Examples
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| Very low-dose pills | Alesse, Loestrin 1/20, Lybrel, Mircette, YAZ |
| Low-dose pills | Lo/Ovral, Seasonale, Seasonique, Yasmin |
| Phasic pills | Ortho-Novum 7/7/7, Ortho Tri-Cyclen Lo, Triphasil |
| High-dose pills | Demulen 1/50, Ortho-Novum 1/50, Ovral |
| Note: | This is not a complete list of all brand-name birth control pills
available. |
Skin patch
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| 20 mcg estrogen, plus progestin | Ortho Evra patch |
Vaginal ring
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| 15 mcg estrogen, plus progestin | NuvaRing |
Birth control pills
Very low-dose pills have 20 mcg of estrogen plus
progestin.
Low-dose pills have 30 to 35 mcg of estrogen plus progestin.
Phasic pills have changing levels of estrogen and progestin.
High-dose pills have about 50 mcg of estrogen plus
progestin.
For
information on progestin-only pills, see
progestin-only hormonal methods.
How It Works
Birth control hormones in
pills,
skin patches, or vaginal rings
give you a regular dose of
estrogen and
progestin. This controls your body's
menstrual cycles and prevents pregnancy. It also helps
relieve heavy menstrual bleeding, pain, and sometimes premenstrual mood
problems and bloating.
In the
perimenopausal years before menopause, hormone levels
go up and down a lot. Using birth control hormones can help with
hot flashes, sleep problems, and mood.1, 2
Birth control pills
Birth control pills, also called oral contraceptives, come in
packs. The most common type has 3 weeks of hormone pills. Some packs have sugar
pills for the fourth week, and some do not. During that fourth non-hormone
week, you have your menstrual period. After the fourth week (28 days), you
start a new pack.
Seasonique and Seasonale have you take 12 weeks of hormone pills,
followed by 1 week of low-estrogen or no-hormone pills. On this schedule, you
have four periods a year. If your doctor prescribes an
unlabeled use for other birth control pills, you can
also have four periods a year. You take the active hormone pills continuously
for 12 weeks, followed by 1 week of sugar pills. You then start a new pack of
pills. If you have breakthrough bleeding during the 3 months, your doctor will
prescribe extra estrogen.
Lybrel comes in 4-week packs of hormone pills, which you take
every day of the year. On this schedule, you have no periods.
For more information, see
how
to take birth control pills.
Birth control skin patch
The
birth
control patch
is a patch [about
1.75 in. (4 cm) square] that
sticks firmly on your skin. You can wear it on your lower abdomen, buttocks, or
upper arm. Each patch releases estrogen and progestin through your skin for 7
days. Over a 4-week period, you use one patch each week for 3 weeks, and then
no patch for 1 week. During this week, you have your menstrual period.
For more information, see
how
to use the patch.
Birth control vaginal ring (CVR)
The vaginal ring is small [about
2 in. (5 cm) in diameter],
flexible, and colorless. It releases a continuous low dose of hormones into the
vagina to prevent pregnancy for that month.
You insert the vaginal ring yourself and leave it in place
for 3 weeks. This gives you continuous birth control for the month. On the
first day of the fourth week, you remove the ring and usually have a menstrual
period. The exact position of the ring in the vagina is not critical for it to
work.
For more information, see
how
to use a vaginal ring.
Why It Is Used
Birth control hormones are commonly used to:
- Prevent pregnancy. Birth
control hormones prevent pregnancy in three ways. They stop the
ovaries
from releasing an egg each month (ovulation).
They also thicken the mucus in the
cervix. This makes it hard for sperm to travel into
the uterus. And birth control hormones change the lining of the uterus, which
makes it harder for a fertilized egg to attach to it. - Control menstrual periods. Taking estrogen and progestin on a
schedule keeps your
menstrual periods on a schedule. You can schedule your
periods to be every month, every few months, or not at all. This can relieve
you of problems that flare with every menstrual cycle, like
endometriosis or painful
ovarian cysts.
- Lighten
menstrual bleeding. Normally, the uterus builds up a new lining every
month, which then sheds away. This shedding is your menstrual bleeding. Taking
hormones keeps the lining from getting very thick, so bleeding is lighter.
