages extracted of estrone sulfate (E1S) and diethylstilbestrol were 6.5% and 38.5%, respectively. For the uterus, the patterns of extraction of all five estrogens were similar to those found for the brain. In contrast, the hepatic microvasculature was freely permeable to all estrogens including E1S and diethylstilbestrol. Albumin binding had little or no effect on hepatic uptake. Significant reductions in the influx of estradiol and E1S were found only when the injection vehicle was human pregnancy serum (high sex hormone-binding globulin concentration). In the presence of plasma proteins, the hepatic extraction of all of the estrogens studied significantly exceeded that in the brain and uterus. We conclude that enhanced delivery of circulating estrogens to the liver compared to that to the brain and uterus provides a further explanation for the enhanced hepatic actions of these preparations when used for oral replacement therapy.
口服雌激素对肝脏雌激素作用标志物的影响比对非肝脏标志物的影响更大。这具有重要的临床意义,因为雌激素的肝脏作用被认为是这种治疗方式的几种并发症的原因。迄今为止,其作用机制一直归因于口服激素的所谓首过效应。本研究旨在检测用于替代疗法的所有市售雌激素类药物在体内从循环中的摄取情况。评估了从微循环进入雌激素作用的三个重要靶器官,即脑、子宫和肝脏的摄取量。这是通过使用先前描述的双同位素、单次注射、定时组织采样技术来完成的。对于脑,使用不同的注射载体发现了两种摄取模式。第一种模式的特征是在没有血浆蛋白的情况下具有高摄取率(80 - 100%)。对摄取的唯一抑制作用是由血浆蛋白产生的。呈现这种模式的雌激素是雌二醇、雌酮和乙炔雌二醇。第二种模式的特征是在没有血浆蛋白的情况下摄取非常有限,血浆蛋白结合几乎没有额外影响。在没有血浆蛋白的情况下,硫酸雌酮(E1S)和己烯雌酚的摄取百分比分别为6.5%和38.5%。对于子宫,所有五种雌激素的摄取模式与在脑中发现的模式相似。相比之下,肝脏微血管对包括E1S和己烯雌酚在内的所有雌激素都是自由通透的。白蛋白结合对肝脏摄取几乎没有影响。仅当注射载体是人妊娠血清(高性激素结合球蛋白浓度)时,才发现雌二醇和E1S的摄取量显著降低。在存在血浆蛋白的情况下,所研究的所有雌激素的肝脏摄取量显著超过脑和子宫中的摄取量。我们得出结论,与脑和子宫相比,循环雌激素向肝脏的递送增加为这些制剂用于口服替代疗法时肝脏作用增强提供了进一步的解释。