Progestogen-only contraception and bone mineral density: a systematic review

Contraception, 73(5), 470-487

DOI 10.1016/j.contraception.2005.12.010 PMID 16627031 Source

Abstract

Questions have been raised about the effects of progestogen-only contraceptive use on bone health, particularly among young women who have not yet reached peak bone mass and perimenopausal women who may be starting to lose bone mass. We conducted a systematic review that evaluated the association between progestogen-only contraceptive use and fracture risk or bone mineral density (BMD). We identified 39 articles from MEDLINE and EMBASE, published through July 2005. One study reported that depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) users were more likely to experience stress fractures than nonusers; this association was not statistically significant after controlling for baseline bone density. In cross-sectional studies, the mean BMD in DMPA users was usually below that of nonusers, but within 1 SD. In longitudinal studies, BMD generally decreased more over time among DMPA users than among nonusers, but women gained BMD upon discontinuation of DMPA. Limited evidence suggested that use of progestogen-only contraceptives other than DMPA did not affect BMD.

Topics

progestogen-only contraception bone density, dmpa bone mineral density, depot medroxyprogesterone bone health, contraceptive side effects bone loss, progestin contraception fracture risk, hormonal contraception skeletal health, bone density young women contraception, perimenopausal contraception bone effects, reversible bone density loss dmpa, systematic review contraceptive bone health

Cite this article

Curtis, K. M., & Martins, S. L. (2006). Progestogen-only contraception and bone mineral density: a systematic review. *Contraception*, *73*(5), 470-487. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2005.12.010

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