| Clinical data | |
|---|---|
| ATC code |
|
| Identifiers | |
| |
| CAS Number | |
| PubChemCID | |
| ChemSpider | |
| UNII | |
| CompTox Dashboard(EPA) | |
| Chemical and physical data | |
| Formula | C18H24O3 |
| Molar mass | 288.387 g·mol−1 |
| 3D model (JSmol) | |
| |
| |
Doisynolic acid is asynthetic,orally active,nonsteroidal estrogen that was never marketed.[1][2][3] The reaction ofestradiol orestrone withpotassium hydroxide, astrong base, results in doisynolic acid as a degradation product, which retains high estrogenic activity, and this reaction was how the drug was discovered, in the late 1930s.[4][5][6] The drug is a highly active and potent estrogen by the oral or subcutaneous route.[4] The reaction ofequilenin ordihydroequilenin with potassium hydroxide was also found to producebisdehydrodoisynolic acid, whose levorotatory isomer is an estrogen with an "astonishingly" high degree of potency, while the dextrorotatory isomer is inactive.[4] Doisynolic acid was named afterEdward Adelbert Doisy, a pioneer in the field of estrogen research and one of the discoverers of estrone.[7]
Doisynolic acid is the parent compound of a group of synthetic, nonsteroidal estrogens with high oral activity.[8] The synthetic, nonsteroidal estrogensmethallenestril,fenestrel, andcarbestrol were all derived from doisynolic acid and are seco-analogues of the compound.[9]Doisynoestrol, also known as fenocycline, iscis-bisdehydrdoisynolic acid methyl ether, and is another estrogenic derivative.[10]
Thisdrug article relating to thegenito-urinary system is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it. |