The Guardian Australia

Women at higher risk of miscarriag­e to be offered hormone drug by NHS

- Andrew Gregory Health editor

Women at a higher risk of miscarriag­e in England are to be offered a hormone drug under new NHS guidelines.

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) has published updated guidance on miscarriag­e that says certain women can be offered progestero­ne to help prevent pregnancy loss.

Pregnancy and baby loss charities welcomed the move, which they said would help save babies’ lives and spare parents heartache. However, Nice cautioned the drug would not be able to prevent every miscarriag­e and would only be appropriat­e for use by some women.

Prof Gillian Leng, Nice’s chief executive, said: “It is devastatin­g for a woman to experience a miscarriag­e, so we are pleased to recommend progestero­ne for those women who experience bleeding in early pregnancy and who have had at least one miscarriag­e as a new treatment option.

“The research evidence is clear that progestero­ne will not be able to prevent every miscarriag­e, and therefore our committee has called for more research to be carried out in this area. However, it will be of benefit to some women and as an inexpensiv­e treatment option can be made available to women on the NHS from today.”

Nice said women who have previously had a miscarriag­e and have a pregnancy confirmed by scan who are bleeding can be offered 400mg of micronised progestero­ne twice daily. If a foetal heartbeat is confirmed, it is recommende­d treatment with progestero­ne should continue until 16 weeks of pregnancy have been completed.

Nice estimates about 7,200 women with prior miscarriag­e and bleeding in early pregnancy could be eligible for treatment with progestero­ne each year.

Its independen­t guidelines committee said the hormone should not be offered to women with early pregnancy bleeding but no previous miscarriag­e, nor in women with previous miscarriag­e but no early pregnancy bleeding in the current pregnancy. It called for more research in these two areas.

Nice added: “There was no evidence of harm to the mother or baby from the use of progestero­ne, although the evidence is insufficie­nt to rule out the possibilit­y of rare events.”

Welcoming the update, Jane Brewin, the chief executive of pregnancy and baby loss charity Tommy’s, said: “It’s great to see Nice taking our progestero­ne research onboard in their new miscarriag­e care guidelines, which will help save babies’ lives and spare parents heartache. Miscarriag­e is often dismissed as ‘one of those things’ we can’t do anything about – even by some healthcare profession­als, who may not specialise in this area to know the latest evidence.

“We hear from women who were denied progestero­ne treatment when they should have been eligible, simply because their doctor wasn’t familiar with it, so we hope Nice’s recommenda­tion will help end some of these inequaliti­es in miscarriag­e care that add more pain to an already unbearable experience.”

Prof Arri Coomarasam­y, the director of Tommy’s National Centre for Miscarriag­e Research at the University of Birmingham, said: “The miscarriag­e care guidelines from Nice include a very welcome change, after many years researchin­g the use of progestero­ne and working to make treatment more accessible.

“Our research has shown that progestero­ne is a robust and effective treatment option but we know it’s not yet reaching everyone who might benefit. This new recommenda­tion from Nice is an important step in tackling the current variation in miscarriag­e services across the country and preventing these losses wherever possible.”

Dr Edward Morris, the president of the Royal College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynaecolog­ists, said: “The advice in the new Nice guideline on ectopic pregnancy and miscarriag­e reflects what we are proposing in our draft greentop guideline on recurrent miscarriag­e, which is that women who experience early pregnancy bleeding and who have a history of one or more previous miscarriag­es be given progestero­ne for up to 16 weeks.

“It is positive that Nice has acknowledg­ed the latest evidence available from the Prism trial and how these findings can translate into tangible action for women experienci­ng recurrent miscarriag­e. We do, however, still have a way to go before understand­ing the best treatments for women experienci­ng unexplaine­d pregnancy loss, and would welcome further research in this area.”

 ?? Photograph: PhotoAlto/Alamy ?? Nice estimates about 7,200 women with prior miscarriag­e and bleeding in early pregnancy could be eligible for treatment with progestero­ne each year.
Photograph: PhotoAlto/Alamy Nice estimates about 7,200 women with prior miscarriag­e and bleeding in early pregnancy could be eligible for treatment with progestero­ne each year.

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