Novel oral contraceptive for heavy menstrual bleeding: estradiol valerate and dienogest
Estradiol valerate and dienogest, a new oral contraceptive, significantly reduced heavy menstrual bleeding and improved hematologic indicators in women.
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This paper reviews and describes a novel combined oral contraceptive containing estradiol valerate and dienogest (E2V/DNG) for heavy menstrual bleeding, a subset of abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) defined by blood loss >80 mL or perceived excessive loss. It states that over six months of use, E2V/DNG is associated with a mean ~65% reduction in menstrual blood loss, with about half of treated women achieving an 80% reduction, alongside improvements in hematologic measures such as ferritin, hemoglobin, and hematocrit. A key caveat emphasized is that potential advantages related to fewer adverse effects on lipid/glucose metabolism and reduced thromboembolic risk have not yet been demonstrated in clinical trials, so its safety is assumed similar to other low–ethinyl estradiol combination oral contraceptives. Relevance to endometriosis: the corpus inclusion is based on keyword match, but the paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it focuses on contraception-related treatment of heavy menstrual bleeding (menorrhagia).
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- last seen: 2026-05-11T08:04:27.483483+00:00