Commentary

Neuropsychiatric side effects of hormonal contraceptives: More common than you think!


 

Practitioners should discuss mood effects during consultation

An ob.gyn., primary care physicians, or others with prescriptive authority (i.e. nurse practitioners and physician assistants) in clinical practice may encounter a patient who seems to have mood side effects owing to progestogen-containing contraceptives that they prescribe. However, many ob.gyns. are likely unaware of the prevalence, or that some of those same patients can have such significant mood effects that they would become or are suicidal.

I believe questioning patients about mood effects during consultation and particularly during follow-up following the initiation of any hormonal contraceptive is worth a passing comment for every patient, which should include mood effects in broader discussion for anyone currently using an antidepressant, patients with a history of antidepressant use, and patients who have considered suicide. As we do with other drugs, these questions can be posed in the form of a questionnaire followed up by the practitioner in counseling.

Practitioners who encounter a patient with mood changes as a result of hormonal contraceptive use can consider changing to a nonhormonal method of birth control, or recommending the patient use a barrier method during sexual activity, as none of these options have neuropsychiatric side effects.

Ultimately, practitioners of all types need to engage in shared decision-making to identify the key benefits and risks of hormonal contraceptive use for each patient, which may involve trial and error to determine the ideal treatment. It is critical that practitioners of all types strike a balance between alleviating patient concerns about potential mood changes, monitoring patients with an appreciable risk of mood changes, and continuing patients on hormonal contraception for whom the benefits outweigh the risks.

Dr. Simon is a clinical professor at George Washington University and the medical director and founder of IntimMedicine Specialists in Washington, which provides patient-focused care for women across the reproductive life cycle. He is a past president of the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health and the North American Menopause Society. Dr. Simon has been a consultant to, received grant and research support from, and served on the speakers bureau for various pharmaceutical companies that develop combination hormonal contraceptives. Email Dr. Simon at obnews@mdedge.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

MDedge Daily News: Stem cells may reverse premature menopause
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: How Trump’s election affected contraception
MDedge Psychiatry
Trump administration rule erodes ACA contraceptive mandate
MDedge Psychiatry
Courts temporarily block Title X changes
MDedge Psychiatry
Judge bars contraceptive mandate from being enforced
MDedge Psychiatry
Universal adolescent education on healthy relationships needed
MDedge Psychiatry
iPLEDGE allows at-home pregnancy tests during pandemic
MDedge Psychiatry
Today’s top news highlights: Remdesivir data dive, FDA approves contraceptive gel
MDedge Psychiatry
How physicians can provide better care to transgender patients
MDedge Psychiatry
Hormonal contraceptives protective against suicide?
MDedge Psychiatry