Sustained-release deslorelin acetate implants disrupt oestrous cyclicity in the mare.
Joonè. C J CJ; Cavalieri. J J
Key Findings
- A single 9.4 mg or triple 28.2 mg deslorelin implant disrupted normal ovarian hormone cycles in 7 of 8 mares.
- Some treated mares maintained high progesterone levels for the full 12‑week study, while others showed erratic cycles.
- Control mares (no active implant) displayed normal estrous cycles throughout the same period.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in GnRH‑agonist peptides, this study suggests that sustained‑release deslorelin can strongly suppress reproductive cycling in horses, but the findings are not directly applicable to human protocols. There is no actionable dosing guidance for people, and safety or efficacy in humans remains untested.
Summary
A study in horses showed that a slow‑release GnRH‑agonist implant (deslorelin) can mess up the normal estrous cycle in most treated mares, keeping their hormone levels abnormal for weeks. The research is specific to female horses and does not directly translate to human use.
Abstract
There is a need for a safe, effective and practical method of oestrus suppression in the mare. The aim of this study was to monitor ovarian activity in mares exposed to either 9.4 or 28.2 mg deslorelin acetate, a GnRH agonist, in the form of a sustained-release implant. Following oestrus synchronisation, mares were randomly assigned to one of three groups (n = 4 per group) and administered either one (Des1 group; 9.4 mg) or three (Des3 group; 28.2 mg) implants of deslorelin acetate (Suprelorin-12, Virbac Australia) or one blank implant (Control group; Virbac Australia). Mares underwent weekly blood sampling for 12 weeks following implant placement (Day 0-Day 84), with transrectal palpation and ultrasonography of the reproductive tract at all sampling timepoints except Days 56, 70 and 77. All mares showed baseline serum progesterone concentrations (SPC; ≤1.3 nmol/L or 0.4 ng/ml) on Day 0. Cycling Control mares showed typical oestrous cyclicity characterised by peaks and troughs in SPC over time. Four of eight treated mares demonstrated a sustained elevation in SPC after the initial ovulation after implant placement; SPC declined to baseline levels (Des1 group; 2 mares) or remained elevated (Des3 group; 2 mares) at the final sampling timepoint on Day 84. Oestrous cyclicity was erratic in three of the remaining four treated mares. In total, 87.5% (7 of 8) of treated mares showed atypical oestrous cyclicity after implant placement. These results suggest that deslorelin acetate disrupts oestrous cyclicity in the mare, which warrants further research.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-04-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/avj.13244
11