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Featured researches published by Gabriela Noé.


Contraception | 1993

Pharmacokinetics and bioavailability of ST 1435 administered by different routes

Gabriela Noé; Ana Maria Salvatierra; Oskari Heikinheimo; X. Maturana; Horacio B. Croxatto

The ovulation inhibiting potency of the synthetic progestin ST 1435 (Nestorone) is high after parenteral administration and practically nil after oral administration. The purpose of this study was to determine the pharmacokinetic parameters of ST 1435 after single oral or intravenous administration or after long-term treatment with subdermal implants in women. After administration, as a single i.v. bolus, the plasma disappearance rate of immunoreactive ST 1435 had two components with half-lives (mean +/- SE) of 3.5 +/- 0.5 and 83 +/- 14 min, respectively. The volume of distribution was 4.7 +/- 1.3 L/Kg and the metabolic clearance rate was 55 +/- 6 L/Kg/d. After oral administration, the bioavailability was about 10% of the dose. After chronic subdermal administration, the plasmatic clearance was slower than following the acute doses. These results show that ST 1435 has shorter half-lives and a faster clearance rate than progestins which bind SHBG. The large volume of distribution indicates accumulation in the extravascular space and was expected in view of the high affinity of ST 1435 for progesterone receptors. The slower plasma elimination rate after chronic administration was attributed to the re-entry of a larger mass of drug from the extravascular space, and/or accumulation of immunoreactive metabolites with slower clearance than the parent steroid.


Contraception | 1994

The progestin ST 1435—rapid metabolism in man

Oskari Heikinheimo; Gabriela Noé; Maija Haukkamaa; Pekka Lähteenmäki

Parenterally administered ST 1435 (Nestorone) is highly potent for contraception, and ovulation can be inhibited with very low serum levels of ST 1435. Orally administered ST 1435 is ineffective in various laboratory animals, presumably due to extensive first-pass metabolism. Thus, ST 1435 has been proposed for lactational contraception, to be metabolized by the suckling infant. We have studied the metabolism of ST 1435 in female volunteers following oral (10 mg), intravenous (iv) (0.1 mg) and transdermal (4.5-9.0 mg) routes of ST 1435 administration. Preliminary studies using rats were performed to develop the methodology of high performance-liquid chromatography (HPLC) fractionation and ST 1435-RIA detection. Rat portal serum revealed 4 distinct peaks of immunoreactive material with the retention times (Rts) of 7.5, 10, 14.5 and 17.5 min (ST 1435 = 10 min). In systemic serum, only the peak with the Rt of 7.5 min could be detected. Therefore, orally administered ST 1435 is very effectively metabolized by the rat liver; this also explains the previously observed lack of biological effects of oral ST 1435. Following oral administration of ST 1435 to two women, the Rt of the major peak was 10 min. The magnitude of the ST 1435 peak decreased rapidly, and at 24h following ingestion, no ST 1435 could be detected by this method. The t1/2 of ST 1435 was approximately 1-2h. In addition, two minor peaks with Rts of 4.5 and 16 min could be detected with the ST 1435 RIA at 1-4h following oral ingestion. Competitive receptor binding assays using the human uterine progesterone receptors (hPR) revealed that the ST 1435 fraction exhibits strong binding affinity towards the hPR; thus, in the human, a small fraction of biologically active ST 1435 seems to escape from the first-pass metabolism following oral intake. Following iv and transdermal administration of ST 1435, the only detectable peak with ST 1435-RIA was that of ST 1435. Similar magnitude of the ST 1435 peaks following oral administration of 10 mg and iv administration of 0.1 mg indicated that the bioavailability of ST 1435 is low. These data seem to confirm the suspicion that orally administered ST 1435 is also rapidly metabolized in the human, therefore encouraging further evaluation of ST 1435 during lactation. However, the rapid metabolism seen after oral intake can be successfully circumvented by sustained parenteral administration of ST 1435.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1999

Sex hormone binding globulin expression and colocalization with estrogen receptor in the human Fallopian tube.

