| Literature DB >> 36158399 |
Zalak V Karena1, Harsh Shah2, Hetvee Vaghela2, Kalp Chauhan2, Pranav K Desai2, Asjad Raza Chitalwala2.
Abstract
Mifepristone is a progesterone and glucocorticoid receptor antagonist. Medical abortion with mifepristone and prostaglandin has revolutionized the abortion process extending abortion care to the doors of females. From as low as 2 mg/day to doses extending to 600 mg, from daily dosing to single dosage treatment, mifepristone has a wide perspective in the treatment of various pathologies. Cervical dilatation and myometrial contractility have made the utility of mifepristone feasible for second-trimester termination of pregnancy and induction of labor awaiting Food and Drug Administration approvals. Its anti-progesterone action on the menstrual cycle has a new dimension of use as a contraceptive, as well as use as a menstruation inductive agent. Its role in endometriosis, ectopic pregnancy, and adenomyosis requires more intensive research. Apoptotic action of mifepristone, interference of heterotypic cell adhesion to the basement membrane, cell migration, growth inhibition of various cancer cell lines, decreased epidermal growth factor expression, suppression of invasive and metastatic cancer potential, increase in tumor necrosis factor, downregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase 2, B-cell lymphoma 2, and Nuclear factor kappa B have opened its potential to be explored as anti-cancer treatment and its effects on leiomyoma. The drug needs to be studied more for the prospectus of its anti-glucocorticoid actions in a wider dimension beyond its acquiescence for the treatment of Cushing syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: abortion; cushing disease; cushing syndrome; leiomyoma; medical termination of pregnancy; meningioma; mifepristone
Year: 2022 PMID: 36158399 PMCID: PMC9499832 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.28318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Obstetric and gynecological uses of mifepristone.
FDA: Food and Drug Administration; LNG: levonorgestrel; DMPA: depot medroxyprogesterone acetate; LH: luteinizing hormone; IVF: in vitro fertilization
| Obstetric and gynecological uses | Indications | Recommended doses |
| FDA-approved use | ||
| 1 | Early pregnancy termination | Mifepristone 200 mg orally on day 1, misoprostol 800 µg buccally after 24-48 hours |
| Proposed uses | ||
| 1 | Second-trimester termination of pregnancy |
Mifepristone 200 mg orally, followed by misoprostol 200 μg vaginally 3 hourly [ |
| 2 | Missed abortion and fetal demise |
600 mg/day for 2 days [ |
| 3 | Menstrual induction |
Mifepristone 600 mg single dose [ |
| 4 | Emergency contraception |
Less than 25 mg single dose [ |
| 5 | Estrogen-free contraceptive pill |
2 and 5 mg daily [ |
| 6 | Cervical dilatation |
600 mg orally single dose [ |
| 7 | Induction of labor |
200 mg single dose [ |
| 8 | Ectopic pregnancy |
Methotrexate 50 mg/m2 intramuscularly and mifepristone 600 mg orally [ |
| 9 | Endometriosis |
50 and 100 mg daily for 6 months [ |
| 10 | Leiomyomas |
10-25 mg daily for 3 months [ |
| 11 | Adenomyosis |
5 mg daily [ |
| 12 | Breakthrough bleeding in LNG and DMPA |
50 mg every 2 weeks for 24 weeks [ |
| 13 | Premature LH surges undergoing controlled ovarian hyperstimulation in IVF |
2.5 mg two doses after follicle aspiration [ |
Figure 1Adverse effects of mifepristone with high doses.
MR: mineralocorticoid receptor; TFT: thyroid function test; blue circle: effects due to excess glucocorticoid receptor antagonism; red circle: effects due to adrenal insufficiency; green circle: effects due to cortisol withdrawal
Non-gynecological uses of mifepristone.
