Combined Oral Contraceptive Adherence and Pregnancy Rates

Mitchell D. Creinin, Jeffrey T. Jensen, Melissa J. Chen, Amanda Black, Dustin Costescu, Jean Michel Foidart

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To assess the relationship of adherence and pregnancy in participants using an estetrol and drospirenone combined oral contraceptive. Methods: We performed a secondary analysis for which we pooled data from two parallel, multicenter, phase 3 trials (United States and Canada, Europe and Russia) that enrolled participants 16-50 years of age to receive estetrol 15 mg and drospirenone 3 mg in a 24 hormone and four placebo pills regimen for up to 13 cycles. Participants reported pill intake, sexual intercourse, and other contraceptive use on paper diaries. We limited this efficacy analysis to at-risk cycles (one or more reported acts of intercourse and no other contraceptive use) in participants 16-35 years of age at screening. We excluded cycles with other contraceptive use unless pregnancy occurred in that cycle. We assessed primarily the relationship between number of pills not taken per cycle and pregnancies and, secondarily, when pregnancies occurred during product use with a test for trend and χ2 analyses as appropriate. Results: Among 2,837 participants in this analysis, 31 on-treatment pregnancies occurred during 26,455 at-risk cycles. Pregnancies occurred in 0.09%, 0.25%, 0.83%, and 1.6% of cycles in which participants reported they took all hormone pills (n=25,613 cycles) or did not take one (n=405 cycles), two (n=121 cycles), and more than two (n=314 cycles) hormone-containing pills, respectively (P<.001). No pregnancies occurred in 2,216 cycles when one or more pills were missed and missed-pill instructions were followed. All pregnancies related to not taking pills occurred in the first three cycles. Pregnancy rates ranged from 0% to 0.21% per cycle with no significant trend by cycle (P=.45). Conclusion: Pregnancy occurs more frequently when combined oral contraceptive users report not taking all hormone-containing pills per 28-day cycle and exceeds 1% only when more than two pills are not taken. Pregnancies in participants who reported missed pills occurred only when missed-pill instructions were not followed. A 0.09% pregnancy risk per cycle among users of a 24 hormone and four placebo pills formulation who report taking all pills likely approximates a true method-failure rate.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)989-994
Number of pages6
JournalObstetrics and gynecology
Volume141
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2023
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Obstetrics and Gynecology

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