From the Journals

Adherence to oral contraceptive protocols prevents pregnancy


 

FROM OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY

Findings highlight the importance of options

“With increasing restrictions on abortion care, offering more contraceptive options for people is critical,” Lauren Owens, MD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington, Seattle, said in an interview. “That’s not to say that having another pill option makes up for the harm people are experiencing as they navigate abortion bans and legal interference in their health care, but no one pill works for all people, and having more options is helpful,” she said.

Dr. Owens noted that the rates of pregnancy in the current study were lower than she traditionally associates with COCs, “although I usually discuss annual failure rates with patients, not failure rates per cycle, and the latter will clearly be lower.” In the current study, “The authors hypothesize some of this may be due to the longer half-life that estetrol has compared to ethinyl estradiol, the estrogen form more commonly found in oral contraceptive pills,” she said.

From a clinical standpoint, “I appreciated the linkage between number of missed pills and pregnancies occurring,” Dr. Owens said. “This is a good reminder to clinicians to talk to patients ahead of time about what to do when missed pills occur and to provide resources in advance that patients can reference when needed,” she said.

“The authors published other studies on this pill in the last year and it seems to work well and have a reasonable safety profile,” Dr. Owens told this news organization. However, “We still need to broaden the methods available to patients, particularly methods that people producing sperm can use. In the face of ongoing and escalating attacks on access to contraceptive care and abortion care, it’s more important than ever to do what we can to improve options for patients,” she said.

The study was supported by Estetra SRL, an affiliate company of Mithra Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Creinin disclosed relationships with multiple companies including Gedeon Richter, Mayne, and Organon. He disclosed serving on the advisory boards for Evofem, Fuji Pharma, Gedeon Richter, GlaxoSmithKline, Mayne, Merck, OLIC, Organon, and Searchlight, and serving as a consultant for Estetra SRL (including the current study), Libbs, Mayne, and Medicines360; his university department receives contraceptive research funding from Chemo Research SL, Evofem, HRA Pharma, Medicines360, Merck, and Sebela. Dr. Owens had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Post ‘Roe,’ contraceptive failures carry bigger stakes
MDedge ObGyn
Now trending on social media: Bad birth control info
MDedge ObGyn
Embattled iPLEDGE program: Changes ahead?
MDedge ObGyn
How to place an IUD with minimal patient discomfort
MDedge ObGyn
Ninety-four women allege a Utah doctor sexually assaulted them. Here’s why a judge threw out their case
MDedge ObGyn
Comment & Controversy
MDedge ObGyn
Ectopic pregnancy risk and levonorgestrel-releasing IUDs
MDedge ObGyn
Risk of expulsion low after early postpartum IUD placement
MDedge ObGyn
FDA Advisory panels consider easing isotretinoin requirements
MDedge ObGyn
Frustration over iPLEDGE evident at FDA meeting
MDedge ObGyn