Conference Coverage

Efavirenz-based ART may hamper vaginal ring contraception


 

REPORTING FROM CROI 2018

– Efavirenz-based antiretroviral therapy may significantly impair the effectiveness of vaginal ring contraceptives, investigators reported.

Over a 21-day period, levels of estrogen among women who used a vaginal ring (NuvaRing) while on efavirenz-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) were up to 79% lower, and levels of progestin were up to 57% lower, than in women with HIV infection who used the vaginal ring before starting ART, reported Kimberly K. Scarsi, PharmD, of the University of Nebraska, Omaha.

In contrast, women on an atazanavir-based ART regimen had lower estrogen levels than untreated controls who used a vaginal ring, but higher levels of progestin – the primary antiovulatory component of the ring – suggesting that it would retain contraceptive effectiveness, she said at the annual Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections.

“In a broader context, these data can be applied to other drugs that behave similarly. So for example, erythromycins are also known to interfere with hormones in this way, as well as some anticonvulsant agents that may also impair the effectiveness of vaginal ring contraceptives,” she said at a brief, following her presentation of the data in an oral abstract session.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Major depressive disorder increases acute MI risk in HIV
Clinician Reviews
Make HIV testing of adolescents routine
Clinician Reviews
Rising injectable drug use among whites may reverse declining HIV infection rates
Clinician Reviews
Unrestricted DAA access halved Dutch HCV incidence in HIV
Clinician Reviews
HIV vaccine could prevent 30 million cases by 2035
Clinician Reviews
Revaccinate HIV-infected teens with hepatitis B vaccine
Clinician Reviews
Trial seeks improved regimens for pregnant women with HIV
Clinician Reviews
Bloating. Flatulence. Think SIBO
Clinician Reviews