Details
| Stereochemistry | RACEMIC |
| Molecular Formula | C13H16N2O2 |
| Molecular Weight | 232.2783 |
| Optical Activity | ( + / - ) |
| Defined Stereocenters | 0 / 1 |
| E/Z Centers | 0 |
| Charge | 0 |
SHOW SMILES / InChI
SMILES
CCC1(CCC(=O)NC1=O)C2=CC=C(N)C=C2
InChI
InChIKey=ROBVIMPUHSLWNV-UHFFFAOYSA-N
InChI=1S/C13H16N2O2/c1-2-13(8-7-11(16)15-12(13)17)9-3-5-10(14)6-4-9/h3-6H,2,7-8,14H2,1H3,(H,15,16,17)
| Molecular Formula | C13H16N2O2 |
| Molecular Weight | 232.2783 |
| Charge | 0 |
| Count |
|
| Stereochemistry | RACEMIC |
| Additional Stereochemistry | No |
| Defined Stereocenters | 0 / 1 |
| E/Z Centers | 0 |
| Optical Activity | ( + / - ) |
Aminoglutethimide, marketing as Cytadren has been used in the treatment of advanced breast and prostate cancer. It was formerly used for its weak anticonvulsant properties. Cytadren is indicated for the suppression of adrenal function in selected patients with Cushing’s syndrome. Morning levels of plasma cortisol in patients with adrenal carcinoma and ectopic ACTH producing tumors were reduced on the average to about one half of the pretreatment levels, and in patients with adrenal hyperplasia to about two thirds of the pretreatment levels, during 1-3 months of therapy with Cytadren. Data available from the few patients with adrenal adenoma suggest similar reductions in plasma cortisol levels. Measurements of plasma cortisol showed reductions to at least 50% of baseline or to normal levels in one third or more of the patients studied, depending on diagnostic groups and time of measurement. Because Cytadren does not affect the underlying disease process, it is used primarily as an interim measure until more definitive therapy such as surgery can be undertaken or in cases where such therapy is not appropriate. Only small numbers of patients have been treated for longer than 3 months. A decreased effect or “escape phenomenon” seems to occur more frequently in patients with pituitary dependent Cushing’s syndrome, probably because of increasing ACTH levels in response to decreasing glucocorticoid levels. Cytadren blocks several other steps in steroid synthesis, including the C-11, C-18, and C-21 hydroxylations and the hydroxylations required for the aromatization of androgens to estrogens, mediated through the binding of Cytadren to cytochrome P-450 complexes. A decrease in adrenal secretion of cortisol is followed by an increased secretion of pituitary adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which will overcome the blockade of adrenocortical steroid synthesis by Cytadren. The compensatory increase in ACTH secretion can be suppressed by the simultaneous administration of hydrocortisone. Since Cytadren increases the rate of metabolism of dexamethasone but not that of hydrocortisone, the latter is preferred as the adrenal glucocorticoid replacement. Although Cytadren inhibits the synthesis of thyroxine by the thyroid gland, the compensatory increase in thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) is frequently of sufficient magnitude to overcome the inhibition of thyroid synthesis due to Cytadren. In spite of an increase in TSH, Cytadren has not been associated with increased prolactin secretion. At low doses, aminogluthethimide is only an effective inhibitor of aromatase (Cytochrome P450 11A1), but at higher doses, it effectively blocks Cytochrome P450 11A1 (P450scc) as well. Citadel was marketed previously as an anticonvulsant but was withdrawn from marketing for that indication in 1966 because of the effects on the adrenal gland.
Approval Year
Targets
| Primary Target | Pharmacology | Condition | Potency |
|---|---|---|---|
Target ID: CHEMBL1978 Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7083200 |
|||
Target ID: CHEMBL2033 Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3755630 |
Conditions
| Condition | Modality | Targets | Highest Phase | Product |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palliative | CYTADREN Approved UseCytadren is indicated for the suppression of adrenal function in selected patients with Cushing’s syndrome. Morning levels of plasma cortisol in patients with adrenal carcinoma and ectopic ACTH producing tumors were reduced on the average to about one half of the pretreatment levels, and in patients with adrenal hyperplasia to about two thirds of the pretreatment levels, during 1-3 months of therapy with Cytadren. Data available from the few patients with adrenal adenoma suggest similar reductions in plasma cortisol levels. Measurements of plasma cortisol showed reductions to at least 50% of baseline or to normal levels in one third or more of the patients studied, depending on diagnostic groups and time of measurement.
