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Progestogen / hormone replacement

Progesterone with the birth control pill

Many women of reproductive age take a combined or progestogen-only oral contraceptive while also using a chronic medication such as Progesterone (Progesterone). The combination is generally fine at 100mg, 200mg, but a small number of medications can reduce contraceptive efficacy meaningfully and need either a backup method or a switch.

How Progesterone can affect contraceptive efficacy

Combined and progestogen-only contraceptives are metabolised through CYP3A4. Strong CYP3A4 inducers (some antiepileptics, rifampicin, St John's Wort) lower contraceptive plasma levels and reduce efficacy. Whether Progesterone acts on CYP3A4 determines whether Progesterone affects contraception. Most agents in Progestogen / hormone replacement have no clinically meaningful effect on the pill at 100mg, 200mg.

Practical guidance

According to the prescribing information for Progesterone, women on hormonal contraception should review Progesterone with the prescribing pharmacist or doctor. Where an interaction is documented, additional barrier contraception or switching to a non-oral method (IUD, implant) for the duration of Progesterone therapy is the standard mitigation.

Frequently asked questions

Will Progesterone make my pill less effective?

Most Progestogen / hormone replacement medications at 100mg, 200mg do not affect oral contraceptive efficacy. The exceptions are CYP3A4-inducing drugs and a small number of others. The prescribing information for Progesterone states whether the interaction is meaningful.

Do I need a backup contraceptive on Progesterone?

Backup contraception is needed only when there is a documented interaction between Progesterone and the contraceptive method. For most users at 100mg, 200mg, no backup is required. The pharmacist confirms whether Progesterone interacts with hormonal contraception.

Products containing Progesterone

More on Progesterone

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