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Biotransformation of diethylstilbestrol in the rhesus monkey and the chimpanzee.

Diethylstilbestrol (DES) is considered a teratogen and a transplacental carcinogen in humans. In order to compare its biotransformation in nonhuman primates to that in humans, a metabolic study was carried out in rhesus monkeys and chimpanzees. After an oral dose of 1 mg/kg [14C]DES, approximately 59% of the ingested radioactivity was found in the urine and 28% in the feces of two female rhesus monkeys after 4 days, while in male rhesus monkeys urinary radioactivity accounted for 43% and fecal radioactivity for 35%. In chimpanzees, 63% of a 0.5 mg/kg dose was excreted with the urine in a female and 47% in a male animal. In both species, urinary radioactivity was predominantly (greater than 70%) associated with glucuronides. Besides DES, three metabolites were found in the urinary glucuronide fraction of rhesus monkeys and chimpanzees by radio gas chromatography and were identified as dienestrol and omega-hydroxy derivatives of DES and dienestrol. Fecal radioactivity in rhesus monkeys was shown to consist exclusively of DES. Glucuronidation of DES appears to occur in neonatal and fetal rhesus monkeys.[1]

References

  1. Biotransformation of diethylstilbestrol in the rhesus monkey and the chimpanzee. Metzler, M., Müller, W., Hobson, W.C. Journal of toxicology and environmental health. (1977) [Pubmed]
 
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