CS: Cushing syndrome; DM: diabetes mellitus; GR: glucocorticoid receptor; TNBC: triple-negative breast cancer; GBM: glioblastoma multiforme; IOP: intraocular pressure; HPA: hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal; GABA: gamma-aminobutyric acid; AD: Alzheimer’s disease
| Non-gynecological uses | Author | Type of study | Study details | Conclusions |
| Cushing syndrome | Morgan and Laufgraben [ | Review of therapeutics | The article reviews the role of mifepristone in CS treatment | Mifepristone is recommended for CS to control hyperglycemia and those who are not candidates for surgical treatment. The recommended starting dosage is 300 mg/day. Maximum dosage is 1,200 mg/day |
| Fleseriu et al. [ | Clinical trial | 50 adults with endogenous CS and associated type 2 diabetes mellitus/impaired glucose tolerance (C-DM) or a diagnosis of hypertension (C-HT) | In C-DM: Significant decrease in HbA1c, decrease in fasting plasma glucose. In C-HT: Improvement in DBP, decreased waist circumference, and mean weight change | |
| Katznelson et al. [ | Clinical trial | 46 adult patients with refractory CS along with type 2 DM or impaired glucose tolerance, and/or a diagnosis of hypertension | 88% of patients had clinically significant improvement at 24 weeks | |
| Insulin sensitivity and resistance | Gubbi et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | 16 overweight individuals with pre-diabetes or mild type 2 DM but not clinical hypercortisolism studied | Short-term mifepristone administration improves adipose and hepatic insulin sensitivity among obese individuals with hyperglycemia without hypercortisolism by GR blockade |
| Cancer | Nanda et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | Nine patients were enrolled. Patients were randomized to placebo or mifepristone for the first cycle; mifepristone was given to all for subsequent cycles | Immunohistochemical staining for GR found six of nine tumors were GR-positive. All six GR-positive tumors were triple-negative at the time of recurrence. Of these six patients, two had a complete response, two had partial responses, one had stable disease, and one had progressive disease. GR inhibition by mifepristone plus chemotherapy produces manageable toxicity |
| Liu et al. [ | An experimental study (cell line study) | A compound library containing 17 compounds by altering the sensitive metabolic region of mifepristone is studied for the treatment of TNBC cell lines | FZU-00,003 displayed the most potent efficiency | |
| Kim et al. [ | An experimental study (mouse model) | Mouse model of ovarian cancer that mimics the clinical metastases of human high-grade serous carcinoma | An effective chemopreventive strategy in the BRCA gene mutation for ovarian cancer and by extension breast cancer | |
| Goyeneche et al. [ | An experimental study (cell line and animal study) | Ovarian cancer cell lines of different genetic backgrounds (SK-OV-3, Caov-3, OV2008, and IGROV-1) | In vitro, mifepristone inhibited ovarian cancer cell proliferation in a dose- and time-dependent manner. In vivo, mifepristone significantly delayed the growth of ovarian carcinoma xenografts in a dose-dependent manner | |
| Serritella et al. [ | Clinical trial | 106 patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer | Enzalutamide combined with mifepristone was safe and well-tolerated but did not meet its endpoint | |
| Meningioma | Ji et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | 164 eligible patients, 80 were randomly assigned to mifepristone and 84 to placebo | Twenty-four patients (30%) were able to complete 2 years of mifepristone without disease progression. There was no statistical difference in failure-free or overall survival |
| Llaguno-Munive et al. [ | An experimental trial (animal study) | Wistar rats were studied after orthotopically implanting C6 glioma cells | Mifepristone could act as a chemosensitizing agent for temozolomide during chemotherapy for GBM | |
| Ocular pathology | ||||
| Uveal melanoma | Alvarez et al. [ | An experimental study (cell lines) | In vitro, uveal melanoma cells were incubated with mifepristone for up 72 hours | Mifepristone inhibits functionality, growth capacity, and viability of human primary and metastatic uveal melanoma cell lines in a concentration-related manner |
| Glaucoma | Green et al. [ | An experimental study (animal study) | Topically administered mifepristone | Mifepristone alone reduced IOP relative to controls and the further addition of medrysone (progesterone) at 14 days did not affect IOP. Mifepristone is an effective antagonist against progesterone’s effects on IOP |
| Green et al. [ | An experimental study (animal study) | Topical dexamethasone interaction with mifepristone | Mifepristone caused a lower intraocular pressure than seen in other groups, whether in the presence or absence of dexamethasone | |
| Psychiatric diseases | ||||
| Depression | Flores et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | 30 patients’ data were analyzed. 15 were randomized to placebo, and 15 were randomized to mifepristone for 8 days | Short-term use of mifepristone may be effective in the treatment of psychotic major depression and may re-regulate the HPA axis |
| Alcohol dependence and withdrawal | Khom et al. [ | An experimental study (animal study) | 67 adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats with alcohol vapor dependence | Mifepristone decreased GABA release with the largest effect in dependent rats |
| Olanzapine-induced weight gain | Beebe et al. [ | An experimental study (animal study) | Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats grouped to olanzapine and mifepristone | Results suggest that mifepristone, a potent glucocorticoid antagonist, may both reduce and prevent olanzapine-induced weight gain in rats |
| Alzheimer’s disease (AD) | Belanoff et al. [ | Clinical trial | The rate of cognitive decline is compared in AD subjects randomized to receive 200 mg of mifepristone daily for 6 months or a placebo | Mifepristone decelerated the rate of cortisol-related cognitive decline in subjects with mild-to-moderate AD |