Pa. Fail et al., Comparative effects of quinacrine and erythromycin in adult female rats: anonsurgical sterilization study, FERT STERIL, 73(2), 2000, pp. 387-394
Objective: To compare the efficacies of erythromycin and quinacrine for non
surgical sterilization in rats. Quinacrine used for nonsurgical sterilizati
on in women is mutagenic, and most clinical regimens have had a higher fail
ure rate than surgical sterilization.
Design: This acute mammal study included five groups of rats assigned rando
mly and evaluated at two times after treatment.
Animal(s): Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats.
Intervention(s): Five groups of female Sprague-Dawley rats (20 per group) w
ere given 70 or 280 mg/kg of erythromycin lactobionate, 350 mg/kg of quinac
rine hydrochloride, or vehicle control administered transcervically. Rats w
ere mated 21 days later. Additional groups (n = 4 per group) were treated a
nd killed 21 days later without mating.
Main Outcome Measure(s): Fourteen days after mating, numbers of ovarian cor
pora lutea, total uterine implants, and embryos were evaluated. For unmated
animals, uterine sections were examined for fibrosis and lumen closure.
Result(s): Neither drug altered numbers of corpora lutea. Erythromycin decr
eased pregnancy rate and number of implantations (increased preimplantation
loss) in a dose-related fashion. Quinacrine increased resorptions. Uterine
pathology was more extensive and frequent in erythromycin-treated animals,
with extent and severity increasing from 21 to 35+ days.
Conclusion(s): Erythromycin was more effective than quinacrine in preventin
g pregnancy. (Fertil Steril(R) 2000;73:387-94 (C)2000 by American Society f
or Reproductive Medicine.).