Emergency contraception pill could be an alternative to mifepristone for
abortions, study suggests
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[January 24, 2025]
By CARLA K. JOHNSON
A new study suggests that a pill used for emergency contraception could
be repurposed at a higher dose as an abortion drug, providing a possible
alternative to mifepristone, one of the two drugs used in the most
common type of abortion in the United States.
Mifepristone has been under attack by abortion opponents, with several
states seeking in federal court to restrict its use.
Now used in two-thirds of U.S. abortions, mifepristone blocks a hormone
needed to sustain a pregnancy. It's typically used with misoprostol,
which causes contractions and bleeding.
In the study, 133 women who were up to nine weeks' pregnant took a 60
milligram dose of ulipristal acetate, the active ingredient in the
prescription contraceptive Ella, followed by misoprostol 24 hours later.
For 97% of them, that drug combo was effective at inducing an abortion,
an effectiveness equal to the mifepristone-misoprostol combination. Four
women needed a procedure or an additional medication to complete the
abortion.
The 60 milligram dose of ulipristal used in the study is twice the dose
of Ella, a prescription drug used for emergency contraception.
The company that makes Ella says on its website that it won't end an
existing pregnancy. It can be taken up to five days after unprotected
sex to prevent pregnancy.
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An abortion- rights activist holds a box of mifepristone pills as
demonstrators from both anti-abortion and abortion-rights groups
rally outside the Supreme Court in Washington, Tuesday, March 26,
2024. (AP Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades, File)
The findings, published Thursday in
the journal NEJM Evidence, may make emergency contraception a target
of abortion opponents.
“I’m really worried that these results could be misapplied by
anti-abortion activists to try to further their assault on
contraception,” said Dr. Daniel Grossman of the University of
California, San Francisco, who wrote an accompanying editorial in
the journal. Grossman praised the study but said more research is
needed on ulipristal as an abortion drug before doctors would
prescribe it routinely for that use.
Lead author Dr. Beverly Winikoff, president of Gynuity Health
Projects, a not-for-profit research group, said women need
information about ulipristal, especially with mifepristone
challenged in court.
“At least now we would have an alternative,” Winikoff said. “I think
it’s better to have more things that you could use.”
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