Aims Effective stroke treatments beyond reperfusion remain scant. The natural steroid hormone progesterone has shown protective effects in experimental models of brain injury and cardiovascular disease. However, unfavourable bioavailability limits its clinical use. Desogestrel and drospirenone are new generation progestins with progesterone-like properties, developed as oral contraceptives with excellent bioavailability and safety profile. We investigated the neuroprotective properties of these progestins in vivo using transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) and in vitro using an oxygen-glucose deprivation and reoxygenation (OGD/R) model in primary neuronal cells. Methods and results MCAO was induced in female, female ovariectomized (modelling postmenopausal females) and male mice. Treatment with the progestins resulted in less severe strokes after MCAO and less neuronal death in OGD/R. Desogestrel and drospirenone induced higher expression levels of GABA A R α4 and delta subunits within the brain, suggesting changes in GABA A R configuration favouring tonic inhibition as potential mechanism of action. Treatment with the GABA A R blocker picrotoxin abolished the protection afforded by the progestins in vivo and in vitro. Conclusion For the first time, here, we delineate a potential role of desogestrel and drospirenone, both clinically approved and safe drugs in mitigating the consequences of stroke. Contraception with desogestrel and drospirenone in progestin-only preparations may be particularly beneficial for women at risk of stroke.
CITATION STYLE
El Amki, M., Binder, N., Steffen, R., Schneider, H., Luft, A. R., Weller, M., … Wegener, S. (2019). Contraceptive drugs mitigate experimental stroke-induced brain injury. Cardiovascular Research, 115(3), 637–646. https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvy248
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