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Kees van Grootheest Netherlands
Pharmacovigilance Centre Lareb, Goudsbloemvallei 7, 5237 MH
's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands Correspondence to: K van Grootheest ac.vangrootheest{at}lareb.nl
Our centre, the Dutch spontaneous reporting system for
adverse drug reactions, recently received five reports of
thromboembolism as a suspected adverse drug reaction to the new oral
contraceptive Yasmin (ethinylestradiol and drospirenone).
A 17 year old woman suddenly collapsed and died after taking the
contraceptive for six months. Autopsy showed that she had had a massive
pulmonary embolism. No obvious risk factors for thromboembolism, such
as smoking, a period of long immobilisation, air flights, or
concomitant medication, were evident.1 Because she died
suddenly no blood sample was taken. Blood taken from her parents did
not test positive for any of the known risk factors: concentrations of
protein C and antithrombin III were normal. The activated partial
thromboplastin time and partial thromboplastin time were normal, and
the existence of factor V Leiden mutation was excluded.
A 28 year old woman changed her oral contraceptive from
ethinylestradiol with desogestrel (Marvelon) to ethinylestradiol with drospirenone. Four months later she had thrombosis in one leg and was
treated with acenocoumarol. Risk factors or concomitant drugs were unknown.
Another patient, a 45 year old woman, had deep vein thrombosis in one
leg after taking ethinylestradiol with drospirenone for two months, as
did a 50 year old woman who took the contraceptive for three months.
A 35 year old woman had pulmonary thrombosis 17 days after
she started taking the contraceptive. She had given birth four
months earlier.
Ethinylestradiol with drospirenone has been approved as an oral
contraceptive in all European Union countries since 2000 and has
recently been launched in the United Kingdom.2 The public assessment report of the contraceptive gives only one suspected case of
pulmonary embolism but also says that the number of cases in the
preregistration studies are too low for a reliable conclusion on this
matter.3
The risk of thromboembolism for women using the third generation
(combined) pill has long been debated. Physicians therefore may prefer
a new type of combined pill, like ethinylestradiol with drospirenone,
assuming that these are safer. However, an association of these drugs
with a lower risk of thromboembolism has not been proved by research,
and our cases show that newer contraceptive pills may have a risk of
thromboembolism. At present, insufficient data on the superiority of
ethinylestradiol with drospirenone are available.
Footnotes
Funding: None.
Competing interests: None declared.
References
| 1. | Winkler UH. Oral contraception in women at risk of venous disease. Gynaecol Forum 2001; 6: 23-28. |
| 2. |
Sheldon T.
Dutch GPs warned against new contraceptive pill.
BMJ
2002;
324:
869 |
| 3. | Official site of Dutch medicines evaluation board. www.cbg-meb.nl/nl/docs/gnsmiddl/par-yasmin.pdf (accessed 21 October 2002). |
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