contraceptive pill yasmin continues to stir debate
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today
Egypt Today, egypt today
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today

Contraceptive pill Yasmin continues to stir debate

Egypt Today, egypt today

Egypt Today, egypt today Contraceptive pill Yasmin continues to stir debate

Dubai - Arabstoday
Following concerns that contraceptive pills containing the synthetic hormone drospirenone carry an increased risk of blood clots, panel members of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) met in December to vote on whether the benefits outweighed the risks. They voted 15-11 in favour. However, research carried out by the Washington Monthly and the British Medical Journal (BMJ) has since found that four of the panel members had links to Bayer, the pharmaceutical company that manufactures two of the best known drospirenone-containing pills, Yaz and Yasmin. Their relationships with Bayer were known to the FDA at the time of the review, but were not considered to be a cause for a "conflict of interest". All four panel members voted in support of drospirenone-containing pills. Meanwhile, another panel member with known concerns about drospirenone-containing products was, only days before the vote, prevented from taking part due to a "conflict of interest". Such claims have served to further muddy the waters around the controversial pill, and will be of concern to many women - four million according to Bayer - who take Yasmin alone. Although health authorities and the Ministry of Health insist that it requires a prescription, it is still readily available over the counter in pharmacies in the UAE. Thousands of lawsuits are currently pending in the US over alleged injuries and deaths as a result of the use of such pills, according to Bayer's annual report. Other birth control pills containing drospirenone are Beyaz, Ocella, Loryna, Gianvi, Safyral, Syeda and Zarah. The BMJ claimed last year that, according to studies carried out in the US and UK, the risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) was two to three times higher in women between the ages of 15 and 44 who are taking birth control pills containing the hormone drospirenone, than those who are taking pills containing a different hormone, levonorgestrel. A deep vein thrombosis is a blood clot that forms in the veins of the leg and can break loose. If it reaches the lung, it can cause a potentially fatal pulmonary embolism. "Prescribing lower-risk levonorgestrel preparations as the first-line choice in women wishing to take an oral contraceptive would seem prudent," said the researchers in the British study. They added, however, that the overall risk of blood clots in women taking drospirenone-containing pills was still very low. Microgynon is one of the better-known birth control pills containing levonorgestrel. Although the results of these studies support earlier findings, others have reported no increased risk. The conflicting claims prompted the FDA to review the studies, culminating in the vote in December. Most contraceptive pills contain two hormones, oestrogen and progesterone, which prevent the ovaries from releasing eggs and alter the cervical mucus and womb lining to prevent pregnancy. As well as a method of birth control, pills containing drospirenone are sometimes prescribed to treat premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), polycystic ovaries and moderate acne. They can also help to reduce water retention. All birth control pills raise the risk of blood clots, and women who smoke, are over 35 or have a history of blood clots in their family are most at risk and should avoid taking oral contraceptives altogether. So how should we react to these findings? "Yasmin is one of the most used pills," says Dr Meltem Tank, an obstetrician-gynaecologist at the Swedish Medical Centre in Abu Dhabi, "and 99 per cent of women are very happy with it. I haven't seen a case in which Yasmin is causing more clotting than any other pill, in my experience." Others, though, are more anxious. "Of course I am very concerned about this," says Dr Anna Sepiolo, an obstetrician-gynaecologist based at the Dubai London Clinic in Umm Suqeim. "If people are taking this pill and are worried about it, they should discuss it with their gynaecologist to find which method of contraception is best for them."
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contraceptive pill yasmin continues to stir debate contraceptive pill yasmin continues to stir debate



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