Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LEVORA 0 15 30 28 versus SYEDA.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LEVORA 0 15 30 28 versus SYEDA.
LEVORA 0.15/30-28 vs SYEDA
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Combination oral contraceptive containing ethinyl estradiol and levonorgestrel. Suppresses gonadotropin (FSH and LH) release from the pituitary, inhibiting ovulation. Also induces changes in cervical mucus (increasing viscosity) and endometrium (reducing receptivity) to impair sperm penetration and implantation.
Syeda is a combination of drospirenone and ethinyl estradiol, a contraceptive that suppresses gonadotropins, primarily inhibiting ovulation; drospirenone has antimineralocorticoid and antiandrogenic activity.
One tablet orally once daily at the same time each day for 28 days (21 active tablets containing 0.15 mg levonorgestrel and 0.03 mg ethinyl estradiol, followed by 7 placebo tablets).
1 tablet (3 mg drospirenone / 0.02 mg ethinyl estradiol) orally once daily for 21 days, followed by 7 days of placebo tablets.
None Documented
None Documented
Ethinyl estradiol: 13-27 hours (terminal); Levonorgestrel: 11-45 hours (terminal, dose-dependent due to SHBG binding).
Terminal elimination half-life of 12-15 hours; allows twice-daily dosing for sustained therapeutic levels.
Renal: ~50% (as glucuronide and sulfate conjugates of ethinyl estradiol and levonorgestrel); Fecal: ~50% (enterohepatic recirculation).
Urinary excretion (40-60% as unchanged drug and metabolites); biliary/fecal elimination accounts for 15-25%.
Category C
Category C
Oral Contraceptive
Oral Contraceptive