Abstract: | Healthy women requiring abortion in early normal pregnancy were recruited to study the abortifacient effects of different doses of Epostane, an inhibitor of 3 beta-hydroxy steroid dehydrogenase, that previously has been shown to interfere with progesterone production in the luteal phase of humans and to have abortifacient effects in animals. A single dose of 100 mg resulted in decreasing progesterone and estradiol, which rapidly recovered, and none of the women started to bleed. Repeated doses of 50 or 100 mg during one day resulted in a more pronounced decrease in both progesterone and estradiol, but no bleeding. When treatment was prolonged over several days with 100 mg X 4 for five days and 400 mg X 2 for four days, respectively, a suppression of progesterone and estradiol was found and two out of four and eight out of ten women started to bleed and subsequently aborted. The treatment was well tolerated by most of the women. Routine laboratory parameters remained unaltered throughout treatment. Cortisol levels remained within the normal range. |