Because Cytadren does not affect the underlying disease process, it is used primarily as an interim measure until more definitive therapy such as surgery can be undertaken or in cases where such therapy is not appropriate. Only small numbers of patients have been treated for longer than 3 months. A decreased effect or “escape phenomenon” seems to occur more frequently in patients with pituitary dependent Cushing’s syndrome, probably because of increasing ACTH levels in response to decreasing glucocorticoid levels. Launch Date1980 |
Cmax
| Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
5.9 μg/mL |
250 mg 2 times / day multiple, oral dose: 250 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: MULTIPLE co-administered: |
AMINOGLUTETHIMIDE plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: MALE food status: UNKNOWN |
|
5.9 μg/mL EXPERIMENT https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6101151 |
500 mg single, oral dose: 500 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: SINGLE co-administered: |
AMINOGLUTETHIMIDE plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: MALE food status: FASTED |
AUC
| Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
97 μg × h/mL EXPERIMENT https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6101151 |
500 mg single, oral dose: 500 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: SINGLE co-administered: |
AMINOGLUTETHIMIDE plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: MALE food status: FASTED |
T1/2
| Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
12.5 h |
250 mg 2 times / day multiple, oral dose: 250 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: MULTIPLE co-administered: |
AMINOGLUTETHIMIDE plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: MALE food status: UNKNOWN |
|
12.5 h EXPERIMENT https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6101151 |
500 mg single, oral dose: 500 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: SINGLE co-administered: |
AMINOGLUTETHIMIDE plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: MALE food status: FASTED |
Funbound
| Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
75% EXPERIMENT https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6101151 |
500 mg single, oral dose: 500 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: SINGLE co-administered: |
AMINOGLUTETHIMIDE plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: MALE food status: FASTED |
Doses
| Dose | Population | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|
250 mg 4 times / day steady, oral Recommended Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Route: oral Route: steady Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Sources: |
pregnant Health Status: pregnant Sex: F Sources: |
Other AEs: Pseudohermaphroditism... Other AEs: Pseudohermaphroditism (2 patients) Sources: |
250 mg 4 times / day steady, oral Recommended Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Route: oral Route: steady Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy |
Disc. AE: Thrombocytopenia... AEs leading to discontinuation/dose reduction: Thrombocytopenia (severe, 2 patients) Sources: |
AEs
| AE | Significance | Dose | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pseudohermaphroditism | 2 patients | 250 mg 4 times / day steady, oral Recommended Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Route: oral Route: steady Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Sources: |
pregnant Health Status: pregnant Sex: F Sources: |
| Thrombocytopenia | severe, 2 patients Disc. AE |
250 mg 4 times / day steady, oral Recommended Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Route: oral Route: steady Dose: 250 mg, 4 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy |
Overview
| CYP3A4 | CYP2C9 | CYP2D6 | hERG |
|---|---|---|---|
OverviewOther
| Other Inhibitor | Other Substrate | Other Inducer |
|---|---|---|
Drug as perpetrator
| Target | Modality | Activity | Metabolite | Clinical evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11996015/ Page: 7.0 |
yes | |||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11869873/ Page: 7.0 |
yes | |||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11996015/ Page: 252.0 |
yes | |||
| yes | ||||
Page: 56.0 |
yes | |||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17961023/ Page: 3.0 |
yes |
PubMed
| Title | Date | PubMed |
|---|---|---|
| Acute effects of testosterone on intracellular Ca2+ kinetics in rat coronary endothelial cells are exerted via aromatization to estrogens. | 2004-07 |
|
| Hormonal impact of the 17alpha-hydroxylase/C(17,20)-lyase inhibitor abiraterone acetate (CB7630) in patients with prostate cancer. | 2004-06-14 |
|
| Upregulation of steroidogenic enzymes and ovarian 17beta-estradiol in human granulosa-lutein cells by Cordyceps sinensis mycelium. | 2004-05 |
|
| Medical treatment of hyperadrenocorticism in the dog. | 2004-04-16 |
|
| Antinociceptive effects of peripheral benzodiazepine receptors. | 2004-04 |
|
| Oestrogen suppression--lessons from clinical studies. | 2004-03 |