Gabriela Noé

The detection of sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) or SHBG mRNA in several sex steroid target tissues, has raised the possibility that SHBG modulates the action of sex steroids outside the vascular compartment. The presence of SHBG mRNA was investigated by RT-PCR in the poly (A+) RNA fraction of the human Fallopian tube. Human and rat liver were used as positive and negative control tissues, respectively. The electrophoretic analysis of the amplified PCR products showed bands at 219 bp, corresponding to the expected size of the SHBG cDNA, in the Fallopian tube and human liver but not in rat liver, indicating that SHBG might be synthesized by the Fallopian tube. The cellular localization of SHBG and of estrogen receptor (ER) was examined by immunohistochemistry in consecutive sections of Fallopian tube tissues for individual staining or double immunostaining in the same section. Specific immunostaining of SHBG was present in the epithelial, vascular and muscle cells of the ampullary and isthmic region. In epithelial cells, immunoreactive SHBG was present in the apical end with the highest concentration close to the luminal membrane. The ER was localized in the nuclei of epithelial, stromal and muscle cells of the ampulla and isthmus. Double immunostaining showed that SHBG and ER are colocalized principally in epithelial cells of the ampulla and in muscle cells of the isthmus. In conclusion, the detection of SHBG and SHBG mRNA and the localization of SHBG in estrogen target cells was shown. These findings support the hypothesis that SHBG might regulate sex steroid action at the tissue level.


Contraception | 1992

Changes in serum levels of SHBG, endogenous ligands and levonorgestrel induced by ethinylestradiol in NORPLANTR users

Gabriela Noé; M. Pavez; Horacio B. Croxatto

Abstract This work was done in search for a model to examine target organ response to fluctuations in serum levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) and its ligands. The time course and magnitude of fluctuations of SHBG, levonorgestrel (L-Ng), estradiol (E 2 ), testosterone (T) and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in serum were examined during and after treatment with 50 ug of ethinylestradiol (EE 2 ) daily for 10 days in 10 volunteer women using NORPLANT R implants. Six of these volunteers were also treated with 20 ug of EE 2 daily for 7 days and two additional volunteers using a copper-T IUD were treated with 50 ug of EE 2 daily for 7 days. In all cases, SHBG and L-Ng levels increased in a close parallel manner several-fold above basal levels during treatment, reaching a maximum around two days after the last EE 2 pill. In contrast, the levels of E 2 and T increased in one subject, decreased in 5 and remained unchanged in 4, while changes of DHT were unrelated to those of the other ligands. Since the L-Ng “secretion rate” by NORPLANT R implants is constant, it follows that the effect of EE 2 on its levels is due to a decreased metabolic clearance rate, most likely secondary to the increased binding of L-Ng to SHBG in serum. This interpretation is in agreement with the close parallelism in the fluctuations of L-Ng and SHBG.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2012

Effect of single post-ovulatory administration of levonorgestrel on gene expression profile during the receptive period of the human endometrium

Macarena Vargas; Alejandro Tapia-Pizarro; Soledad Henríquez; Marisol Quezada; Ana Maria Salvatierra; Gabriela Noé; David J. Munroe; Luis Velasquez; Horacio B. Croxatto

The hypothesis that levonorgestrel (LNG) used as an emergency contraceptive interferes with endometrial receptivity remains unproven. We compared the endometrial gene expression profile during the receptive period after administering a single dose of LNG 1.5 mg or placebo on day 1 of the luteal phase. An endometrial biopsy was done on day LH+7 or LH+8 and samples were taken from seven volunteers, each one contributing with one cycle treated with placebo and another with LNG. The expression of 20 383 genes was determined using cDNA microarrays. Real-time RT-PCR was used 1) to confirm the differences found in DNA microarray analysis and 2) to determine the effect of LNG on transcript levels of C3, C4BPα, COX2, MAOA, S100A4, and SERPINB9, known to be upregulated during receptivity, and on cPLA2α, JAK1, JNK1, CTSL1, and GSTP1, known to respond to mifepristone. Additional endometrial biopsies were done during the pre-receptive (LH+3) and receptive (LH+7) period and samples were taken from eight untreated volunteers in order to determine the changes associated with acquisition of receptivity of 14 genes. Mean levels of PAEP, TGM2, CLU, IGF2, and IL6ST mRNAs increased after administering LNG while those of HGD, SAT1, EVA1, LOC90133, ANXA1, SLC25A29, CYB5A, CRIP1, and SLC39A14 decreased. Except for the level of ANXA1 transcript, all changes remained within the range observed in untreated controls, and none of the transcripts responding to mifepristone changed in response to LNG. Post-ovulatory administration of LNG caused minimal changes in gene expression profiling during the receptive period. Neither the magnitude nor the nature or direction of the changes endorses the hypothesis that LNG interferes with endometrial receptivity.


