You should not take the pill if you suspect you are pregnant or have unexplained vaginal bleeding.
Although cardiovascular disease risks may be increased with oral contraceptive use in healthy, nonsmoking women over 40 (even with the newer low-dose formulations), there are also greater potential health risks associated with pregnancy in older women.
Most side effects of the pill are not serious. The most common such effects are nausea, vomiting, unscheduled bleeding, weight gain, breast tenderness, and difficulty wearing contact lenses. These side effects, especially nausea and vomiting, may subside within the first three months of use.
The serious side effects of the pill occur very infrequently, especially if you are in good health and do not smoke. However, you should know that the following medical conditions have been associated with or made worse by the pill:
- Blood clots in the legs (thrombophlebitis), lungs (pulmonary embolism), stoppage or rupture of a blood vessel in the brain (stroke), blockage of blood vessels in the heart (heart attack and angina pectoris) or other organs of the body. As mentioned above, smoking increases the risk of heart attacks and strokes and subsequent serious medical consequences. Women with migraine also may be at increased risk of stroke with pill use.
- Liver tumors, which may rupture and cause severe bleeding. A possible, but not definite, association has been found with the pill and liver cancer. However, liver cancers are extremely rare. The chance of developing liver cancer from using the pill is thus even rarer.
- High blood pressure, although blood pressure usually returns to normal when the pill is stopped.
The symptoms associated with these serious side effects are discussed in the detailed leaflet given to you with your supply of pills. Notify your health care provider if you notice any unusual physical disturbances while taking the pill. In addition, drugs such as rifampin, as well as some anticonvulsants and some antibiotics, herbal preparations containing St. John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum), and HIV/AIDS drugs may decrease oral contraceptive effectiveness.
There may be slight increases in the risk of breast cancer among current users of hormonal birth control pills with longer duration of use of 8 years or more.
Some studies have found an increase in the incidence of cancer of the cervix in women who use oral contraceptives. However, this finding may be related to factors other than the use of oral contraceptives.
Taking the pill provides some important noncontraceptive benefits. These include less painful menstruation, fewer pelvic infections, and fewer cancers of the ovary and the lining of the uterus.
Be sure to discuss any medical condition you may have with your health care provider. Your health care provider will take a medical and family history before prescribing oral contraceptives and will examine you. The physical examination may be delayed to another time if you request it, and the health care provider believes that it is appropriate to postpone it. You should be reexamined at least once a year while taking oral contraceptives. The detailed patient information leaflet gives you further information which you should read and discuss with your health care provider.
What You Should Know About Your Menstrual Cycle When You Use Amethyst™
You are likely to have unscheduled or unplanned bleeding or spotting when you start to use Amethyst™. The number of days each month with bleeding or spotting usually decreases over time in the majority of women. In a study of Amethyst™, about 5 out of 10 women had 7 or more days of bleeding or spotting while using their third 28-day pill pack of Amethyst™. The number of women with 7 or more days of bleeding or spotting decreased to 3 out of 10 women during the use of their seventh pill pack. Among women who continued to use Amethyst™ for one year, about 6 out of 10 women had no bleeding or spotting during their last month of use.
Do not stop taking Amethyst™ because of bleeding or spotting as this will increase your chance of getting pregnant. If the spotting or bleeding continues for more than 7 consecutive days or if the bleeding is heavy, call your health care provider.
Can I Get Pregnant While Taking Amethyst™?
You are not likely to get pregnant if you take Amethyst™ at the same time every day as directed by your health care provider. Because regular monthly bleeding does not occur on Amethyst™, it may be difficult to recognize if you get pregnant. If you suspect that you may be pregnant, or if you have symptoms of pregnancy such as nausea/vomiting or unusual breast tenderness, you should have a pregnancy test and you should contact your health care professional. Stop taking Amethyst™ if you are pregnant.
Instructions for the Patient
HOW TO TAKE AMETHYST™
Important Points to Remember
Before You Start Taking Amethyst™:
1. BE SURE TO READ THESE DIRECTIONS:
Before you start taking Amethyst™.
And
Anytime you are not sure what to do.
2. THE RIGHT WAY TO TAKE AMETHYST™ IS TO TAKE ONE PILL EVERY DAY AT THE SAME TIME.
If you miss pills, you could get pregnant. This includes starting the pack late. The more pills you miss, the more likely you are to get pregnant. See “WHAT TO DO IF YOU MISS PILLS” below.
3. MANY WOMEN HAVE SPOTTING OR LIGHT BLEEDING, OR MAY FEEL SICK TO THEIR STOMACH DURING THE FIRST 1 to 3 PACKS OF PILLS.
If you feel sick to your stomach, do not stop taking Amethyst™. This will usually go away.
If it doesn’t go away, check with your health care professional.
4. MOST WOMEN HAVE SPOTTING OR BLEEDING DURING THE FIRST FEW MONTHS OF TAKING AMETHYST™. Do not stop taking your pills even if you are having bleeding or spotting. If the bleeding or spotting lasts for more than 7 consecutive days, talk to your health care provider.
5. MISSING PILLS CAN ALSO CAUSE SPOTTING OR LIGHT BLEEDING, even when you make up these missed pills.
On the days you take 2 pills to make up for missed pills, you could also feel a little sick to your stomach.
6. IF YOU VOMIT (within 4 hours after you take your pill), you should follow the instructions for WHAT TO DO IF YOU MISS PILLS. IF YOU HAVE DIARRHEA or IF YOU TAKE SOME MEDICINES, including some antibiotics, your pills may not work as well.
Use a back-up nonhormonal method (such as condoms and/or spermicide) until you check with your health care professional.
7. IF YOU HAVE TROUBLE REMEMBERING TO TAKE AMETHYST™, talk to your health care professional about how to make pill-taking easier or about using another method of birth control.
8. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS OR ARE UNSURE ABOUT THE INFORMATION IN THIS LEAFLET, call your health care professional.
BEFORE YOU START TAKING AMETHYST™
1. DECIDE WHAT TIME OF DAY YOU WANT TO TAKE YOUR PILL. It is important to take your pill at the SAME TIME every day.
2. LOOK AT YOUR AMETHYST™ DISPENSER. The pill pack has 28 “active” white pills (with hormones).
3. ALSO FIND:
1) where on the pack to start taking pills, and
2) in what order to take the pills (follow the arrows).
Blister (Amethyst Levonorgestrel And Ethinyl Estradiol Ta 9)
* For use of day labels, see WHEN TO START THE FIRST PACK OF AMETHYST™ below.
4. BE SURE YOU HAVE READY AT ALL TIMES:
ANOTHER KIND OF NONHORMONAL BIRTH CONTROL (such as condoms and/or spermicide) to use as a back-up in case you miss pills.
AN EXTRA, FULL PILL PACK.
WHEN TO START THE FIRST PACK OF AMETHYST™
Day 1 Start
1. On Day 1 of your period, peel the day label from the sticker sheet which has the corresponding start day of your period printed on the left hand side; place the label on the dispenser in the designated location. Take your pill daily in the order indicated by the arrows on the dispenser card. Pick a time of day which will be easy to remember and take your pill at the same time every day.
2. Take the first “active” white pill of the first pack during the first 24 hours of your period.
3. You will not need to use a back-up nonhormonal method of birth control, since you are starting the pill at the beginning of your period.
WHAT TO DO DURING THE MONTH
1. TAKE ONE PILL AT THE SAME TIME EVERY DAY UNTIL THE PACK IS EMPTY.
Do not skip pills even if you are spotting or bleeding or feel sick to your stomach (nausea).
Do not skip pills even if you do not have sex very often.
2. WHEN YOU FINISH A PACK
Start the next pack on the day after your last pill. Do not wait any days between packs.
IF YOU SWITCH FROM ANOTHER BRAND OF COMBINATION PILLS:
When switching from a 21 pill pack: Start Amethyst™ on the first day of your period (withdrawal bleed). Be sure that no more than 7 days pass between the last day of your 21-day pack and your first Amethyst™ pill.
When switching from a 28 pill pack (21 active and 7 inactive pills, or 24 active and 4 inactive pills): Start Amethyst™ on the first day of your period (withdrawal bleed). Be sure that no more than 7 days pass after the last active pill and your first Amethyst™ pill.
IF YOU SWITCH FROM ANOTHER TYPE OF BIRTH CONTROL
When switching from other types of birth control such as pills containing only a progestin (progestin only pill or POP), an injection, or an implant, your health care professional will provide you with instructions for when to start Amethyst™.
WHAT TO DO IF YOU MISS PILLS
Combination oral contraceptives may not be as effective if you miss pills. Instructions for what to do if you miss pills are provided in the following table.
| # of pills missed in a row | What to do when you miss a pill(s) |
| 1 missed pill | • Take the missed pill as soon as you remember. THEN |
| • Take the next pill at your regular time. This means you may take 2 pills in 1 day. |
| • You COULD BECOME PREGNANT if you have sex during the 7 days after you restart your pills. You MUST use a nonhormonal birth-control method (such as condoms and/or spermicide) as a back-up for those 7 days. |
2 missed pills
and remembered on the day of the second missed pill | • Take 2 missed pills on the day you remember. The following day you are back on schedule to take 1 pill a day. |
| For example, you take your pills in the morning and you missed 1 pill on Monday and 1 on Tuesday. On Tuesday evening you remembered that you missed your Monday and Tuesday pills. You take the 2 missed pills on Tuesday evening and on Wednesday morning you’re back on schedule and you take 1 pill. |
| • You COULD BECOME PREGNANT if you have sex during the 7 days after you restart your pills. You MUST use a nonhormonal birth-control method (such as condoms and/or spermicide) as a back-up for those 7 days. |
2 missed pills
and remembered on the day after the second pill is missed | • Take 2 missed pills on the day you remember. The next day you take 2 pills. The following day you are back on schedule to take your pills. |
| For example, you take your pills in the morning and you missed 1 pill on Monday and 1 on Tuesday. On Wednesday morning you remembered that you missed your Monday and Tuesday pills. You take the 2 missed pills on Wednesday morning and 2 pills on Thursday morning. On Friday morning you’re back on schedule and you take 1 pill. |
| • You COULD BECOME PREGNANT if you have sex during the 7 days after you restart your pills. You MUST use a nonhormonal birth-control method (such as condoms and/or spermicide) as a back-up for those 7 days. |
| 3 or more missed pills | • Contact your health care professional for further advice. Keep taking one pill every day until you reach your health care professional. Do not take the missed pills. |
| • You COULD BECOME PREGNANT if you have sex during the 7 days after you restart your pills. You MUST use a nonhormonal birth-control method (such as condoms and/or spermicide) as a back-up for those 7 days. |
FINALLY, IF YOU ARE STILL NOT SURE WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE PILLS YOU HAVE MISSED
Use a BACK-UP NONHORMONAL BIRTH-CONTROL METHOD anytime you have sex.
PREGNANCY AFTER STOPPING THE PILL
If you do not desire pregnancy, you should use another method of birth-control immediately after stopping Amethyst™. You can get pregnant within days after stopping Amethyst™.
For additional information see “Detailed Patient Labeling.”
Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You may report side effects to FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088.
Brands listed are the trademarks of their respective owners.
Manufactured For:
Teva Pharmaceuticals
Parsippany, NJ 07054
Rev. A 1/2022