Birth Control Ortho Evra Contraceptive Patch
Currently there
are lawsuits filed against J&J, maker of a birth control patch which
alleges women have suffered strokes, blood clots which are linked to using
the birth control patch. Many doctors have stopped writing prescriptions
for birth control patch after the Food and Drug Administration warned of
increased hormone exposure to women who use it. Parents of a 14-year-old
Wisconsin girl who died last year are suing the makers of a popular birth
control patch for failing to warn people sooner about serious side effects.
FDA Updates Labeling for Ortho Evra Contraceptive
Patch
The Food and Drug Administration today approved updated labeling for the
Ortho Evra contraceptive patch to warn healthcare providers and patients
that this product exposes women to higher levels of estrogen than most
birth control pills. Ortho Evra was the first skin patch approved for
birth control.
It is a weekly prescription patch that releases ethinyl estradiol (an
estrogen hormone) and norelgestromin (a progestin hormone) through the
skin into the blood stream. FDA advises women to talk to their doctor
or healthcare provider about whether the patch is the right method of
birth control for them.
Furthermore, women taking or considering using this product should work
with their health care providers to balance the potential risks related
to increased estrogen exposure against the risk of pregnancy if they do
not follow the daily regimen associated with typical birth control pills.
Because Ortho Evra is a patch that is changed once a week, it decreases
the chance associated with typical birth control pills that a woman might
miss one or more daily doses.
The addition of this new warning is a result of FDA's and the manufacturer's
analysis directly comparing the levels for estrogen and progestin hormones
in users of Ortho Evra with those in a typical birth control pill. In
general, increased estrogen exposure may increase the risk of blood clots.
However, it is not known whether women using Ortho Evra are at a greater
risk of experiencing these serious adverse events.
The new bolded warning specifically states that women who use Ortho Evra
are exposed to about 60 percent more total estrogen in their blood than
if they were taking a typical birth control pill containing 35 micrograms
of estrogen. However, the maximal blood level of estrogen (peak blood
levels) is about 25% lower with Ortho Evra than with typical birth control
pills. While the estrogen level with the patch remains constant for one
week until the patch is removed, the peak blood levels with a daily birth
control pill rapidly declines to levels that are lower than on the Orthro
Evra.
FDA is continuing to monitor safety reports for the Ortho Evra patch.
The manufacturer, Ortho McNeil Pharmaceuticals is conducting additional
studies to compare the risk of developing serious blood clots in women
using Ortho Evra to the risk in women using typical birth control pills
that contain 35 micrograms of estrogen.
The new labeling information is available along with additional information
for healthcare providers and consumers online at: Link to
Ortho Evra's Labeling
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