Latest News

Vaginal Ring Use Raises Risk for Certain STIs


 

FROM ACOG 2024

Data Inform Multipurpose Prevention Technology

Dr. Vincent and her colleague, Richard Pyles, PhD, have a 15-year history of studying vaginal drug and hormone effects on the vaginal mucosa in women and preclinical and cell models. “Based on that work, it was plausible for estrogen to be protective for several types of infections,” she said. The availability of TriNetX allowed the researchers to explore these relationships in a large database of women in the studies presented at the meeting. “We began with a basic science observation in an animal model and grew it into this clinical study because of the available TriNetX system that supported extensive medical record review,” Dr. Pyles noted.

The take-home messages from the current research remain that vaginal rings delivering hormones are indicated only for contraception or birth control, not for protection against STIs or HIV, and women at an increased risk for these infections should protect themselves by using condoms, Dr. Vincent said.

However, “the real clinical implication is for the future for the drugs that we call MPTs or multi-purpose prevention technologies,” Dr. Vincent said.

“This could be a vaginal ring that releases medications for birth control and prevention of HIV or an STI,” she explained.

The findings from the studies presented at the meeting have great potential for an MPT on which Dr. Vincent and Dr. Pyles are working that would provide protection against both HIV and pregnancy. “For HIV prevention, the hormonal vaginal ring components have potential to work synergistically with the HIV prevention drug rather than working against each other, and this could be realized as a need for less HIV prevention drug, and subsequently fewer potential side effects from that drug,” said Dr. Vincent.

The studies received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Restricted Abortion Access Tied to Mental Health Harm
MDedge Family Medicine
Key Abortion Paper Retracted
MDedge Family Medicine
OTC Birth Control Pill Headed to US Pharmacies: What Your Patients Should Know
MDedge Family Medicine
Acne Risk With Progestin-Only Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptives Evaluated
MDedge Family Medicine
Unplanned Pregnancy With Weight Loss Drugs: Fact or Fiction?
MDedge Family Medicine
Demand for Permanent Contraception Up Nationwide Since Dobbs Ruling
MDedge Family Medicine
IUDs Malpositioned More Commonly by PCPs Than Ob.Gyns.
MDedge Family Medicine
Frontal Fibrosing Alopecia: Study Finds Oral Contraceptive Use Modulates Risk In Women with Genetic Variant
MDedge Family Medicine
Investigational Male Contraceptive Suppresses Sperm Rapidly
MDedge Family Medicine
Progestin-Only IUDs Linked to 22% Lower Ischemic Stroke Risk
MDedge Family Medicine