|
| Aromatase inhibitors: new endocrine treatment of breast cancer. | 2004-02 |
|
| Involvement of steroids in anti-inflammatory effects of peripheral benzodiazepine receptor ligands. | 2004-01-30 |
|
| The glucocorticoid receptor mediates the thymic epithelial cell-induced apoptosis of CD4+8+ thymic lymphoma cells. | 2004-01 |
|
| Role of secondary hormonal therapy in the management of recurrent prostate cancer. | 2003-12-29 |
|
| Aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer. | 2003-09-11 |
|
| Aromatase is the major enzyme metabolizing buprenorphine in human placenta. | 2003-09 |
|
| Professor Tom Connors and the development of novel cancer therapies by the Phase I/II Clinical Trials Committee of Cancer Research UK. | 2003-08-04 |
|
| Ff1b is required for the development of steroidogenic component of the zebrafish interrenal organ. | 2003-08-01 |
|
| The role of aromatase inhibitors in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer. | 2003-08 |
|
| Applicability of the intratumor aromatase preclinical model to predict clinical trial results with endocrine therapy. | 2003-08 |
|
| A comparison of the efficacy of aromatase inhibitors in second-line treatment of metastatic breast cancer. | 2003-08 |
|
| Corticosterone enhances adrenocorticotropin-induced calcium signals in bovine adrenocortical cells. | 2003-08 |
|
| Growth retardation as well as spleen and thymus involution in latent TGF-beta binding protein (Ltbp)-3 null mice. | 2003-08 |
|
| Expression of 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11betaHSD) proteins in luteinizing human granulosa-lutein cells. | 2003-07 |
|
| Antidepressant-like effect of Ro5-4864, a peripheral-type benzodiazepine receptor ligand, in forced swimming test. | 2003-06-13 |
|
| [Effects of cycloheximide, aminoglutethimide, indomethacin, cytochalasin B and colchicine on ovulation and the ultrastructure of the ovarian follicle wall in the stellate sturgeon Acipenser stellatus Pall]. | 2003-05-02 |
|
| [Maturation of the follicle-enclosed common frog oocytes stimulated by low progesterone concentrations depends on transcription]. | 2003-05-02 |
|
| Could exemestane affect insulin-like growth factors, interleukin 6 and bone metabolism in postmenopausal advanced breast cancer patients after failure on aminoglutethimide, anastrozole or letrozole? | 2003-05 |
|
| Stereoselective determination of pyridoglutethimide enantiomers in serum with a chiral cellulose-based high-performance liquid chromatographic column using solid phase extraction and UV detection. | 2003-04-01 |
|
| The adrenal cortex and steroidogenesis as cellular and molecular targets for toxicity: critical omissions from regulatory endocrine disrupter screening strategies for human health? | 2003-04-01 |
|
| Update on the current use of hormonals as therapy in advanced breast cancer. | 2003-04 |
|
| Reversal of cycloheximide-induced memory disruption by AIT-082 (Neotrofin) is modulated by, but not dependent on, adrenal hormones. | 2003-04 |
|
| Randomized trial of tamoxifen versus tamoxifen plus aminoglutethimide as adjuvant treatment in postmenopausal breast cancer patients with hormone receptor-positive disease: Austrian breast and colorectal cancer study group trial 6. | 2003-03-15 |
|
| Acute ethanol administration profoundly alters poly I:C-induced cytokine expression in mice by a mechanism that is not dependent on corticosterone. | 2003-03-07 |
|
| Aromatase inhibitors as adjuvant therapy in breast cancer. | 2003-03 |
|
| The therapeutic potential of aromatase inhibitors. | 2003-03 |
|
| Stimulatory effect of progesterone on the expression of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein in MA-10 Leydig cells. | 2003-03 |
|
| A spinal mechanism for the peripheral anti-inflammatory action of indomethacin. | 2003-02-07 |
|
| Aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer: an update. | 2003-01-07 |
|
| Anandamide activity and degradation are regulated by early postnatal aging and follicle-stimulating hormone in mouse Sertoli cells. | 2003-01 |
|
| Breast cancer patients with bone metastases are characterised by increased levels of nonisomerised type I collagen fragments. | 2003 |
|
| Long-term survival of patients given hormonal therapy for metastatic endometrial stromal sarcoma. | 2003 |
|
| Elevation of soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor II in non-febrile patients with acute myeloid leukemia. | 2002-11-25 |
|
| Exemestane: treatment of breast cancer with selective inactivation of aromatase. | 2002-11-15 |
|
| A phase II study of cisplatin and vinorelbine in patients with metastatic breast cancer. | 2002-11 |
|
| Design, synthesis, and evaluation of 4-(4'-aminobenzyl)-2-oxazolidinones as novel inhibitors of the cytochrome P-450 enzyme aromatase. | 2002-10 |
|
| The evolving role of aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer. | 2002-10 |
|
| Glucocorticoids enhance activation of the human type II 3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase/Delta5-Delta4 isomerase gene. | 2002-09 |
