To investigate relative efficacy of intrauterine diclofenac and ibuprofen as adjuvants to intrauterine quinacrine for nonsurgical sterilization, a total of 900 women were systematically allocated to 2 monthly insertions of pellets of diclofenac (75 mg) or ibuprofen (55.5 mg) as adjuvants to intrauterine quinacrine (216 mg) in a rural private practice in West Bengal, India. All women were prescribed oral contraceptives for three months from first insertion. In the middle of the study increased care was taken to insert pellets at the fundus. There was no statistically significant difference found in cumulative life-table pregnancy failure rates at 36 months for women receiving diclofenac (2.7 +/- 0.82) or ibuprofen (3.4 +/- 0.89). Taking care to insert pellets at the fundus resulted in a decline of failures at 24 months from 4.4 +/- 0.92 to zero. Intrauterine administration of pellets of quinacrine (216 mg) plus diclofenac (75 mg) or ibuprofen (55.5 mg) with 3 months' oral contraception provides acceptable efficacy if pellets are inserted to the fundus.
Two preliminary single-insertion clinical trials of the quinacrine pellet method of non-surgical female sterilization were compared. Both trials used transcervical application of quinacrine, 252 mg, and diclofenac, 75 mg, as pellets. In the first trial (21 April 1992 to 17 February 1993), 58 women received oral contraceptives for three months. In the second trial (19 February 1993 to 25 May 1994), 229 women received medroxyprogesterone acetate, 150 mg IM, at the time of quinacrine insertion. At 18 months, the life-table pregnancy failure rate per 100 women of the first trial was 8.6 (SE 3.7), whereas the failure rate for the medroxyprogesterone acetate group was 0.5 (SE 0.5), p<0.05. There were no serious complications or side-effects in either group. Larger confirming trials with random allocation and long-term systematic follow-up are needed to determine whether a single injection of medroxyprogesterone improves the efficacy of quinacrine.
The transcervical quinacrine pellet method developed by Zipper and co-workers is potentially a much needed safe, inexpensive, and effective non-surgical method of female sterilization. This method utilizes an intrauterine device inserter to deposit 250 mg of quinacrine hydrochloride as pellets in the uterine cavity. No complications or side effects, other than temporary pain and oligomenorrhea, have been reported. Tetracycline has an established track record for safety. It also has been reported to have properties similar to quinacrine as a sclerosing agent, with potential as a non-surgical method using the quinacrine insertion technique. To expand the experience with quinacrine and to study tetracycline as an alternative, studies were undertaken under the auspices of the Indian Rural Medical Association in Calcutta, India. During the period 14 August, 1979 to 28 June, 1984, 414 women received three insertions of 200 mg of quinacrine. There were 29 failures and a three-year life table failure rate of 8.5. During the period 25 April, 1984 to 28 December 1984, 55 women received three insertions of 200 mg of tetracycline. By 1 June, 1986 there were 32 failures among the 55 cases for a failure rate of 58%. A more recent study using a single dose of 1000 mg of tetracycline also produced unacceptably high failure rates.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.