Generic Name: Drospirenone + Ethinylestradiol
FORMULATION
Drospirenone, USP 3 mg
Ethinylestradiol 30mcg
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
Drospirenone + Ethinylestradiol (ERIN®) contains drospirenone 3 mg and ethinylestradiol 0.03 mg. Drospirenone and ethinylestradiol are progestogens and estrogens, fixed combinations. Drospirenone + Ethinylestradiol (ERIN®) is available as yellow, circular, biconvex film-coated tablet debossed with “647” on one side and plain on other side.
INDICATION
Oral contraceptive, with antimineralocorticoid and antiandrogenic effects also beneficial for women who experience hormone-related fluid retention and the resulting symptoms and for women with acne and seborrhea.
Method of Administration
Oral use
How to take Drospirenone + Ethinylestradiol
Combined oral contraceptive, when taken correctly, have a failure rate of approximately 1% per year. The failure rate may increase when pills are missed or taken incorrectly.
Tablets must be taken in the order directed on the package every day at about the same time with some liquid as needed. One tablet is to be taken daily for 21 consecutive days. Each subsequent pack is started after a 7-day tablet-free interval, during which time a withdrawal bleed usually occurs. This usually starts on day 2–3 after the last tablet and may not have finished before the next pack is started.
Tablet-taking has to start on day 1 of the woman’s natural cycle (i.e., the first day of her menstrual bleeding). Starting on days 2–5 is allowed, but during the first cycle a barrier method is recommended in addition for the first 7 days of tablet-taking.
The woman should start with drospirenone + ethinylestradiol preferably on the day after the last hormone-containing tablet of the previous COC, but at the latest on the day following the usual tablet-free or hormone-free interval of her previous COC.
In case a vaginal ring or transdermal patch has been used, the woman should start using drospirenone + ethinylestradiol preferably on the day of removal, but at the latest when the next application would have been due.
(Minipill, Injection, Implant) or from a progestogen-releasing intrauterine system (IUS)
The woman may switch any day from the minipill, from an implant or the IUS on the day of its removal, or from an injectable when the next injection would be due, but in all these cases she should be advised to additionally use a barrier method for the first 7 days of tablet-taking.
The woman may start immediately. When doing so, she does not need additional contraceptive measures.
Women should be advised to start at day 21 to 28 after delivery or second-trimester abortion. When starting later, the woman should be advised to additionally use a barrier method for the first 7 days of tablet-taking.
However, if intercourse has already occurred, pregnancy should be excluded before the actual start of COC use or the woman has to wait for her first menstrual period.
If the user is less than 12 hours late in taking a tablet, contraceptive protection is not reduced. The woman should take the tablet as soon as she remembers and should take further tablets at the usual time.
If she is more than 12 hours late in taking a tablet, contraceptive protection may be reduced. The management of missed tablets can be guided by the following two basic rules:
Accordingly the following advice can be given in daily practice:
The user should take the last missed tablet as soon as she remembers, even if this means taking two tablets at the same time. She then continues to take tablets at her usual time.
In addition, a barrier method such as a condom should be used for the next 7 days.
If intercourse took place in the preceding 7 days, the possibility of pregnancy should be considered. The more tablets are missed and the closer they are to the tablet-free phase, the higher the risk of pregnancy.
The user should take the last missed tablet as soon as she remembers, even if this means taking two tablets at the same time. She then continues to take tablets at her usual time.
Provided that the woman has taken her tablets correctly in the 7 days preceding the first missed tablet, there is no need to use extra contraceptive precautions.
However, if this is not the case, or if she missed more than 1 tablet, the woman should be advised to use extra precautions for 7 days.
The risk of reduced reliability is imminent because of the forthcoming tablet-free phase. However, by adjusting the tablet-intake schedule, reduced contraceptive protection can still be prevented.
By adhering to either of the following two options, there is no need to use extra contraceptive precautions, provided that in the 7 days preceding the first missed tablet the woman has taken all tablets correctly. If this is not the case, the woman should be advised to follow the first of these two options and to use extra precautions for the next 7 days as well.
If the woman missed tablets and subsequently has no withdrawal bleed in the first normal tablet-free interval, the possibility of pregnancy should be considered.
CONTRAINDICATIONS
Combined oral contraceptives should not be used in the presence of any of the conditions listed below. Should any of these conditions appear for the first time during COC use, the product should be stopped immediately.
Manufactured by:
Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Limited
Baroda Highway, Halol, Gujarat,
389350, India
Imported by:
Sun Pharma Philippines, Inc.
17F Unit 3, Milestone @ Fifth Avenue, 5th Avenue,
Bonifacio Global City, Taguig City, Metro Manila,
Philippines
Distributed by:
DKT Health, Inc.
80 E. Rodriguez Jr. Avenue (C5),
Bagumbayan, Quezon City
1110 Philippines