|
| Secondary hormonal therapies in the treatment of prostate cancer. | 2002-09 |
|
| Enantiomeric separations using poly(L-valine) and poly(L-leucine) surfactants. Investigation of steric factors near the chiral center. | 2002-08-09 |
|
| Erratum to "CNS drugs in Cushing's disease: pathophysiological and therapeutic implications for mood disorders" [Prog. Neuro-Psycol. Biol. Psychiatry, 26, 763 (2002)]. | 2002-06 |
|
| Medical therapy of Cushing's disease. | 2002 |
|
| Interactions of antioestrogens and aromatase inhibitors. | 2002 |
|
| Identification of the aromatase inhibitor aminoglutethimide in urine by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. | 2002 |
Sample Use Guides
Therapy should be initiated with 250 mg orally four times daily, preferably at 6-hour intervals.
Route of Administration:
Oral
In Vitro Use Guide
Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9795339
To investigate whether adrenocorticotropin receptor (ACTH-R) down-regulation will also be induced in tumor cells, was studied the effect of Aminoglutethimide (AG) on ACTH-R expression in the human NCI-h295 adrenocortical carcinoma cell line, which expresses functional ACTH receptors and produces steroids of the glucocorticoid, mineralocorticoid and androgen pathway. The cells were incubated in triplicate with increasing doses of AG (3, 30, 300 microM) which suppressed steroid secretion dose-dependently.
| Substance Class |
Chemical
Created
by
admin
on
Edited
Mon Mar 31 17:45:47 GMT 2025
by
admin
on
Mon Mar 31 17:45:47 GMT 2025
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| Record UNII |
0O54ZQ14I9
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| Record Status |
Validated (UNII)
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| Record Version |
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| Classification Tree | Code System | Code | ||
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NDF-RT |
N0000175921
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NCI_THESAURUS |
C2355
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LIVERTOX |
40
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NCI_THESAURUS |
C2018
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NDF-RT |
N0000175928
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WHO-VATC |
QL02BG01
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WHO-ATC |
L02BG01
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164
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C233
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677
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0O54ZQ14I9
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330915
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2654
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7494
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2145
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CHEMBL488
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m1707
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SUB05440MIG
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DTXSID8022589
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7054
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AMINOGLUTETHIMIDE
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DB00357
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204-756-4
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837
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D000616
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100000092761
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125-84-8
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ENANTIOMER -> RACEMATE | |||
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ENANTIOMER -> RACEMATE | |||
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EXCRETED UNCHANGED |
After ingestion of a single oral dose, 34%-54% is excreted in the urine as unchanged drug during the first 48 hours
URINE
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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METABOLITE -> PARENT |
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IMPURITY -> PARENT |
CHROMATOGRAPHIC PURITY (HPLC/UV)
EP
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IMPURITY -> PARENT |
CHROMATOGRAPHIC PURITY (HPLC/UV)
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IMPURITY -> PARENT |
CHROMATOGRAPHIC PURITY (HPLC/UV)
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IMPURITY -> PARENT |
CHROMATOGRAPHIC PURITY (HPLC/UV)
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ACTIVE MOIETY |
| Name | Property Type | Amount | Referenced Substance | Defining | Parameters | References |
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| Biological Half-life | PHARMACOKINETIC |
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ORAL ADMINISTRATION |
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| Tmax | PHARMACOKINETIC |
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ORAL ADMINISTRATION |
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