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Women's Sexual Health

Yasmin and cannabis (marijuana, THC)

As cannabis becomes legal or decriminalised in more jurisdictions, the practical question of combining it with prescription medication comes up regularly. Yasmin (Drospirenone / Ethinyl Estradiol) and cannabis share several pharmacological pathways, and the combination at 3mg / 0.03mg is not automatically benign even where both are legal.

How cannabis affects Yasmin

THC and other cannabinoids are metabolised partly by hepatic CYP enzymes, including CYP3A4 — the same pathway used by many Women's Sexual Health medications. Frequent cannabis use can shift the metabolism of Drospirenone, Ethinyl Estradiol mildly. THC also has cardiovascular effects (increased heart rate, blood pressure changes) and central nervous system effects that can stack with Yasmin's side-effect profile.

Practical guidance

Occasional moderate cannabis use is unlikely to cause clinically meaningful problems for most adults on Yasmin at 3mg / 0.03mg. Heavy daily use, edibles with high THC content, or cannabis combined with alcohol substantially raise the risk of dizziness, hypotension, impaired judgement and amplified side effects from Drospirenone, Ethinyl Estradiol. According to the prescribing information, the full list of recreational substances should be disclosed to the prescriber.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use cannabis while taking Yasmin?

For most adults at 3mg / 0.03mg, occasional moderate cannabis is tolerated, but heavy daily use is not advised because of metabolic and additive cardiovascular effects with Drospirenone, Ethinyl Estradiol. The safe practice is to mention it to the prescriber.

Does CBD interact with Yasmin?

CBD inhibits several CYP enzymes including CYP3A4, which can raise plasma levels of medications that go through that pathway. For Yasmin specifically, this depends on whether Drospirenone, Ethinyl Estradiol uses CYP3A4. Daily high-dose CBD products warrant a pharmacist check.

More on Yasmin

The information on this website is provided for reference and educational purposes only. It does not replace consultation with a qualified healthcare professional.