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Progestogen only pill



Progestogen Only Pill (POP)
Background
B.C. type Hormonal
First use 1973
Failure rates (first year)
Perfect use 0.5%
Typical use  ?%
Usage
Duration effect 1day
Reversibility Yes
User reminders Taken within same 3hour window each day
Clinic review 6 months
Advantages and Disadvantages
STD protection No
Weight No proven effect
Periods Light spotting may be irregular
Periods Often lighter and less painful
Medical notes
Unaffected by being on most (but not all) antibiotics. May be used, unlike COCPs, in patients with hypertension and history of migraines. Affected by some anti-epileptics.
Progestogen Only Pills or Progestin Only Pills (POP) are contraceptive pills that only contain synthetic progestogens (progestins) and do not contain oestrogen. They are colloquially known as mini pills.

Although such pills are sometimes called "Progesterone Only Pills," they do not actually contain progesterone, but one of several chemically related compounds and there are a number of progestogen only contraceptive formulations.

Contents

How they work

The mechanism of action of progestogen-only contraceptives depends on the progestogen activity and dose.[1]

Very low dose progestogen-only contraceptives, such as traditional progestogen-only pills (and subdermal implants Norplant and Jadelle and intrauterine systems Progestasert and Mirena), inconsistently inhibit ovulation in ~50% of cycles and rely mainly on their progestogenic effect of thickening the cervical mucus and thereby reducing sperm viability and penetration.

Intermediate dose progestogen-only contraceptives, such as the progestogen-only pill Cerazette (or the subdermal implant Implanon), allow some follicular development but much more consistently inhibit ovulation in 97–99% of cycles. The same cervical mucus changes occur as with very low dose progestogens.

High dose progestogen-only contraceptives, such as the injectables Depo-Provera and Noristerat, completely inhibit follicular development and ovulation. The same cervical mucus changes occur as with very low dose and intermediate dose progestogens.

In anovulatory cycles using progestogen-only contraceptives, the endometrium is thin and atrophic. If the endometrium was also thin and atrophic during an ovulatory cycle, this could theoretically interfere with implantation of a blastocyst (embryo).

Efficacy

The theoretical efficacy is similar to that of the combined oral contraceptive pill (COCP). However, they are taken continuously without any breaks between packets and traditional progestogen-only pills must be taken to a much stricter time every day (within 3 hours vs. a COCP's 12 hours, although in some countries the POP Cerazette has an approved window of 12 hours). The real-life efficacy is therefore dependent upon user compliance.

POPs are not dependent upon gut bacterial flora for their absorption and so are not affected by courses of antibiotics. They will, however, be affected by any episodes of diarrhea or vomiting.

Benefits

Lacking the oestrogen of combined pills, they are not associated with increased risks of DVT or heart disease. With the decreased clotting risk, they are not contraindicated in the setting of sickle-cell disease. The low dose of progestogen, and absence of oestrogen, make the minipill safe to use during breastfeeding; in fact, it may increase the flow of milk. Like combined pills, the minipill decreases the likelihood of pelvic inflammatory disease.

It is unclear whether POPs provide protection against endometrial cancer and ovarian cancer to the extent that COCP do.

Side effects

  • With no break in the dosage, flow does not initially occur at a predictable time. Most women tend to establish, over a few months, light spotting at approximately regular intervals.
  • May cause mastalgia or mood swings.
  • Weight gain is less commonly experienced than on COCP.

Breast cancer risk

Epidemiological evidence on POPs and breast cancer risk is based on much smaller populations of users and so is less conclusive than that for COCPs.

In the largest (1996) reanalysis of previous studies of hormonal contraceptives and breast cancer risk, less than 1% were POP users. Current or recent POP users had a slightly increased relative risk (RR 1.17) of breast cancer diagnosis that just missed being statistically significant. The relative risk was similar to that found for current or recent COCP users (RR 1.16), and as with COCPs, the increased relative risk decreased over time after stopping, vanished after 10 years, and was consistent with being due to earlier diagnosis or promoting the growth of a preexisting cancer.[2][3]

The most recent (1999) IARC evaluation of progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives reviewed the 1996 reanalysis as well as 4 case-control studies of POP users included in the reanalysis. They concluded that: "Overall, there was no evidence of an increased risk of breast cancer" with progestogen-only contraceptives, but since there was "inadequate evidence", they were "possibly carcinogenic".[4]

Recent anxieties about the contribution of progestogens to the increased risk of breast cancer associated with HRT in postmenopausal women such as found in the WHI trials[5] have not yet spread to progestogen-only contraceptive use in premenopausal women.[1]

See also

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Progestogen_only_pill". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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