Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: JENLOGA versus ORTHO NOVUM 7 7 7 21.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: JENLOGA versus ORTHO NOVUM 7 7 7 21.
JENLOGA vs ORTHO-NOVUM 7/7/7-21
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
JENLOGA is a combination of sulfamethoxazole, a sulfonamide, and trimethoprim, a dihydrofolate reductase inhibitor. Sulfamethoxazole inhibits bacterial dihydrofolic acid synthesis by competing with para-aminobenzoic acid, while trimethoprim inhibits dihydrofolate reductase, blocking the conversion of dihydrofolic acid to tetrahydrofolic acid. This sequential blockade produces synergistic bactericidal activity.
Combined hormonal contraceptive; primarily suppresses ovulation via inhibition of gonadotropin release (LH and FSH) from the pituitary. Also induces changes in cervical mucus and endometrium.
350 mg orally once daily with food.
One tablet orally once daily for 21 days, followed by 7 days of no tablets. Each tablet contains norethindrone 0.5 mg/0.75 mg/1 mg and ethinyl estradiol 35 mcg, with biphasic or triphasic dosing per cycle.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal half-life 6-8 hours in healthy adults; prolonged to 12-15 hours in moderate renal impairment (CrCl 30-50 mL/min)
Ethinyl estradiol: 13-27 hours; norethindrone: 8-14 hours; with multiple dosing, steady state after 5-7 days.
Renal (80% as unchanged drug), biliary/fecal (15% as metabolites and unchanged drug)
Renal: <10% unchanged; biliary/fecal: ~50% as metabolites; extensive enterohepatic recirculation.
Category C
Category C
Oral Contraceptive
Oral Contraceptive