Climacteric | 2010

Endometrial effect of progesterone delivered by vaginal rings in estrogen-treated postmenopausal women

Gabriela Noé; Regine Sitruk-Ware; Fernando Zegers-Hochschild; B. Variano; Juan Carlos Montero; P. Arriagada; Arthur Li; Frank Z. Stanczyk; Juan C. Felix; Daniel R. Mishell; Horacio B. Croxatto

Aim The type of estrogen and progestin as well as their doses, route and regimens of administration may each affect the benefit–risk profile of postmenopausal hormone therapy. The aim of this study was to evaluate the endometrial effect of progesterone released continuously from a vaginal ring, combined with transdermal estradiol in postmenopausal women. Method Forty-four postmenopausal women participated in a randomized, double-blind, dose-finding study evaluating two hormonal treatments, combining 50 μg/day of estradiol delivered by transdermal patches and either 0.5-g or 1-g progesterone vaginal rings (PVR) given for 12 weeks. The effect on the endometrium was assessed by histology and the detection of the proliferative marker Ki-67. We also measured the serum concentration of estradiol and progesterone, the tissue concentration of progesterone and the immunolocalization of estradiol and progesterone receptors in the endometrium. Results Endometrial thickness was increased after both treatments, although endometrial histology appeared atrophic in most biopsies. A circulating dose–response of serum progesterone levels was observed from the first to the 12th week of PVR use. In the high-progesterone-dose group, the scarce presence of Ki-67 and hormone receptors reflected the predominant action of progesterone in endometrial glands and stroma, in parallel with a lower tissue concentration of progesterone in this group. Conclusion The PVR appears to be a promising method of administering natural progesterone to postmenopausal women treated with estrogen. Estradiol levels corrected the menopausal symptoms, as expected, and the presence of atrophic endometrium in the majority of women indicated that both doses of progesterone oppose the stimulatory estradiol effects, although the percentage of proliferative tissue was not negligible in both groups.


Contraception | 2010

Contraceptive efficacy of emergency contraception with levonorgestrel given before or after ovulation.

Gabriela Noé; Horacio B. Croxatto; Ana Maria Salvatierra; Verónica Reyes; Claudio Villarroel; Carla Muñoz; Gabriela Morales; Anita Retamales


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2003

A Clinical Trial of 7α-Methyl-19-Nortestosterone Implants for Possible Use as a Long-Acting Contraceptive for Men

Sigrid von Eckardstein; Gabriela Noé; Vivian Brache; Eberhard Nieschlag; Horacio B. Croxatto; Francisco Alvarez; Alfred J. Moo-Young; Irving Sivin; Narender Kumar; Margaret Small; Kalyan Sundaram


Simposio Internacional: la Biología del oviducto | 1991

Hormonal control of ovum transport through the rat oviduct

Horacio B. Croxatto; María Elena Ortiz; María Luisa Forcelledo; Blanca Fuentealba; Gabriela Noé; Grace Moore; Francisco Moran; H. Cárdenas


Contraception | 2012

Letter to the EditorResponse to Letter to the Editor

Gabriela Noé; Horacio B. Croxatto

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Ana Maria Salvatierra

Eastern Virginia Medical School

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Blanca Fuentealba

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Francisco Moran

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Grace Moore

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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H. Cárdenas

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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