February 7, 2005
Bone density returns when teens stop using
popular contraceptive, Group Health study finds
Seattle—A new study of the popular injectable contraceptive
Depo-Provera shows that teenagers’ bone density recovers after they stop
using the drug. Several previous studies have linked Depo-Provera to bone
loss, raising concerns about its use among teens, a population in their
peak bone-building years.
"These findings are reassuring for those concerned about future
risk of fractures," said Delia Scholes, PhD, senior investigator at
Group Health Center for Health Studies and the study’s
lead investigator. "This information can be useful in helping
young women balance the need to avoid unintended pregnancies with the need
to build strong bones."
Scholes’ study, which appears in the February 2005 issue of Archives
of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, is the first to show that
teen-aged Depo-Provera users’ bone loss appears to be reversed once
young women stop taking the contraceptive. The findings come less than
three months after a decision by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to
issue a black box warning on Depo-Provera. The warning states that the
drug is associated with bone loss that "may not be completely
reversible."
While Scholes and her colleagues found that Depo-Provera use in women
aged 14 to 18 was associated with continuous bone density loss at the hip
and spine, they also found that users experienced significant gains after
they quit using the drug. This provides evidence "that the loss of
bone mass is apparently reversed," Scholes concluded.
In 2002, Scholes reported similar results among women aged 18 to 39.
However, the current study shows that teen women who discontinued using
Depo-Provera appeared to regain their bone density faster than older women
did.
Teens use Depo-Provera at higher rates than older women do. About 10
percent of American women aged 15 to 19 who are using birth control use
Depo-Provera, compared to just 3 percent of women in the United States
overall. Given once every three months, the method is effective,
relatively low in cost, private, and easy-to-use, Scholes explained. It is
also a popular choice among young women for whom other types of
contraception have failed.
How the study was conducted
The researchers measured hip, spine, and whole-body bone densities in
170 healthy teen women, aged 14 to 18, who get their care at Group Health
Cooperative. The bone densities of the 80 participants receiving
Depo-Provera injections were compared to those of 90 similar women who
were not using this method. Bone density measurements were taken at the
start of the study, and at 6-month intervals over a span of 2 to 3 years.
During that period, 61 of the Depo-Provera users stopped using the drug,
allowing the scientists to see how their bone density changed once they
discontinued.
<>What the researchers found
As with previous studies, the researchers found that, compared to
non-users, Depo-Provera users had significant loss of bone density in the
hip and spine.
-
Those who used Depo-Provera experienced an
average loss of bone density at the hip of 1.81 percent per year
compared with a loss of 0.19 percent per year among non-users.
-
At the spine, women who used Depo-Provera had a
bone loss of 0.97 percent, while those not using the drug had an
increase in bone density of 1.32 percent. These bone-loss rates are
similar to that of women who are breastfeeding or going through
menopause.
-
Women who were new Depo-Provera users lost bone
density more rapidly than did longer-term users.
Once the Depo-Provera users stopped getting the injections, however,
they gained a significant amount of bone density compared to non-users for
the same period. For example:
-
The average amount of bone gained in a year for
women who quit using Depo-Provera was 1.34 percent at the hip,
compared to a slight loss of 0.19 for women who were not taking the
drug.
-
Density at the spine increased 2.86 percent for
women who quit the drug compared to an increase of 1.32 percent for
women who were not taking the drug.
It’s not clear from studies to date whether other hormonal methods of
birth control might affect bone density, Scholes said. She and her
colleagues are currently conducting a study of the effect of oral
contraceptive use and discontinuation on women’s bone density.
Scholes noted that a recent U.S. Surgeon General’s report on bone
health and osteoporosis provides a number of steps that teens and young
women can take to improve or maintain bone density. The 2004 report
recommends:
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Eat foods high in calcium and vitamin D
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Participate in regular weight-bearing exercise
-
Don’t smoke
-
Limit consumption of alcoholic beverages
Scholes’ study was funded by a grant from the National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health. The
co-authors are Group Health investigators Andrea Z. LaCroix, PhD, Laura E.
Ichikawa, MS, and William E. Barlow, PhD, and the University of Washington
School of Medicine’s Susan M. Ott, MD.
About Group Health Center for Health Studies
Group Health Center for Health Studies conducts
research related to prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of major health
problems. Funded primarily through government and private research grants,
the Center is located in Seattle, Washington. Group Health is a
consumer-governed, nonprofit health care system that coordinates care and
coverage. Based in Seattle, Group Health and Group Health Options, Inc.
serve nearly 540,000 members in Washington and Idaho.
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