Oral contraceptive use and risk of suicidal behavior among young women

  • Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai ROR
  • Virginia Commonwealth University ROR
  • Lund University ROR

Psychological Medicine, 52(9), 1710-1717

DOI 10.1017/S0033291720003475 PMID 33084550

Abstract

Background

Oral contraceptive use has been previously associated with an increased risk of suicidal behavior in some, but not all, samples. The use of large, representative, longitudinally-assessed samples may clarify the nature of this potential association.

Methods

We used Swedish national registries to identify women born between 1991 and 1995 (N = 216 702) and determine whether they retrieved prescriptions for oral contraceptives. We used Cox proportional hazards models to test the association between contraceptive use and first observed suicidal event (suicide attempt or death) from age 15 until the end of follow-up in 2014 (maximum age 22.4). We adjusted for covariates, including mental illness and parental history of suicide.

Results

In a crude model, use of combination or progestin-only oral contraceptives was positively associated with suicidal behavior, with hazard ratios (HRs) of 1.73-2.78 after 1 month of use, and 1.25-1.82 after 1 year of use. Accounting for sociodemographic, parental, and psychiatric variables attenuated these associations, and risks declined with increasing duration of use: adjusted HRs ranged from 1.56 to 2.13 1 month beyond the initiation of use, and from 1.19 to 1.48 1 year after initiation of use. HRs were higher among women who ceased use during the observation period.

Conclusions

Young women using oral contraceptives may be at increased risk of suicidal behavior, but risk declines with increased duration of use. Analysis of former users suggests that women susceptible to depression/anxiety are more likely to cease hormonal contraceptive use. Additional studies are necessary to determine whether the observed association is attributable to a causal mechanism.

Topics

oral contraceptive suicidal behavior, hormonal contraception suicide risk, young women contraceptive mental health, oral contraceptive self-harm risk, depression contraceptive use suicidality, adolescent OC psychiatric risk, hormonal birth control psychiatric safety, suicidal ideation oral contraceptives, contraceptive mood disorder risk, reproductive hormone suicide association
PMID 33084550 33084550 DOI 10.1017/S0033291720003475 10.1017/S0033291720003475

Cite this article

Edwards, A., Lönn, S., Crump, C., Moscicki, E., Sundquist, J., Kendler, K. S., & Kristina, S. (2022). Oral contraceptive use and risk of suicidal behavior among young women. *Psychological medicine*, *52*(9), 1710-1717. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291720003475

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