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Heavy women likelier to become pregnant while on the pill, study finds
Dec. 29, 2004
Women who are overweight or obese are more likely to get pregnant while taking
birth control pills than women of normal weight, new research finds.
In
the group of women studied, 5 percent of overweight women taking the pill got
pregnant each year versus 3 percent of normal weight women, said study author
Victoria Holt.
The study, which the researchers believe is the first of
its kind, was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development. It appears in the January issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
The
finding is potentially significant because overweight women have a higher chance
of complications while pregnant, including gestational diabetes and high blood
pressure.
But while obese or overweight women in the study were 60
percent to 70 percent more likely to get pregnant while on the pill, other
experts emphasized that the actual chances of conceiving were not
alarming.
"The absolute risk is low," said Dr. Ralph Dauterive, head of
obstetrics and gynecology at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans. "Who
knows why this is occurring. The solution is to add condoms, an IUD or no
sex."
Oral contraceptive trials have reported pregnancy rates of 0.5
percent or lower, but national surveys have put the actual number much higher.
There are more than 400,000 pregnancies among users of oral contraceptives in
the United States each year, the study said.
In the 40 years since the
first birth control pills hit the market, the amount of the hormone estrogen
they contain has decreased fivefold.
"Maybe we're at a point that it's
not enough for some women," said Holt, who is a member of the Public Health
Sciences Division at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in
Seattle.
The genesis of the new study reaches back several years to a
meeting of a U.S. Food and Drug Administration panel convened to discuss the
possibility of removing higher-dose birth control pills from the market. At the
meeting, one of the new study's co-authors overheard another panel member, who
was also a physician, say, "Don't do that. All of my overweight patients are
going to get pregnant.' "
Holt and her colleagues compared the weight and
body mass index (BMI) of 248 women who became pregnant while using birth control
pills between 1998 and 2001, to 533 control subjects who used oral
contraceptives but did not become pregnant. All the participants were enrolled
with a health maintenance organization in Seattle.
The risk of pregnancy
was nearly 60 percent higher in women with a BMI greater than 27.3, and more
than 70 percent higher in those with a BMI in excess of 32.2.
A BMI of
27.3 or more is roughly equivalent to a 5-foot, 4-inch woman weighing 160 pounds
or more. A person with a BMI greater than 25 is considered overweight; a BMI
above 30 is obese.
Among consistent birth control pill users, the risk of
pregnancy was more than 70 percent higher in women weighing more than 165 pounds
and nearly double in women weighing more than 190 pounds.
The researchers
said there are several possible explanations - though none proven - for the
findings.
First, overweight and obese people have a higher metabolism,
which means it's possible the pill is "used up" more quickly in these women,
Holt said.
Also, overweight women have more liver enzymes, which help
metabolize the hormones in birth control pills. "That would also cause the pills
to be used up more quickly," Holt said.
The final possible explanation
has to do with body composition. "Women with high BMI are more likely to have
more fat and the hormones in birth control pills are fat-soluble," Holt
explained. "The hormones may get trapped in the fat rather than entering the
bloodstream."
SOURCE: HealthDay
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