- Help relieve menstrual pain. Birth control
hormones lower your level of
prostaglandins, which are one cause of menstrual
pain.
- Help relieve perimenopausal problems.
In the years leading up to
menopause, a woman's hormone levels are unpredictable.
Taking birth control hormones helps keep hormones even. This can help relieve
hot flashes, sleep problems, and depression for many perimenopausal
women.1, 2
- Treat polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) problems. Birth control
hormones can help control
PCOS problems.
The Yasmin birth control pill is used for PCOS
hormone treatment.3 This pill has the progestin called
drospirenone, which is an antiandrogen.4 It can
improve PCOS acne problems, male-type hair growth, and male-pattern hair loss,
which are caused by high
androgen levels.
- Prevent some diseases. Taking birth
control hormones lowers
ovarian cancer risk.5 For
women with a risk of
endometrial cancer, taking progestin with estrogen
helps lower that risk.6 The estrogen in the pill,
patch, or ring also helps keep bones strong. This lowers your risk of
osteoporosis later in life.1
Premenstrual syndrome (PMD) relief. The
Yasmin and YAZ birth control pills have a progestin that reduces water
retention (bloating) during the menstrual cycle. This type of pill may help
reduce severe mood and physical symptoms that some women get before they start
their monthly periods.7 These symptoms are called
premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). YAZ has been
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treating PMDD
symptoms. (These two pills have the same amount of progestin, called
drospirenone. YAZ is very low-estrogen, and Yasmin is low-estrogen.)
Estrogen-progestin pills, skin patches, or vaginal rings are good
choices for women who:
- Need short- or long-term birth control that can
be stopped at any time.
- Prefer a form of birth control that does
not interfere with sexual spontaneity.
- Have heavy, painful, or
irregular menstrual periods.
- Have endometriosis or ovarian cysts.
- Have a family
history of ovarian cancer. Estrogen-progestin pills start lowering the risk of
ovarian cancer after 1 year of use. This benefit seems to last for years after
a woman stops taking the pill.5
Do not use birth control hormones
containing estrogen if you have any of the following conditions:
If you are older than age 35, do not use
birth control pills if you:
- Take medicine
for high blood pressure.
- Smoke.
- Have
diabetes.
- Have high
cholesterol.
How Well It Works
Estrogen-progestin pills, skin patches, or vaginal rings are
effective methods of birth control when they are used exactly as directed.
Since some women do not use their birth control as directed, pregnancy does
happen in a certain number of women. This has been shown by studies of actual
users.
- Among pill users, 8 women in 100 become
pregnant per year.8 Of women who take their pills
every day, only 3 in 1,000 become pregnant per year.8
When the method fails, it is usually because of skipping a daily pill or two.
- Among skin patch and contraceptive vaginal ring users, 8 women in 100 are expected
to become pregnant per year. With perfect use, only 3 in 1,000 become pregnant
per year.8
The pill and the patch may not work as well if you are overweight
(body
mass index greater than 30).9, 10
Low-dose pills are as highly effective as
higher-dose pills when you take them as directed. But your risk of pregnancy is
higher after missing low-dose pills than after missing higher-dose
pills.5
For more information about how well estrogen-progestin birth
control works for helping other medical problems, see the topics Dysfunctional
Uterine Bleeding, Menopause and Perimenopause, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
(PCOS), Uterine Fibroids, Functional Ovarian Cysts, Premenstrual Syndrome,
Endometriosis, Chronic Female Pelvic Pain, and von Willebrand's disease.
Side Effects
Estrogen-progestin pills, skin patches, and vaginal rings have
similar possible side effects. The pill causes hormone levels to peak and drop
each day. Each weekly patch takes 3 days after application to reach a steady
hormone level. The ring releases a steady dose every day throughout the day.
This may explain why the ring is less likely to cause headaches and nausea than
the pill or patch.
Common side effects of estrogen-progestin methods
The most common side effects are changes in menstrual periods,
including:
- Very light or
skipped periods. If you take monthly cycles of birth
control hormones for a long time, your periods might stop. This effect can last
until several months after you stop taking hormones.
