About: Etynodiol is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7 publications have been published within this topic receiving 31 citations. The topic is also known as: Ethinodiol & 17alpha-Ethynyl-19-norandrost-4-ene-3beta,17beta-diol.
TL;DR: The above results indicate that the amount of progestogen ingested by the infant from its mother's milk is small and is unlikely to pose a risk to the infant.
TL;DR: Femulen was shown to be an effective and acceptable contraceptive in women of varying ages and blood pressure on the whole remained within normal limits.
TL;DR: The study results were interpreted in terms of the impact on clinical management of oral contraceptive users and the methods, strengths and weaknesses of phase IV trials, particularly as they relate to confirmation of the results reported here.
Abstract: From August 1988-June 1989 983 physicians participated in a phase IV trial by following 7759 women using the monophasic oral contraceptive (OC) Demulen 1/35 (1 mg ethynodiol diacetate and 35 ug ethinyl estradiol) to evaluate its efficacy and safety. The total number of cycles for the study stood at 21440. In addition the total woman-years stood at 1787. Only 6382 patients could be evaluated for safety. 4.4% of the patients had adverse reactions to the OC but only 1.7% of all patients stopped taking it. The leading side effects included nausea (67 cases) headache (45) amenorrhea (42) emotional changes (30) breast pain (19) dysmenorrhea (12) and 11 cases of weight gain abdominal/pelvic pain and bloating. Of the 280 reported adverse reactions only 87 (31%) were considered severe. The leading serious adverse reactions were depression (10) and hypertension (6). Only 5412 patients could be used to determine efficacy. The physicians initially reported 121 (2.2%) pregnancies during the study. The researchers learned that 33 of the 84 returned 2nd questionnaires (response rate 70%) reported that the women conceived after enrollment but before taking the OC. 36 conceived while taking it but 8 did not take it daily. Noncompliance may have contributed to pregnancy for the remaining 28 cases. Therefore the 36 confirmed pregnancies made for a failure rate of .7%. 85.7% of the pregnancies happened in the 1st 3 months of taking the OC. Either patient noncompliance or true medication failure accounted for treatment failure. Therefore it is important for physicians to instruct patients on how to take OCs correctly.
TL;DR: This report of a descriptive study gives clinicians as estimate of the incidence and severity of complexion changes in actual use of a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive.
Abstract: An open-label, phase IV, multicenter survey of obstetrician-gynecologists was conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive, ethynodiol diacetate, 1 mg, with ethinyl estradiol, 35 micrograms. Surveys from 983 community-based physicians reported on 6,382 women. Most patients did not experience "clinically noticeable complexion changes" (5,695/6,382, or 89.2%). Of the 687 patients with complexion changes, nearly three-fourths reported an improvement (501/687, or 72.9%). A follow-up questionnaire was sent to 127 respondents (18.6%) who reported worsening of the complexion; 70% of the questionnaires were returned. Most complexion worsening was of slight degree (63%), reported by the patient and not the physician (84% vs. 16%), and experienced during the first two to three months (84%). Although the literature includes many references to skin condition "improvement" on oral contraceptives, this report of a descriptive study gives clinicians as estimate of the incidence and severity of complexion changes in actual use.
TL;DR: The incidence of ovarian cyst formation requiring surgical intervention was 0.05% in women taking EDA 1 mg with EE 35 micrograms and only three women required an operation for ovarian cysts.
Abstract: A total of 7,759 women were treated with ethynodiol diacetate, 1 mg, with ethinyl estradiol, 35 micrograms (EDA 1 mg with EE 35 micrograms) in a field study involving 983 obstetrician-gynecologists evaluating the incidence of ovarian cyst formation. Six thousand three hundred eighty-two patients were evaluable; 1,377 could not be evaluated because of failure to meet inclusion criteria or inconsistent or incomplete data collection. Cysts were detected in 80 patients at the time of the final visit. Follow-up questionnaires were received on 61% of patients and confirmed the presence of 12 newly formed ovarian cysts in patients taking EDA 1 mg with EE 35 micrograms. Only three women required an operation for ovarian cysts; two women had functional ovarian cysts (one follicular and one luteal), and one had a neoplastic cyst (cystadenoma). Thus, the incidence of ovarian cyst formation requiring surgical intervention was 0.05% in women taking EDA 1 mg with EE 35 micrograms.