New Oral Contraceptive May End Periods

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New Oral Contraceptive May End Periods

New Oral Contraceptive May End Periods


Lybrel Designed for Continuous, Year-Round Contraception

Dec. 13, 2006 -- Menstrual periods may soon be just another lifestyle choice for American women.

The continuous oral contraceptive Lybrel was shown to be highly effective for eliminating monthly bleeding in a yearlong study.

The study was published in the December issue of the journal Contraception.

After a year on the pill, roughly 60% of the women in the study experienced no periods and 20% had some spotting.

Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, which funded the study, hopes to launch the low-dose oral contraceptive early next year, pending approval by the FDA. Wyeth is a WebMD sponsor.

Choosing Not to Have Periods


Birth control pills designed to limit uterine bleeding to just four times a year are already on the market in the U.S. But Lybrel is the first oral contraceptive designed to do away with periods.

"There just is no good medical reason for a woman to have menstrual periods if she doesn't want them," gynecologist and study researcher David F. Archer, MD, tells WebMD. "It really does come down to an issue of preference."

That hasn't always been the case. When they came on the market in the early 1960s, all oral contraceptive regimens included 21 days on active hormones and seven days off each month to imitate a 28-day monthly cycle, complete with uterine bleeding.

Before the age of accurate at-home pregnancy tests, monthly periods reassured women on the pill that they were not pregnant.

Women taking oral contraceptives have what is called withdrawal bleeding during the seven days they are off active hormones.

Women on Lybrel get continuous hormones -- without days off the active pills -- so they should have little or no uterine bleeding.

In the newly reported study, 2,134 women between the ages of 18 and 49 took the low-dose oral contraceptive for a year to 18 months.

After a month on the birth control pill, 94% of the women in the study still experienced uterine bleeding, with or without spotting.

The number of bleeding and spotting days per month decreased steadily with increased duration of use of the birth control pill. However, 21% of the women in the study were still bleeding after a year on the pill.

The researchers say that the effectiveness of the continuous oral contraceptive was similar to that of a traditional 21-day regimen. They add that the continuous pill also demonstrated a good safety profile.
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