Issue 11, 2017

Environmental photochemistry of dienogest: phototransformation to estrogenic products and increased environmental persistence via reversible photohydration

Abstract

Potent trienone and dienone steroid hormones undergo a coupled photohydration (in light)-thermal dehydration (in dark) cycle that ultimately increases their environmental persistence. Here, we studied the photolysis of dienogest, a dienone progestin prescribed as a next-generation oral contraceptive, and used high resolution mass spectrometry and both 1D and 2D nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to identify its phototransformation products. Dienogest undergoes rapid direct photolysis (t1/2 ∼ 1–10 min), forming complex photoproduct mixtures across the pH range examined (pH 2 to 7). Identified products include three photohydrates that account for ∼80% of the converted mass at pH 7 and revert back to parent dienogest in the absence of light. Notably, we also identified two estrogenic compounds produced via the A-ring aromatization of dienogest, evidence for a photochemically-induced increase in estrogenic activity in product mixtures. These results imply that dienogest will undergo complete and facile photolytic transformation in sunlit surface water, yet exhibit greater environmental persistence than might be anticipated by inspection of kinetic rates. Photoproduct mixtures also include transformation products with different nuclear receptor binding capabilities than the parent compound dienogest. These outcomes reveal a dynamic fate and biological risk profile for dienogest that must also take into account the composition and endocrine activity of its transformation products. Collectively, this study further illustrates the need for more holistic regulatory, risk assessment, and monitoring approaches for high potency synthetic pharmaceuticals and their bioactive transformation products.

Graphical abstract: Environmental photochemistry of dienogest: phototransformation to estrogenic products and increased environmental persistence via reversible photohydration

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 7 2017
Accepted
05 10 2017
First published
05 10 2017

Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2017,19, 1414-1426

Environmental photochemistry of dienogest: phototransformation to estrogenic products and increased environmental persistence via reversible photohydration

N. C. Pflug, M. K. Hankard, Stephanie M. Berg, M. O'Connor, J. B. Gloer, E. P. Kolodziej, D. M. Cwiertny and K. H. Wammer, Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2017, 19, 1414 DOI: 10.1039/C7EM00346C

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