Daré Bioscience, Inc., San Diego, CA, United States.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, VA, United States.
Contraception. 2024 Jul;135:110440. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2024.110440. Epub 2024 Mar 27.
Evaluate the safety of Ovaprene, an investigational nonhormonal vaginal contraceptive designed for monthly use.
Open-label, multicenter study enrolling heterosexually-active women with previous permanent contraception who underwent assessments during five menstrual cycles: baseline postcoital test cycle, diaphragm postcoital test cycle, Ovaprene safety cycle, and two Ovaprene postcoital test cycles. Safety outcomes included treatment-emergent adverse events, systemic laboratory findings, pelvic examinations, colposcopies, Nugent scores, determination of community state types of vaginal microbiota, and anti-Escherichia coli activity and inflammatory markers in cervicovaginal fluids.
We enrolled 38 participants. Of these, 33 used Ovaprene and completed 77 Ovaprene cycles. The most common product-related urogenital treatment-emergent adverse events were bacterial vaginosis and vaginal odor. The frequency of transitioning from Lactobacillus-dominated community state type to community state type IV (not Lactobacillus-dominated) was similar before Ovaprene use and afterwards. Mean Nugent scores were <4 at each visit without a discernible upward trend. Inflammatory markers showed wide variation but no upward trend, and E. coli inhibitory activity of cervical secretions did not change. We found no Staphylococcus aureus, the causative agent in toxic shock syndrome, on used Ovaprenes or in vaginal samples. No clinically important changes in systemic laboratory findings, pelvic examinations, or colposcopies occurred during Ovaprene use.
Ovaprene use did not result in cervicovaginal irritation or adverse effects on resident vaginal microbiota and did not impact transitions from a Lactobacillus-dominated community state type to community state type IV.
The finding that the use of Ovaprene, an investigational monthly user-controlled nonhormonal vaginal contraceptive, does not appear to result in adverse changes in vaginal health during short-term use supports further evaluation of the contraceptive potential of the device.
评估 Ovaprene 的安全性,这是一种用于每月使用的非激素阴道避孕法。
这是一项开放性、多中心的研究,纳入了具有既往长效避孕措施且有性生活的女性,她们在五个月经周期内接受评估:基线后性交测试周期、隔膜后性交测试周期、Ovaprene 安全性周期,以及两个 Ovaprene 后性交测试周期。安全性结果包括治疗中出现的不良事件、系统实验室发现、盆腔检查、阴道镜检查、阴道微生物群 Nugent 评分、阴道微生物群社区状态类型的确定、宫颈阴道液中的大肠杆菌活性和炎症标志物。
我们共纳入 38 名参与者,其中 33 名参与者使用 Ovaprene 并完成了 77 个 Ovaprene 周期。最常见的与产品相关的泌尿生殖系统治疗中出现的不良事件是细菌性阴道病和阴道异味。在使用 Ovaprene 之前和之后,从乳杆菌主导的社区状态类型向非乳杆菌主导的社区状态类型 IV 的转变频率相似。每次就诊时 Nugent 评分均<4,没有明显的上升趋势。炎症标志物变化范围较大,但没有上升趋势,宫颈分泌物对大肠杆菌的抑制活性没有变化。我们在使用的 Ovaprenes 或阴道样本中未发现导致中毒性休克综合征的金黄色葡萄球菌。在使用 Ovaprene 期间,系统实验室发现、盆腔检查或阴道镜检查没有出现任何临床重要的变化。
Ovaprene 的使用不会导致宫颈阴道刺激或对常驻阴道微生物群产生不良影响,也不会影响从乳杆菌主导的社区状态类型向社区状态类型 IV 的转变。
使用一种非激素阴道避孕法(每月使用一次,且使用者可控制)Ovaprene 不会导致阴道健康在短期使用期间出现不良变化,这一发现支持进一步评估该装置的避孕潜力。