GENERIC NAME: Oral Contraceptives
or OCs (also known as Birth Control Pills or BCPs)
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BRAND NAMES: see below
DRUG CLASS AND MECHANISM: Oral contraceptives (OCs) are
medications that prevent pregnancy. They are one type
of birth control. OCs may contain combinations of estrogen
and progestin or progestin alone. Combinations of estrogen
and progestin prevent pregnancy by inhibiting the release
of the hormones LH and FSH from the pituitary gland in
the brain. LH and FSH play key roles in the development
of the egg and preparation of the lining of the uterus
for implantation of the embryo. Progestin also makes the
uterine mucus that surrounds the egg more difficult for
sperm to penetrate and, therefore, for fertilization to
take place. In some women, progestin inhibits ovulation
(release of the egg).
The combination OCs are called "monophasic,"
"biphasic," or "triphasic." Monophasic
OCs deliver the same amount of estrogen and progestin
every day. Biphasic OCs deliver the same amount of estrogen
every day for the first 21 days of the cycle. During
the first half of the cycle, the progestin/estrogen
ratio is lower to allow the endometrium to thicken as
it normally does. During the second half of the cycle,
the progestin/estrogen ratio is higher to allow normal
shedding of the lining of the uterus to occur. The triphasic
OCs have constant or changing estrogen concentrations
and varying progestin concentrations throughout the
cycle. There is no evidence that bi- or tri-phasic OCs
are superior to monophasic OCs, or vice-versa.
PRESCRIPTION: Yes
GENERIC AVAILABLE: Yes, for some (see below).
PREPARATIONS: Tablets, various amounts. (Please see
the Birth Control article for non-oral contraceptives.)
STORAGE: All OCs should be stored between 15?(59°F)
and 30°C (86°F).
PRESCRIBED FOR: OCs are prescribed for the prevention
of pregnancy. When taken as directed, OCs fail in less
than 1 in every 200 users over the first year of use.
OCs also are prescribed to treat mid-cycle pain which
some women experience with ovulation. OCs, while regulating
the menstrual cycle, reduce menstrual cramps and heavy
bleeding, and, because of the reduced bleeding, they
may prevent the anemia that can develop in some women.
Doctors sometimes prescribe higher doses of OCs for
use as "morning after" pills to be taken up
to 72 hours after unprotected intercourse to prevent
fertilization and pregnancy.
DOSING: Many of the OCs come in easy to use dispensers
in which the day of the week or a consecutive number
(1, 2, 3, etc.) is written on the dispenser with a corresponding
tablet for each day or number. For example, some Ortho-Novum
dispensers are labeled "Sunday" next to the
first tablet. Thus, the first tablet is to be taken
on the first Sunday after menstruation begins (the first
Sunday following the first day of a woman's period).
If her period begins on Sunday, the first tablet should
be taken on that day. For OCs that use consecutive numbers,
the first tablet (#1) is taken on the first day of the
menstrual period (the first day of bleeding). Tablet
#2 is taken on the second day, and so on. Still other
packages instruct women to begin on day 5 of the cycle.
For such products, women count from day 1 of their menstrual
cycle (day 1 is the first day of bleeding). On the fifth
day, the first tablet is taken. Tablets then are taken
daily.
OCs are packaged as 21-day or 28-day units. For 21-day
packages, tablets are taken daily for 21 days. This
is followed by a 7-day period during which no OCs are
taken. Then the cycle repeats. For the 28-day units,
tablets containing medication are taken for 21 consecutive
days, followed by a seven-day period during which placebo
tablets (containing no medication) are taken.
Women just starting to take OCs should use additional
contraception for the first 7 days of use because pregnancy
may occur during this period of time.
If women forget to take tablets, pregnancy may result.
If a single tablet is forgotten, it should be taken
as soon as it is realized that it is forgotten. If more
than one tablet is forgotten, the instructions that
come with the packaging should be consulted, or a physician
or pharmacist should be called.
DRUG INTERACTIONS: Estrogens can inhibit the metabolism
(elimination) of cyclosporine, resulting in increased
cyclosporine blood levels. Such increased blood levels
can result in kidney and/or liver damage. If this combination
cannot be avoided, cyclosporine concentrations can be
monitored, and the dose of cyclosporine can be adjusted
to assure that its blood levels do not become elevated.
Estrogens appear to increase the risk of liver disease
in patients receiving dantrolene through an unknown
mechanism. Women over 35 years of age and those with
a history of liver disease are especially at risk.
Estrogens increase the liver's ability to manufacture
clotting factors. Because of this, patients receiving
warfarin (Coumadin) need to be monitored for loss of
anticoagulant (blood thinning) effect if an estrogen
is begun.
A number of medications, including some antibiotics,
can decrease the blood levels of OC hormones that would
otherwise have been achieved during OC use, but an actual
decrease in the effectiveness of the OC has not been
convincingly proven. Nonetheless, because of this theoretical
possibility, some physicians recommend back-up contraceptive
methods during antibiotic use. Carbamazepine (Tegretol),
phenobarbital, phenytoin (Dilantin), primidone (Mysoline),
rifampin (Rifadin), rifabutin (Mycobutin), and ritonavir
(Norvir) each increase the elimination of estrogens.
OCs with higher concentrations of estrogen or alternative
forms of contraception may be necessary in women using
those medications.
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