Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BEYAZ versus FEMLYV.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: BEYAZ versus FEMLYV.
BEYAZ vs FEMLYV
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Combination of ethinyl estradiol and drospirenone suppresses gonadotropins (FSH and LH) from the pituitary, inhibiting ovulation, altering cervical mucus, and inducing endometrial changes. Drospirenone is a spironolactone analogue with antimineralocorticoid and antiandrogenic activity.
Combination of levonorgestrel, a progestin, and ethinyl estradiol, an estrogen; suppresses gonadotropins, inhibits ovulation, alters cervical mucus and endometrium.
One tablet (drospirenone 3 mg / ethinyl estradiol 0.02 mg) orally once daily for 24 days, followed by 4 days of placebo.
FEMLYV (norethindrone acetate/ethinyl estradiol) is administered as one tablet (1 mg norethindrone acetate/20 mcg ethinyl estradiol) orally once daily for 21 days, followed by 7 days of placebo tablets. The dosing regimen is continuous cyclic.
None Documented
None Documented
Drospirenone: approximately 30 hours (terminal). Ethinyl estradiol: approximately 13-15 hours (terminal). Steady-state reached within 10 days. Clinical context: once-daily dosing maintains therapeutic levels with minimal accumulation after 3-4 cycles.
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 24-30 hours, supporting once-daily dosing in most patients.
Urine (45-55% as metabolites), feces (30-40% as metabolites), with enterohepatic recirculation of ethinyl estradiol metabolites.
Primarily renal (approximately 60-70% as metabolites, less than 10% as unchanged drug); fecal excretion accounts for about 20-30%.
Category C
Category C
Oral Contraceptive
Oral Contraceptive