Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ENOVID E 21 versus ORTHO NOVUM 7 14 28.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ENOVID E 21 versus ORTHO NOVUM 7 14 28.
ENOVID-E 21 vs ORTHO-NOVUM 7/14-28
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Norethindrone is a progestin that suppresses gonadotropin release, inhibiting ovulation; mestranol is an estrogen that stabilizes endometrium and provides cycle control.
Combination oral contraceptive containing ethinyl estradiol and norethindrone. Suppresses gonadotropin release (FSH, LH) via negative feedback, inhibiting ovulation. Also increases cervical mucus viscosity and alters endometrial receptivity.
One tablet (norethynodrel 2.5 mg, mestranol 0.1 mg) orally once daily for 21 consecutive days, followed by 7 days without medication. Repeat cycle.
One tablet daily for 28 days; each tablet contains norethindrone 0.5 mg and ethinyl estradiol 0.035 mg (days 1-7), norethindrone 0.75 mg and ethinyl estradiol 0.035 mg (days 8-14), norethindrone 1 mg and ethinyl estradiol 0.035 mg (days 15-21), and placebo (days 22-28). Take at same time each day.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life: 27–36 hours (mean 30.8 h). Steady-state reached after 5–7 days. Clinical context: allows once-daily dosing with stable estrogenic effect.
Ethinyl estradiol: ~13-27 h (mean 17 h); Norethindrone: ~5-14 h (mean 8 h). Clinical context: steady-state achieved after ~5 days; half-life supports daily dosing.
73% renal (45% as unchanged norethindrone, 20% as conjugates, 8% as other metabolites), 27% fecal via bile. Enterohepatic recirculation accounts for 15% of total clearance.
Renal: ~50-60% (metabolites); biliary/fecal: ~30-40% (metabolites); unchanged drug <1% in urine.
Category C
Category C
Oral Contraceptive
Oral Contraceptive