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. 1983 Nov;10(11):620-5.
doi: 10.1002/bms.1200101108.

Metabolism of aminoglutethimide in humans: identification of hydroxylaminoglutethimide as an induced metabolite

Metabolism of aminoglutethimide in humans: identification of hydroxylaminoglutethimide as an induced metabolite

M Jarman et al. Biomed Mass Spectrom. 1983 Nov.

Abstract

Hydroxylaminoglutethimide (3-ethyl-3-(4-hydroxylaminophenyl)-2,6-piperidinedione) has been identified as a novel metabolite of aminoglutethimide (3-(4-aminophenyl)-3-ethyl-2,6-piperidinedione) in the urine of patients treated chronically with this drug. The metabolite was isolated by reverse-phase thin-layer chromatography, and characterized by comparison of its mass spectrum and chromatographic properties with those of the synthetic compound. Hydroxylaminoglutethimide is unstable; it is readily oxidized to nitrosoglutethimide and disproportionates in the mass spectrometer into this compound and aminoglutethimide. In none of four patients studied was the metabolite detected in the urine after the first dose of the drug. In one patient it appeared after the second dose and in two more within seven to eight days suggesting that its formation is drug-induced, and that it may be the metabolite responsible for the diminished half-life of aminoglutethimide during chronic therapy. The profile of metabolites from one patient, examined by high-performance liquid chromatography after the first dose and again after six weeks of therapy afforded evidence that the formation of hydroxylaminoglutethimide was at the expense of a major metabolite N-acetylaminoglutethimide. Hydroxylaminoglutethimide was not an induced metabolite in the rat.

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