The effect of oestrogen dose and progestogen type on haemostatic changes in women taking low dose oral contraceptives
- 1 March 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
- Vol. 103 (3) , 261-267
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-0528.1996.tb09716.x
Abstract
To determine the effect of oestrogen dose and progestogen type on the coagulation and fibrinolytic systems of a group of normal healthy women taking three different oral contraceptive combinations. Plasma levels of factor VII, X, antithrombin III, protein C, fibrinogen, tissue plasminogen activator activity, plasminogen activator inhibitor I antigen and fibrin (D-dimer) degradation products were measured at pretreatment, 6, 14, 22 weeks of treatment and at 6 weeks post-treatment in a group of 67 women taking either 30 micrograms ethinyloestradiol/150 micrograms desogestrel (n = 21), 20 micrograms ethinyloestradiol/150 micrograms desogestrel (n = 24), 30 micrograms ethinyloestradiol/75 micrograms gestodene (n = 22). Sixty-seven healthy normal women, 18 to 34 years, smoking fewer than 15 cigarettes per day. The subjects were within 10% of their normal body weight and had no history of thromboembolic disease. Coombe Women's Hospital and St James's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. Factor VII and X levels were significantly raised on treatment with both the 30 micrograms ethinyloestradiol/desogestrel and gestodene combinations. Higher levels of factor VII activity were observed in the 30 micrograms ethinyloestradiol/desogestrel combination compared with the gestodene combination. Factor VII and X were not significantly affected by the 20 micrograms ethinyloestradiol combination. Increased plasminogen, fibrinogen and D-dimer levels and decreased plasminogen activator inhibitor I antigen levels were observed during the treatment phases in all three groups. Antithrombin III and protein C activity did not change during treatment with any of the oral contraceptives studied. Low dose oral contraceptives cause an activation of the coagulation system which is balanced by an activation of the fibrinolytic system. Reducing the dose of ethinyloestradiol from 30 micrograms to 20 micrograms reduces the effect on factor VII and X. This effect can be modified by the progestogen. The lesser effect of the 20 micrograms combination may make this a safer option for some women than pills containing a higher dose of oestrogen.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oral contraception and stroke. Evidence from the Royal College of General Practitioners' Oral Contraception Study.Stroke, 1994
- Hemostatic and metabolic effects of lowering the ethinyl-estradiol dose from 30 mcg to 20 mcg in oral contraceptives containing desogestrelContraception, 1993
- Oral contraception and risk of a cerebral thromboembolic attack: results of a case-control study.BMJ, 1993
- A comparative study on the effects of a monophasic pill containing desogestrel plus 20 μg ethinylestradiol, a triphasic combination containing levonorgestrel and a monophasic combination containing gestodene on coagulatory factorsContraception, 1991
- A comparison of the effects of two triphasic oral contraceptives on haemostasisBritish Journal of Haematology, 1988
- Physiological coagulation inhibitors (protein S, protein C and antithrombin III) in severe preeclamptic states and in users of oral contraceptivesThrombosis Research, 1988
- A sensitive assay for tissue plasminogen activatorThrombosis Research, 1982
- Oral Contraceptives and Cardiovascular DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1981
- Heparin cofactor activity measured with an amidolytic methodThrombosis Research, 1975
- Gerinnungsphysiologische Schnellmethode zur Bestimmung des FibrinogensActa Haematologica, 1957