| Literature DB >> 31138184 |
Joshua Dean1, Katherine J Kramer2, Fauzia Akbary3, Shaunte Wade1, Maik Hüttemann4, Jay M Berman5, Maurice-Andre Recanati6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To determine whether oral norethindrone acetate is superior to combined oral contraceptives (OCP) in delaying menstruation and preventing breakthrough bleeding when started late in the cycle.Entities:
Keywords: Menstruation delay; Norethindrone; Randomized controlled study; Vaginal bleeding
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31138184 PMCID: PMC6537409 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-019-0766-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Fig. 1Randomized control Study design and patient inclusion. Two patients were removed from the study for non-compliance
Fig. 2Questionnaire given to patients at the end of the study
Fig. 3Incidence of Vaginal Bleeding or Spotting on Therapy Comparison of patients treated with norethindrone 5 mg three times daily versus controls treated with combined oral contraceptive pills. Aggregate data from both studies shown. (n = 27, p < 0.002)
Patient Demographics and summary of results of randomized trial
| Estimated | Norethindrone | Control Group (OCP) | p |
|---|---|---|---|
| N | 23 | 23 | |
| Age | 27.7 (18–33) (0.883) | 28.0 (18–33) (.916) | 0.865 |
| Race | White (26%), Hispanic (26%) | White (30%), Hispanic (18%) | ns |
| African-American (22%), | African-American (30%), | ||
| Asian (9%), Indian (13%) | Asian (13%), Indian (9%) | ||
| Other (4%) | |||
| Nulligravid | 11 | 12 | 0.768 |
| Weight | 147.1 (96–221) (6.733) | 149.3 (100–235) (7.75) | 0.987 |
| Cycle day start | 8.8 (2–14a) (0.613) | 8.2 (3–12) (0.603) | 0.514 |
| Time to event | 29.7 (21–42) (1.405) | 30.61 (22–40) (1.283) | 0.650 |
| Days on therapy | 33.4 (28–45) (1.152) | 33.2 (23–43) (1.177) | 0.916 |
| Patients missing > 2 doses | 0 | 1 | 0.312 |
| Patients with breakthrough bleed | 2a | 10 |
|
| Average day bleed occurred | 16.5 (14–19) | 15.25 (10–23) (1.47) | NA |
| Amount breakthrough bleeding | 1 | 1.5 (1–3) (0.726) | 0.321 |
| Mean weight gain on therapy Of those, > 5 lbs. persistence at 1wk | 3.6 (0–7) (0.469) | 2.2 (0–6) (0.435) |
|
| 0 | 0 | ||
| Patients with side effects | 5 | 12 | 0.054 |
| Side effects | bloating (3), spotting (2) | bloating (2), spotting (9) | |
| weight gain (4), nausea (1) | heavier bleeding (1), nausea (3) | ||
| headache (1) | headache (2), sore breasts (2) | ||
| Days stop therapy to menses | 3 (2–4) (0.167) | 3.17 (2–4) (0.136) | 0.537 |
| Patients reporting light/normal flow | 13 | 20 |
|
| Reported duration of flow as normal or shorter | 15 | 14 | 0.395 |
| Satisfaction Score | 4.09 (3–5) (0.153) | 3.56 (2–5) (0.176) |
|
| Likely to use method again | 4.13 (3–5) (0.158) | 3.522 (2–5) (0.165) |
|
| Likely to recommend method | 4.17 (3–5) (0.162) | 3.39 (2–5) (0.137) |
|
| Unintended pregnancies | 0 | 0 | |
| Desire to conceive in 1 year | 4 | 5 | 0.710 |
| Time to conceive (months) | 2.0 (1–3) (0.170) | 3.6 (3–5) (0.186) |
|
(aOne patient in the treatment group was mistakenly enrolled at cycle day 14 and has been included in the analysis). Mean, range and standard error of the mean are shown
The bold on the rightmost column is for p <0.05 as significant