NEW
YORK - The largest study to examine the
risks of hormone-based birth control has concluded the contraceptives carry a
small risk of stroke and heart attack, depending on the method and type of
hormone used.
But the
risk for individual women remains extremely low, particularly in younger women.
Danish
researchers wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine that the findings
suggest a higher risk of stroke in particular for women using vaginal rings,
and possibly hormonal skin patches - though the second finding was based on a
smaller group of women and could have been due to chance.
Dr.
James Simon, a women's health researcher at George Washington University in
Washington, D.C. told Reuters Health other factors -- such as the belief that a
patch or a ring might be safer for women thought to be at risk -- may explain
the higher rate of stroke in that group.
Simon,
who wasn't involved in the new research, said the findings probably shouldn't
change how doctors prescribe birth control. The risks seen in the study, he
said, pale in comparison to the risks of stroke, heart attack or death faced by
women who get pregnant.
"None
of the hormonal contraceptives studied… were associated with an excess risk of
stroke that was unacceptable, considering their contraceptive and
noncontraceptive benefits," Dr. Diana Petitti of Arizona State University
in Tucson wrote in an editorial accompanying the study.
Previous
attempts to assess the risk of stroke or heart attack due to hormonal
contraceptives have produced conflicting results.
The
researchers on the new study, led by Dr. Ojvind Lidegaard from Copenhagen
University Hospital, crunched the records of 1.7 million Danish women -
essentially the entire female population age 15 to 49 - to assess the potential
dangers. The women, all without a history of heart disease or cancer, were
followed for 15 years beginning in 1995.
Each
individual woman's risk was small. One in every 4,700 women had a stroke each
year and one in every 9,900 suffered a heart attack.
Women
taking contraceptive pills with a combination of estrogen and progestin tended
to have a higher risk of stroke and heart attack than those not using hormonal
contraception.
For
some hormone combinations that difference could have been due to chance. But
women using estrogen with norethindrone or desogesterel at certain doses, for
example, had double the risk of both complications compared to non-users.
Still,
Simon said the new research "shows very little difference between the
different pills for the same dose of estrogen, which will make women's choices
larger."
CONSIDER
AGE
Neither
the skin implant nor the intrauterine device (IUD) containing only progestin
was tied to an increased risk of stroke or heart attack, though the number of
women using those methods was sometimes small.
Danish
women using a vaginal ring had about a two and a half higher chance of stroke
than those not using hormonal contraception. For contraceptive patches, there
was a trend toward more strokes, but the researchers couldn't be confident the
finding was real.
Lidegaard
told Reuters Health many women have used patches and rings "believing that
these non-oral products could confer less risk. But this is definitely not the
case."
He said
age is a key factor when considering risks.
"If
you are 20 years old and you double your risk of (stroke), then you still have a
very low risk because the absolute risk is so low," he said. "On the
other hand, if you are in the other path of reproductive age, especially in the
40s, you should consider not increasing your risk… further because it's already
increased due to your age."
Among
all women, once they stopped using hormonal contraception, their risk of
strokes and heart attacks dropped to the same level as the risk for women who
had never used them.
Simon
said women who think the findings mean they should stop taking contraceptives
are getting the wrong message, because the risks associated with pregnancy are
so much greater.
Petitti,
in her editorial, said, "The research shows that the small risk could be
minimized and perhaps eliminated by abstinence from smoking and by checking
blood pressure, with avoidance of hormonal contraceptive use if blood pressure
is raised."
Reuters
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