Enclomiphene & Clomiphene: The Complete Guide

Key Facts

Drug class: Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulator (SERM)
Clomiphene (Clomid): FDA-approved for female ovulation induction
Enclomiphene: Trans-isomer of clomiphene; not FDA-approved
Off-label use: Male hypogonadism — raises testosterone while preserving fertility
Administration: Oral tablet or capsule
Common side effects: Visual disturbances (rare), mood changes, headache, GI upset
Key advantage: Preserves fertility — does not suppress FSH/LH like exogenous testosterone
Cost: Clomiphene $10–$30/mo (generic); Enclomiphene $50–$150/mo (compounded)

Overview

At a Glance

Clomiphene citrate (Clomid) is a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) that has been used for decades to induce ovulation in women. Off-label, it is prescribed to men with hypogonadism (low testosterone) as an alternative to testosterone replacement therapy. Enclomiphene is the more pharmacologically active trans-isomer of clomiphene, developed as a standalone drug (Androxal) for male hypogonadism but never FDA-approved. Both compounds work by blocking estrogen receptors at the hypothalamus, stimulating the body's own testosterone production through the HPG axis — and critically, preserving fertility.

Clomiphene citrate is a racemic mixture of two geometric isomers: enclomiphene (trans-clomiphene) and zuclomiphene (cis-clomiphene). These two isomers have different pharmacological profiles. Enclomiphene is the more potent anti-estrogenic isomer and is primarily responsible for the hypothalamic estrogen receptor blockade that drives testosterone production. Zuclomiphene has weaker anti-estrogenic activity, a longer half-life, and accumulates in tissue over time — contributing to some of clomiphene's estrogenic side effects (Krzastek et al., 2019).

The commercial formulation of clomiphene citrate (Clomid, Serophene) contains approximately 62% enclomiphene and 38% zuclomiphene. The development of pure enclomiphene (marketed under the investigational name Androxal by Repros Therapeutics) was intended to deliver the testosterone-boosting benefits of clomiphene while reducing estrogenic side effects associated with zuclomiphene accumulation (Kaminetsky et al., 2013).

For men with secondary hypogonadism — low testosterone caused by insufficient signaling from the hypothalamus or pituitary rather than testicular failure — clomiphene and enclomiphene represent a fundamentally different approach from exogenous testosterone. Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) suppresses the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis, reducing or eliminating sperm production and causing testicular atrophy. Clomiphene and enclomiphene stimulate the HPG axis, increasing both testosterone and sperm production simultaneously.

Quick Facts

PropertyClomiphene (Clomid)Enclomiphene
Chemical typeRacemic SERM (enclomiphene + zuclomiphene)Pure trans-isomer of clomiphene
FDA statusApproved for female ovulation inductionNot approved (Androxal NDA was not approved)
Half-life~5 days (zuclomiphene accumulates — up to weeks)~10 hours
AvailabilityGeneric prescription ($10–$30/mo)Compounding pharmacies ($50–$150/mo)
Male hypogonadism useOff-label, well-documentedOff-label, compounded preparation
Fertility impactPreserves or improves spermatogenesisPreserves or improves spermatogenesis

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.

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