The last time I tried to buy Plan B — one of four levonorgestrel “morning-after” pills sold in Canada — the pharmacist at my local drugstore turned me away.
“I can’t sell you this,” she said. “Health Canada says Plan B won’t work if you weigh more than 165 pounds.” (That’s not exactly what the regulator says, but more on that later.)
I hadn’t heard about a weight limit, or told her my weight. Given that Health Canada rates levonorgestrel as a Schedule III drug, I should be able to purchase it off the shelf without consulting a pharmacist.
I asked the pharmacist about the strength of evidence for the recommendation, or if my body mass index (BMI) mattered, and since she didn’t know, I asked to buy the pill anyway. She told me to see a doctor and moved on to the next customer. I bought the pill from the next drugstore down the road, where the pharmacist didn’t mention a weight limit.
Both interactions were troubling — either the first pharmacist was misinformed or the second had sold me a drug that wouldn’t work. As it turned out, such situations are not uncommon.
Dr. Edith Guilbert, a senior medical advisor for the Institut national de santé publique du Québec, has heard similar reports of Quebec pharmacists refusing to sell levonorgestrel to heavier women. She says these incidents are unjustified given the lack of consensus on the impact of body weight on the drug’s efficacy.
“It might be less effective for women who weigh more than 165 pounds or have a BMI over 25, but to say there will be no efficacy is wrong, because we have no baseline statistics on the risk of pregnancy in women who are consulting for emergency contraception,” explains Guilbert, who is co-chair of the Canadian Consensus on Contraception at the Society Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada.
Conflicting guidelines
Health Canada is the only regulator that recommends heavier women seek alternative methods of emergency contraception, stating that levonorgestrel may be less effective in women over 165 pounds and ineffective in women over 176 pounds. This potentially represents more than half of all Canadian women over age 18.
The warning, issued in March 2014, is based on a 2011 meta-analysis that showed that obese women taking the drug had a fourfold greater risk of pregnancy than women of normal weight.
However, a European Medicines Agency review later in 2014 determined that the “data available are too limited and not robust enough to conclude with certainty that contraceptive effect is reduced with increased bodyweight.” The agency advised women to continue using levonorgestrel regardless of their weight, ideally “as soon as possible” after unprotected sex in order to increase the likelihood that the drug will work.
The Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada has taken a similar stance, recommending that, until better evidence is available, women with a BMI over 30 “should not be discouraged” from using levonorgestrel if they can’t access or don’t want a copper intrauterine device (IUD) — the only alternative emergency contraceptive available in Canada.
This stance is also endorsed by the Canadian Pharmacists Association, according to Director of Pharmacy Innovation Phil Emberley. He says reports of women being denied levonorgestrel are concerning, and likely a product of “murky” guidelines on the issue.
“We don’t know the degree to which efficacy drops off based on weight; we don’t have hard and fast milestones to go by.”
At the same time, “pharmacists are responsible for the medication they sell in their dispensaries and part of that responsibility is educating the public on how to use those drugs appropriately.” Such counselling should ideally happen in private, and in the case of “off the shelf” drugs, any final decision should rest with the customer.
Emberley adds that it’s rare for a single study to merit a sea change in practice. “Usually it’s a body of evidence over time that moves clinical decision-making in a certain direction.” More evidence is needed to justify a refusal, particularly given the short time women have to access other forms of contraception, he says.
Few alternatives
Right now, a woman turned away from her pharmacist has only one option for emergency contraception: getting a copper IUD inserted into her uterus by a physician.
Copper IUDs are more than 99% effective at preventing pregnancy, but they can be expensive (up to several hundred dollars) and finding a doctor to insert the device within the recommended 120 hours can be difficult. One American study shows that 85% of clinicians never recommend the device for emergency contraception, and 93% require two or more visits for an insertion. The intimate nature of insertion, and the fact that IUDs can cause heavier, longer and more painful periods, also means the device isn’t appropriate for everyone, says Guilbert.
A new emergency contraceptive drug, ulipristal acetate, will become available in Canada under the brand name Ella in the fall this year. The drug is currently available as an emergency contraceptive in Europe and the United States. There’s also evidence it’s more effective than levonorgestrel for women with a BMI over 30, says Guilbert. “The risk of unintended pregnancy is much less, like 2.5%, compared to almost 6% for women using levonorgestrel.”
However, the introduction of Ella won’t dramatically improve access to emergency contraception for heavier women, as the drug will only be available by prescription. “It could take one or two years before it can become over the counter,” explains Guilbert. In the meantime, “Health Canada should withdraw their recommendations regarding weight and levonorgestrel.”