Over-the-counter progesterone cream produces significant drug exposure compared to a food and drug administration-approved oral progesterone product

Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 45(6), 614-619

DOI 10.1177/0091270005276621 PMID 15901742

Abstract

Progesterone products are available in prescription form as well as over-the-counter (OTC) topical preparations sold for "cosmetic" uses. In a randomized study design, the authors compared the drug exposure from an OTC progesterone cream to a Food and Drug Administration-approved oral preparation at the labeled daily doses recommended for each product. Twelve healthy postmenopausal women received 200-mg oral progesterone capsules once daily for 12 days or progesterone cream 40 mg twice daily for 12 days. At steady state (day 12 of each phase), whole-blood samples were collected over 24 hours (oral progesterone) or 12 hours (topical progesterone) and assayed for total progesterone concentration. No significant differences were found in dose-normalized 24-hour progesterone exposure comparing the cream to oral capsules (median AUC(0-24) 12.5 ng x h/mL vs 10.5 ng x h/mL, respectively; P = .81). In light of the potential risks associated with long-term progesterone use, the authors question whether topical progesterone products should be available OTC.

Topics

over the counter progesterone cream drug exposure, topical progesterone versus oral progesterone bioavailability, OTC progesterone cream postmenopausal women pharmacokinetics, progesterone cream steady state AUC comparison, transdermal progesterone serum levels dose normalized, oral progesterone capsule 200mg pharmacokinetic comparison, progesterone cream FDA regulation safety concerns, randomized crossover progesterone delivery route comparison, whole blood progesterone concentration topical cream, over the counter hormone products safety regulation
PMID 15901742 15901742 DOI 10.1177/0091270005276621 10.1177/0091270005276621

Cite this article

Hermann, A. C., Nafziger, A. N., Victory, J., Kulawy, R., Rocci, M. L., & Bertino, J. S. (2005). Over-the-counter progesterone cream produces significant drug exposure compared to a food and drug administration-approved oral progesterone product. *Journal of clinical pharmacology*, *45*(6), 614-619. https://doi.org/10.1177/0091270005276621

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