Short-term hormonal contraceptives remain the most popular class of reversible contraceptives in the United States, despite the availability of longer-acting methods. Oral contraceptives (OCs), contraceptive patches, and contraceptive vaginal rings are extensively used not only because these methods are easy to initiate but also because their ongoing use remains under the control of the woman herself and also provides her with a wide range of important noncontraceptive benefits.
Despite the more than 60 years of innovation that have made hormonal contraceptives safer, more tolerable, and more convenient, there has been room for improvement. Over the last few years, 4 new hormonal methods have been introduced, and each addresses different limitations and problems associated with the existing, often generic, products.
Compared with the traditional norethindrone pill (Micronor and generics), a new drospirenone progestin-only pill (POP) increases ovulation suppression, offers an improved cyclical bleeding profile, and relaxes the tight missed-pill rules that are usually associated with POPs.
In contrast with the older norelgestromin patch (Evra, Xulane), a new contraceptive transdermal patch significantly decreases total estrogen exposure and pairs its estrogen with levonorgestrel, the progestin associated with the lowest venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk in combined hormonal pills.
While existing combination OCs are formulated with the potent estrogen ethinyl estradiol (EE), a new combination pill, formulated with estetrol (E4) and drospirenone, introduces the first new estrogen (estetrol) used in a contraceptive in more than 50 years. Estetrol, a native estrogen, has selective tissue activity with minimal hepatic and breast impacts. Combined with drospirenone, this formulation offers women good contraceptive efficacy and bleeding patterns.
A new contraceptive vaginal ring introduces a new long-acting, specific progestin (segesterone acetate) and pairs it with low-dose EE. These hormones are packaged in a soft vaginal ring that provides up to 13 cycles of contraceptive protection (3 weeks in/1 week out) with one ring, greatly increasing convenience for women.
Each of these new products represents important incremental improvement over existing options.
Continue to: 1. The drospirenone-only OC...