Houston Chronicle Sunday

Abortion clinics prepare for the end of FDA-approved pill

- By Ella Ceron

The most popular abortion method in the U.S. could vanish from the market, leaving providers scrambling to find alternativ­es after the end of Roe v. Wade.

A Texas judge is expected to rule soon on a case seeking to remove the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s decadesold approval of mifepristo­ne, one of two pills commonly used together to terminate a pregnancy. The antiaborti­on group behind the suit is arguing the FDA fast-tracked the drug’s authorizat­ion and lacked sufficient evidence to make its final decision.

Research has shown that medication abortion is safe and effective. Mifepristo­ne is approved for use in over 80 countries, including Canada, Sweden and the U.K.

Losing access to the pill “really would be catastroph­ic,” said Hayley McMahon, a public health researcher and doctoral student at Emory Rollins School of Public Health.

Over the past 20 years, medication abortion has become increasing­ly popular in the U.S. The most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that it accounted for more than half of all abortions in the country as of 2020. The number is likely higher now due to rule changes in recent years that have made it easier to prescribe via telemedici­ne and send to patients by mail.

Ahead of the ruling, abortion providers have started to make contingenc­y plans.

Telehealth clinics Honeybee Health and Abortion

on Demand said they’ll stock up on misoprosto­l, the pill currently prescribed along with mifepristo­ne to induce abortions, if the ruling doesn’t go their way. Misoprosto­l is approved for treating stomach ulcers, but studies have found that on its own can induce an abortion safely, though less reliably than the two-pill regimen. Together the two pills have a 95 percent success rate on average.

Aid Access and Choix are among the telehealth abortion services that allow people who aren’t yet pregnant to purchase mifepristo­ne — which has a shelf life of about five years — to save for later use. They offer slidingsca­le payments, but experts caution it still might not be an option for lowincome people. Aid Access also continue prescribin­g the pill and shipping it from overseas.

Major retail pharmacies Rite Aid, Walgreens Boots Alliance and CVS Health have plans to sell it in locations where state law allows. CVS Chief Executive Officer Karen Lynch said in an interview that the company follows state and federal laws in distributi­ng medication. Walgreens spokespers­on Fraser Engerman

wouldn’t comment on pending litigation. Rite Aide is monitoring the latest developmen­ts, spokespers­on Terri Hickey said, and dispenses medication in accordance with state and federal laws.

Abortion providers have had to adapt to fastchangi­ng rules in postRoe v. Wade America, where suits can alter state law from one week to the next. But the Texas abortion pill suit threatens to have lasting, national implicatio­ns. Without FDA approval, the drug would be pulled from the U.S. market, with a potential yearslong process to regain approval.

The looming ruling, which Greer Donley, a law professor at the University of Pittsburgh has called “unpreceden­ted,” has left clinics with more questions than answers. They’re unclear on when they would have to comply and what it would mean for their current supply of mifepristo­ne.

Clinics that see patients in person say they’ll try to shift as many people as they can to procedures. But that will likely mean fewer overall abortions because supply is limited and not everyone can afford the time and travel costs.

“You just can’t simply see as many patients in a day if they’re all procedures versus the medication option,” Ashley Brink, the clinical director of Trust Women Wichita, said at a virtual roundtable on Feb. 9. The clinic, which is the closest option for millions of people living in border states to the south with near-total bans, told Bloomberg News last year that its already overloaded and has to turn patients away.

 ?? Robyn Beck/AFP/TNS ?? Mifepristo­ne and Misoprosto­l, pills that terminate pregnancy, could be banned.
Robyn Beck/AFP/TNS Mifepristo­ne and Misoprosto­l, pills that terminate pregnancy, could be banned.

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