- Bleeding between periods (spotting). This usually decreases
after a woman uses a hormonal method for 3 to 4 months.
The contraceptive skin patch may cause
skin irritation at the site.
The contraceptive vaginal ring may cause:
- Vaginal discharge.
- Irritation
and inflammation of the vagina (vaginitis).
Less common side effects of estrogen-progestin methods
Less common side effects include:
- Nausea and vomiting, especially during the
first month of use. This side effect usually goes away after the first few
months of use.
- Frequent or more severe headaches.
Migraine headaches may get worse.
- Weight
gain.
- Breast tenderness for the first few months.
- Depression or mood changes.
- Darkening of
the skin on the upper lip, under the eyes, or on the forehead (chloasma). This
may slowly fade after you stop using hormonal methods, but in some cases it is
permanent.
- Change in interest in sex (can be more or less).
Rare but serious side effects of estrogen-progestin methods
The following symptoms, called ACHES, are
rare but serious and should be reported to your health professional
immediately.
- Abdominal pain that is
severe or persists may be a sign of blood clots (thrombophlebitis) in the pelvis, liver blood clots or
tumors, or gallbladder disease.
- Chest pain
may be a sign of blood clots in the lungs (pulmonary
embolism),
heart attack, or heart disease. Smoking increases this
risk.
- Headaches that are severe may be a
sign of stroke, migraine, or high blood pressure (hypertension). Smoking
increases this risk.
- Eye problems, such as
blurred vision or loss of vision, may be a sign of migraine, blood clots in the
eye, or a change in the shape of the
cornea.
- Severe leg
pain or sudden swelling of one leg may be a sign of leg blood clots
(thrombophlebitis) or deep vein thrombosis (DVT).
If
you have kidney, liver, or
adrenal gland disease, you cannot use YAZ or Yasmin .
This is because the progestin in these pills can raise your potassium levels.
This can be dangerous for people who have kidney, liver, or adrenal gland
disease.
Patch
warnings. The patch delivers more estrogen than the low-dose birth
control pills do. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warns that women
using the patch are more likely to get dangerous blood clots in the legs and
lungs than women using birth control pills. So talk to your doctor about your
risks before using the patch.
Direct sunlight or high heat can increase, then lower, the amount
of hormone released from a patch. This can give you a big dose at the time and
leave less hormone for the patch to release later in the week. This increases
your risk of pregnancy. Avoid direct sunlight on the
hormone patch. Also avoid using a tanning bed, heating pad, electric blanket,
hot tub, or sauna while you are using a hormone patch.
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference
is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
Cancer protection, cancer risk?Experts disagree on the actual
cancer risk from using estrogen-progestin birth control. Using
estrogen-progestin birth control appears to lower the risk for uterine and
ovarian cancers while slightly increasing the risk for cancers of the breast,
cervix, and liver. Women who have a personal history of breast cancer should
not take estrogen-progestin. If you're considering hormonal birth control, let
your health professional know if you have any family history of breast cancer.
Other factors to consider include the following:
- Birth control hormones may not be as effective when combined with
other medicines. Be sure to tell your health
professional or pharmacist that you are taking birth control hormones whenever
you get a new prescription. The herbal medicine
St. John's wort also makes birth control hormones less
effective. Be sure to tell your health professional about all
medicines and supplements you are taking when starting hormonal birth
control.11
- If you want to be able to start a planned pregnancy soon after
you stop long-term use of birth control hormones, hormone shots (Depo-Provera)
may not be a good choice. They can make it hard to get pregnant for several
months after you stop them.
- If you are taking birth control
hormones,
take
special precautions for backup birth control if you miss or skip
pills.
- Birth control pills may not be as effective if you
are vomiting or have diarrhea. Use another method of birth control for 7 days
after vomiting or diarrhea, even if you have not missed any pills.
- The pill and the patch may not work as well if you are overweight
(body mass index greater than 30).9, 10 If you are overweight, ask your doctor about which birth
control methods are right for you.
Be sure to use a backup birth control method during the first 7
days of starting hormonal birth control.
Emergency contraception is available if any birth
control method fails and you are concerned about unprotected sex.
Complete the
new medication information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?)
to help you understand this medication.