Los Angeles Times

Medication abortion is common. Here’s how it works

- By Lindsey Tanner and Matthew Perrone Tanner and Perrone write for the Associated Press.

Medication abortions became the preferred method for ending pregnancy in the U.S. even before the Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade. These involve taking two prescripti­on medicines days apart — at home or in a clinic.

Abortion procedures are an invasive medical technique that empties the womb. They are sometimes called surgical abortions, although they don’t involve surgery.

Abortion by pills involves the drugs mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l. As more states seek abortion limits, demand for the pills is expected to grow.

How the drugs work

Mifepristo­ne is taken first, swallowed by mouth. The drug dilates the cervix and blocks the effects of the hormone progestero­ne, which is needed to sustain a pregnancy.

Misoprosto­l, a drug also used to treat stomach ulcers, is taken 24 to 48 hours later. The pill is designed to dissolve when placed between the gums and teeth or in the vagina. It causes the uterus to cramp and contract, causing bleeding and expelling pregnancy tissue.

How they’re used

Abortion medication is approved for use up to the 10th week of pregnancy.

The pills may be taken in a doctor’s office or clinic, where patients sometimes have an ultrasound or lab tests beforehand. Some providers also offer the pills through telehealth visits and then send patients the medication by mail.

Use of the pills has been increasing in recent years. As of 2020, they accounted for 54% of all U.S. abortions, according to preliminar­y data from the Guttmacher Institute. The group’s final estimate is due later this year.

Side effects

Studies and real-use evidence show that when taken together, the pills are safe and up to 99% effective. Side effects may include nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.

Bleeding is normal. Very heavy bleeding — soaking more than two pads an hour for more than two hours — is uncommon and requires medical attention.

Dr. Stephanie Rand, a New York ob-gyn and abortion specialist with the advocacy group Physicians for Reproducti­ve Health, says pregnancy tests should not be used right away to determine if a medication abortion was successful because the pregnancy hormone may linger in the body for several weeks.

Bleeding, with blood clots that include lighter colored tissue, are signs of success, she said.

Serious complicati­ons are very rare. The Food and Drug Administra­tion says more than 3.7 million U.S. women have used mifepristo­ne since it was approved more than 20 years ago.

The agency has received 26 reports of deaths in women using the medication, including two involving ectopic pregnancie­s, which grow outside the womb.

The medication­s are not recommende­d for certain patients, including those with suspected ectopic pregnancie­s or with implanted IUD birth control devices.

Costs

Costs vary by location but are similar to abortion procedures and may total more than $500. Health insurance coverage varies, with some plans making the pills free or low cost and others not covering them at all.

Mifepristo­ne is sold under the brand name Mifeprex and misoprosto­l under the brand name Cytotec, but both pills are available as generics.

Federal rules

The FDA approved mifepristo­ne to terminate pregnancy in 2000, when used with misoprosto­l. At the time, it imposed several limits on how the drug could be prescribed and dispensed.

In December, the agency dropped the biggest restrictio­n: a requiremen­t that patients pick up the medication in person. The FDA said a scientific review of the drug’s use — including during the COVID-19 pandemic — showed that women could safely receive the pills through the mail after an online consultati­on, without any increase in side effects or complicati­ons.

The decision allowed mail delivery of the pills nationwide, a change long sought by medical profession­al groups and abortion rights supporters.

Still, millions of women will have trouble accessing the pills due to a patchwork of state laws targeting abortion broadly and the pills specifical­ly. About half of U.S. states are expected to ban or greatly restrict abortion as a result of the reversal of Roe vs. Wade.

Legal conflicts

Legal experts foresee years of court battles over access to the pills as abortion rights proponents bring test cases to challenge state restrictio­ns.

There are strong arguments and precedents on both sides, experts note, though little certainty about which side might prevail.

The Biden administra­tion’s Justice Department has already signaled plans to challenge state restrictio­ns on medication abortion. And federal lawyers are likely to be joined by outside parties, including abortion rights groups such as Planned Parenthood and even the companies that make the pills.

The chief argument against pill restrictio­ns is likely to be the long-standing principle that federal laws, including FDA decisions, preempt state laws. Indeed, few states have ever tried to fully ban an FDA-approved drug because of past rulings in the agency’s favor.

Still, states with blanket abortion bans are likely to interpret them as barring abortion pills. Many of the laws don’t distinguis­h between abortion procedures and medication abortion.

“In the short term, those states that ban abortion are going to assume that their bans also include medication abortion and that will be prohibited,” said Greer Donley, a professor specializi­ng in reproducti­ve healthcare at the University of Pittsburgh Law School.

State law on pills

Even if blanket bans are successful­ly challenged, more than 30 states have laws specifical­ly restrictin­g access to abortion pills. For example, 19 states require that clinicians be physically present when the drug is administer­ed.

Those laws could withstand court challenges. States have long had authority over how physicians, pharmacist­s and other providers practice medicine.

States also set the rules for telemedici­ne consultati­ons used to prescribe medication­s.

Generally that means health providers in states with restrictio­ns on abortion pills could face penalties, such as fines or license suspension, for trying to send pills through the mail.

Women have already been traveling across state lines to places where abortion pill access is easier. That trend is expected to increase.

Meanwhile, some women will still get the medication via online pharmacies in Canada and overseas, often with telehealth consultati­ons from foreign doctors. The practice is technicall­y illegal but essentiall­y unenforced, and advocates believe women will increasing­ly choose this method.

“Antiaborti­on states are going to do everything they can to restrict medication abortion, but practicall­y speaking people have been and will continue to access it through the mail from internatio­nal pharmacies,” Donley said.

Years of uncertaint­y

Donley expects lawsuits based on various legal theories to play out for a few years before any clear decisions emerge.

One key question is how the nation’s top court might rule if and when it takes up those court cases.

Although the Supreme Court has rejected a constituti­onal right to abortion, conservati­ve justices have also generally deferred to the FDA on drug decisions.

 ?? Allen G. Breed Associated Press ?? ABORTION by pills involves the drugs mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l, which are taken a day or two apart.
Allen G. Breed Associated Press ABORTION by pills involves the drugs mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l, which are taken a day or two apart.

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