Sociedad Americana de Hirudoterapia

Safety of contraception among women using anticoagulant therapy: An updated systematic review

Research article published in Contraception (2025)

Última actualización: June 18, 2026Revisado por: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Narrative reviewEnsayos clínicosNguyen et al. · Contraception, 2025

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Women on anticoagulant therapy are at risk for bleeding and may be at risk for recurrent thrombosis, which may be further increased with use of certain contraceptive methods. Our objective was to update a previous systematic review on safety of contraception among women on anticoagulant therapy. STUDY DESIGN: We searched multiple databases from inception through December 12, 2022 for articles on concurrent use of contraception and anticoagulant therapy. Outcomes were thromboembolism, bleeding, and drug-drug interactions. Among women on anticoagulant therapy, we compared outcomes for women using and not using contraception. We assessed risk of bias for each study, and certainty of evidence for all outcomes. RESULTS: Fourteen articles met inclusion criteria (12 were new); one had low risk of bias, three had moderate risk of bias, and 10 had high risk of bias. Anticoagulants examined included warfarin, heparin, aspirin, rivaroxaban, enoxaparin, phenindione, acenocoumarol, combined therapy, and unspecified. Four studies (two comparative and two non-comparative studies) in women using anticoagulant therapy found no evidence that use of combined or progestin-only hormonal contraceptive increased the risk of recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE). Ten studies (four comparative and six non-comparative studies) examined uterine bleeding with use of anticoagulant therapy and generally found that bleeding was increased during use of copper intrauterine devices (IUDs) and decreased during use of levonorgestrel (LNG) IUDs. Two studies examined pharmacokinetic outcomes and found no decreases in anticoagulant levels with combined oral contraceptive exposure. CONCLUSIONS: Limited evidence suggests risk for recurrent VTE may not be increased with hormonal contraceptive use among women using anticoagulants. Bleeding among women on anticoagulant therapy might worsen with copper IUD use but might improve with LNG-IUD use. The certainty of evidence for most outcomes is very low. IMPLICATIONS: Women on anticoagulant therapy are at risk for recurrent thrombosis and bleeding, which might be further exacerbated with use of certain contraceptive methods. Additional evidence is needed on safety of concurrent use of anticoagulant medications and contraceptives.

Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.

Publication typeJournal ArticleReview

Resumen

Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.

Por qué esto importa para la hirudoterapia

Esta revisión sistemática actualizada de 14 estudios evaluó si el uso de anticonceptivos eleva el riesgo de trombosis o sangrado en mujeres ya en tratamiento anticoagulante, concluyendo que la evidencia limitada sugiere que la anticoncepción hormonal podría no aumentar la tromboembolia venosa recurrente, que los DIU de cobre podrían empeorar y los DIU de levonorgestrel podrían mejorar el sangrado, y que la certeza de la evidencia para la mayoría de los resultados es muy baja. Su relevancia para la hirudoterapia es periférica y contextual: se refiere a la gestión general de pacientes en anticoagulación sistémica, el mismo equilibrio entre sangrado y trombosis que los clínicos ponderan cuando se añade la terapia con sanguijuelas (que produce un sangrado anticoagulante local, mediado por hirudina) a un plan de tratamiento. La revisión aborda solo anticoagulantes orales e inyectables, no sanguijuelas ni hirudina, y los propios autores califican la evidencia como de muy baja certeza, por lo que solo debe citarse como antecedente sobre la seguridad de los anticoagulantes, no como evidencia específica de sanguijuelas.

Citación

Safety of contraception among women using anticoagulant therapy: An updated systematic review.

Nguyen et al. · Contraception, 2025

Contexto clínico relacionado

Añadido a la biblioteca ASH: May 28, 2026 · Última actualización del sitio: June 18, 2026

Este sitio web proporciona información educativa y no constituye consejo médico, diagnóstico ni recomendaciones de tratamiento. La terapia con sanguijuelas medicinales conlleva riesgos clínicamente significativos y debe ser realizada únicamente por profesionales calificados bajo protocolos aprobados institucionalmente. La autorización 510(k) de la FDA para sanguijuelas medicinales se limita a indicaciones específicas; las discusiones sobre uso investigativo y fuera de indicación se señalan correspondientemente. Para orientación médica específica, consulte a un profesional de salud calificado.