In 1992, when I arrived at the Rayburn House Office Building to serve as a summer intern for then-Oregon Rep. Ron Wyden, the Democrat’s office was feverishly preparing for a congressional hearing on a drug called “RU-486.” The actress Cybil Shepherd testified, drawing attention to the proceedings, and we pored over data regarding the safety and efficacy of the drug we now know as mifepristone. At the time, mifepristone was only available in France, but the experience from that country had already demonstrated that the drug was effective, as safe or safer than surgical abortion — and much more affordable.
Mifepristone became legal in the U.S. in 2000, and its availability dramatically shifted the majority of early abortions to a medication-induced process that occurs in the privacy of one’s home.
Mifepristone became legal in the U.S. in 2000, and its availability dramatically shifted the majority of early abortions to a medication-induced process that occurs in the privacy of one’s home. It is used in conjunction with another medication, misoprostol, which prompts the contractions that complete the abortion. Twenty years of post-marketing data across more than 3 million usages for unwanted pregnancy has only strengthened the positive medical reputation of this drug combination.
On Friday in Texas, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk ruled that the FDA’s initial approval of mifepristone was unlawful. The plaintiffs, a collection of anti-abortion groups calling itself the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, had argued that the medication poses an unusual danger to the patient having an abortion. The plaintiffs expressed concern that the drug causes side effects, including cramping, bleeding and pain, that patients who use it experience regret and mental health sequelae, and that doctors who oppose abortion should not have to treat any complications that occur.
When Kacsmaryk issued his decision, Dr. Jennifer Lincoln, an ob/gyn and executive director of the reproductive organization Mayday Health, messaged me: “I am unsurprised that a conservative judge does not know more than the doctors and scientists who have known about the safety of this drug for over 20 years.” Indeed: the arguments that mifepristone is dangerous are disingenuous, cherry-picked and absurd.
Cramping pain and bleeding are simply symptoms of losing a pregnancy, whether through abortion or miscarriage. Serious side effects of mifepristone requiring hospitalization or transfusion are extremely rare, occurring at a rate of less than half of a percent across studies. It is safer in many respects than a drug such as Tylenol, which causes hepatotoxicity and yet can be purchased from a vending machine, and much safer than pregnancies carried to term — 1.4% of which result in severe maternal morbidity. Mental health problems are more common among women denied an abortion than those who have one. And treating a complication of any medication, including ones we ourselves do not or would not ourselves prescribe, is called caring for our patients.
A drug’s performance depends not only on its intrinsic properties but also on the context in which it is made available. The safety and effectiveness of an induced abortion is reduced when it is delayed and inaccessible. Anyone actually concerned about mifepristone’s impact on physical or mental health would make the drug easier to access.
In fact, mifepristone has been available only under a “risk evaluation and mitigation strategy” (REMS), something usually deployed early in a drug’s development, when a drug has striking safety risks, or when there is a risk of abuse. Only a certified provider can prescribe it, certified providers must sign an agreement with the patient that health risks have been reviewed before prescribing, and, until recently, the medication could only be dispensed to patients directly within a health care setting.
The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) opposes these unnecessary and onerous requirements, which limit access and are completely at odds with the evidence base for the drug and the experience of OB-GYNS prescribing these medications. A lawsuit out of Oregon and Washington takes aim at REMS as “unnecessary and burdensome,” urging that mifepristone’s availability be sustained and that it be prescribable without any REMS, “just like the 20,000+ other drugs that don’t have one.” That the mifepristone situation is not about actual safety is highlighted by the fact that Korlym, which is mifepristone at a higher dose but used for Cushing’s syndrome, is not subject to REMS. Canada offers mifepristone like any other prescription medication, without REMS, and has demonstrated similar stable, outstanding safety data.








