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After Georgia Deaths Tied to Abortion Ban, Experts Maintain Safety of Abortion Pills

— Facts about mifepristone and misoprostol

MedpageToday
 A photo of a patient preparing to take the first of two combination pills, mifepristone, for a medication abortion.
(AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)

Vice President Kamala Harris is expected to about abortion Friday in Georgia, where two women's deaths have been tied to a state law that mostly bans the procedure after .

Amber Thurman died after waiting 20 hours for a hospital to treat complications that occurred after she took abortion pills. ProPublica earlier this week, the case is the first publicly reported instance of a woman dying from delayed care tied to a state abortion law.

The news organization also reported on the , a woman with lupus, diabetes, and hypertension who took abortion pills she ordered online. An autopsy found fetal tissue that hadn't been expelled and a lethal combination of painkillers, ProPublica reported. The state's maternal mortality review committee did not believe abortion medication caused her death.

Still, the fact both women used the pills -- mifepristone and misoprostol -- may raise questions about whether they are safe. Here are some facts.

What Safety Limits Have Been Imposed?

The FDA approved mifepristone in 2000 as a safe and effective way to end early pregnancies. The drug, which blocks the hormone progesterone, also primes the uterus to respond to the contraction-causing effect of another drug typically used along with it, misoprostol. The pills are used in more than nationally.

There are rare occasions when mifepristone can cause excessive bleeding that requires emergency care.

Because of that, the FDA initially imposed strict safety limits on who could prescribe and distribute it -- only specially certified physicians and only as part of three mandatory in-person appointments with the patient getting the drug. The doctors also had to be capable of performing emergency surgery to stop excess bleeding and an abortion procedure if the drug didn't end the pregnancy.

Over the years, the FDA reaffirmed mifepristone's safety and repeatedly eased restrictions, culminating in a 2021 decision doing away with any in-person requirements and allowing the pill to be .

In 2022, a coalition of anti-abortion groups filed a federal lawsuit against the FDA challenging the agency's long-standing approval of mifepristone. Justices ruled in June that the abortion opponents lacked the legal right to sue and preserved access to the medication.

How Often Are There Serious Problems?

Abortion opponents say the more lax restrictions resulted in many more "emergency complications." But that argument lumps together women experiencing a range of issues with mifepristone -- from the drug not working to people who may simply have questions or concerns but don't require medical care.

Ob/gyns say a tiny fraction of patients suffer "major" or "serious" adverse events after taking mifepristone.

A by a group of medical organizations including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) says: "When used in medication abortion, major adverse events -- significant infection, excessive blood loss, or hospitalization -- occur in less than 0.32% of patients, according to a highly regarded study with more than 50,000 patients."

The definition that scientists generally use for serious adverse events includes blood transfusions, major surgery, hospital admissions, and death, said Ushma Upadhyay, PhD, MPH, one of the authors of a .

The prescribing information included in the packaging for mifepristone tablets lists slightly different statistics for what it calls "serious adverse reactions." It cites ranges for how frequently various complications occur: 0.03-0.5% for transfusion, 0.2% for sepsis, and 0.04-0.6% for hospitalization related to medication abortions. The ranges reflect findings across various relevant studies, experts said.

Why Do Patients Go to the Emergency Room?

Mifepristone's labeling also lists a complication that most medical groups don't consider a serious or major adverse event: emergency department (ED) visits, which ranged from 2.9% to 4.6%. The current FDA label lists going to the emergency department as an option if patients experience prolonged heavy bleeding, severe abdominal pain, or a sustained fever.

But ED visits don't always reflect big problems, doctors told the Associated Press.

Some people may go there after a medication abortion because they want to be checked out or have questions but don't have a doctor, said Upadhyay, a professor at the University of California San Francisco. Others, she said, "don't want to go to their primary care provider about their abortion" because of stigma.

A in 2018 found that slightly more than half of patients who visited the ED because of abortions received only observational care. Some, Upadhyay said, "don't receive any treatment."

How Effective Is the Medication?

Mifepristone results in a completed abortion 97.4% of the time, according to U.S. studies cited in the FDA label.

But in 2.6% of cases, a surgical intervention is needed. And 0.7% of the time, the pregnancy continues.

That's compared to a procedural abortion in a clinic, where the chance of the procedure failing to end a pregnancy "is extremely, extremely low," probably less than 0.1%, said Pratima Gupta, MD, MPH, a board member for ACOG.

"Any time a procedural abortion is done, the clinicians ensure that it was a complete abortion" by examining the tissue that is removed or performing an ultrasound during or after the procedure, she said.

Gupta, who has done abortion procedures for more than 20 years, said there are "very few complications from abortion -- any kind of abortion, medication or procedural abortion." A recent study suggests that's just as true for medication abortions that happen in a clinic, a doctor's office, or at home with the help of telehealth.

How does mifepristone's safety and effectiveness compare to other drugs?

The FDA makes drug approval decisions on a case-by-case basis, weighing effectiveness, safety, and other factors.

No drug is 100% effective, and many common medications don't work for a significant portion of patients.

Antidepressants typically help between 40% and 60% of people with depression. New antibiotics approved by the FDA often resolve about 70% of infections.

Since 2000, roughly 6 million patients have taken mifepristone, according to the FDA. A of agency records looking for deaths that were likely related to the drug identified 13, or 0.00027% of patients.

Medical organizations supporting mifepristone's availability say the drug's safety -- given the rate of deaths -- compares to "ibuprofen, which more than 30 million Americans take in any given day."