Raloxifene is a better antioxidant of low-density lipoprotein than estradiol or tamoxifen in postmenopausal women in vitro.

2003 
Objective The oxidation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) is an important factor in the development of atherosclerosis. The antioxidant activity of some compounds buffers the free radicals generated either endogenously or exogenously, thus decreasing the potential damage mediated by oxidation. Estrogens are potent antioxidants of LDL, in vitro and in vivo, a mechanism that could probably influence the cardioprotection associated with hormone replacement therapy in postmenopause. We conducted an in vitro study of the antioxidant effect on LDL of two selective estrogen receptor modulators, raloxifene (RLX) and tamoxifen (TMX), comparing them with the known antioxidant effect of estradiol (E2). Design LDL was isolated by ultracentrifugation from plasma obtained from 12 healthy, untreated, postmenopausal women. Aliquots containing 0.5 mg of LDL protein were incubated for 4 h with CuSO4 (15 μM) to induce oxidative stress and with one of the three compounds studied: RLX, TMX, or E2 at doses of 0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 15, 50, and 500 μM, and 1 and 2 mM. Malonaldehyde (MDA, nmol/mg protein) was measured as a marker of LDL oxidation. Results E2 induced a dose-dependent decrease in MDA concentration. MDA values decreased significantly, as compared with baseline, starting at a concentration of 2 μM for RLX and 3 μM for both, TMX, or E2. The dose necessary to reduce the generation of MDA by 50% was significantly lower for RLX (3.3 μM, P Conclusions The in vitro antioxidant activity of RLX is substantially more potent than TMX or E2. This finding, added to the other beneficial effects of the drug in the cardiovascular system, could imply some cardioprotector effect.
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