Abortion Bans Trigger Methotrexate Crisis for Some Women With Rheumatoid Arthritis

Methotrexate is the gold standard of care for RA, but it can also disrupt a pregnancy. In states with strict anti-abortion laws, some women with RA cannot get their routine medication easily or quickly.

pharmacist taking prescription forcefully from woman
Refusing to give women with RA methotrexate may be discrimination on the basis of sex and discrimination on the basis of disability.iStock

“Are you pregnant or do you plan on being pregnant?” asked the pharmacist.

Novelist Annie Noblin, 40, of West Plains, Missouri, had come in to pick up her prescription for methotrexate for her rheumatoid arthritis (RA). There had never been a problem before. But since Roe v. Wade?had been overturned on June 24, 2022, things had changed. Missouri is in a trigger state, where strict anti-abortion laws were “triggered.”

What Does an RA Drug Have to Do With Abortion?

Sometimes methotrexate is used off-label to end ectopic pregnancies, and use while pregnant can cause miscarriages or birth defects. Women with RA in states with restrictive abortion laws are now finding themselves in the crosshairs.

Invasive Health Questions, Delays in Refills

Noblin had gotten a text earlier in the day that her prescription was being held up. After hearing nothing for hours, she finally went into the pharmacy where she was told that her rheumatologist had to confirm that this was not going to be used for an abortion. And she had to reveal if she was pregnant or planning to be.

“I was livid,” she says. “It felt so invasive. Why are my reproductive plans anyone’s business? The pharmacist said she couldn’t give me the medication until I answered. I was forced then to release my private personal information.

“And now I am going to have to do this every time I try to fill a prescription. Because I can't stand on principle; I have to have this medicine,” she says, adding, “And what if I do become pregnant? Am I then liable for what happens?”

What the Anti-Choice Side Says About the Patient Predicament

When asked to comment on this issue, Laura Echevarria, communications director and press secretary of the National Right to Life Committee, responded via email: “This is absurd. No law passed or proposed by the pro-life movement prohibits doctors from prescribing methotrexate for arthritis. … There are no pro-life laws designed to prevent the drugs from being administered for treatment for arthritis.”

The Concern About Access to Methotrexate Is Real

And yet, Steven Newmark,?director of policy and general counsel for the Global Health Living Foundation, confirms that access to methotrexate is becoming a problem in our post-Roe world. “We have heard from women in certain states that had trigger laws in the wake of the Dobbs decision, that they were being denied access to their FDA [U.S. Food and Drug Administration]–approved drug for their chronic condition. Additional barriers have been put in place in certain instances or more questions were asked. In certain instances we've heard of folks who have just been denied outright.”

Pharmacists Are in the Middle of the Conflict

Some states are trying to clear up the matter. Kentucky’s Board of Pharmacy published the following emergency rule:

“Any prescription or medical order for a drug that is known to possibly cause an abortion shall be presumed by a pharmacy to be for indications other than for the termination of a pregnancy. A pharmacy dispensing such prescription or medical order shall not be required to verify that the prescription or medical order does not violate any provision of this chapter or KRS Chapter 216B.”

But when contacted, Amy Thibault, lead director of external communications for CVS Pharmacy, responded via email, “Laws in certain states restrict the dispensing of medications for the purpose of inducing an abortion. These laws, some of which include criminal penalties, have forced us to require pharmacists in these states to validate that the intended indication is not to terminate a pregnancy before they can fill a prescription for methotrexate or misoprostol.”

What’s the Obligation of the Pharmacist?

The American Pharmacists Association (APHA) sounded an alarm in its July statement, saying “Today, in response to the U.S. Supreme Court recent decision in Dobbs v. Jackson?Women’s Health Organization, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ [HHS] Office for Civil Rights (OCR) released guidance [PDF] for pharmacies that sets forth their obligations under federal civil rights laws, conflicting with some state laws, and raises concerns for our nation's pharmacies and pharmacists.”

What’s more, says the APHA, “The guidance also takes away a pharmacists’ professional judgment to make ‘determinations regarding the suitability of a prescribed medication for a patient; or advising patients about medications and how to take them.’ The implications of the guidance have the potential to cause widespread unintended consequences beyond reproductive healthcare services.”

Pharmacists Group Calls for Clear Policies

In the meantime, E. Michael Murphy, PharmD, advisor for state government affairs at the APHA says, “We have urged state and federal policymakers to take action to ensure patients maintain access to FDA-regulated medications and evidence-based patient care services. It is a complicated question because the laws and regulations in each state are different. We encourage our members to refer to state laws and regulations. ... And we encourage policymakers to provide explicit guidance to healthcare professionals in how to navigate these confusing regulations.”

Healthcare Providers Are Constrained, Too

“Physicians have been placed in an impossible situation, trying to meet their ethical duties to place patients’ health and well-being first, said American Medical Association (AMA) President Jack Resneck Jr., MD, when he provided?testimony (PDF) to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, on July 19, 2022. “We have only begun to assess the full impact of the Dobbs decision,” he said, adding, “At this point, we have more questions than answers.”

In the meantime, Thibault says CVS encourages providers to include their diagnosis on the prescriptions they write so pharmacists know immediately what the medication is intended for.

What Can Prescription Holders Do? Ultimately, the Law Is on the Patients’ Side

Section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is federal law that broadly prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded health programs and activities. The HHS Office of Civil Rights is charged with enforcing this. “That guidance says that generally speaking, pharmacies cannot refuse to dispense medication related to reproductive health, including, but not limited to misoprostol and methotrexate, explains Michelle Banker, director of reproductive rights and health litigation at the National Women’s Law Center.

The reason, she continues, “is that refusing them may constitute discrimination on the basis of sex, which includes discrimination on the basis of pregnancy. It also would include discrimination on the basis of disability, including certain autoimmune diseases that methotrexate is used to treat.”

Remember: Pharmacies Must Fulfill Prescriptions for Medication

Banker adds that one other nuance is that it is possible that in certain limited circumstances, an individual's pharmacist or a pharmacy employee may invoke certain federal laws that permit this sort of refusal on religious grounds but those refusal statutes don't extend to the pharmacy itself. If a person at the pharmacy refuses to fulfill a prescription, then someone else at the pharmacy must do so.

What to Do if You’re Denied Medication

Invoke Section 1557. Bring a copy of "Guidance to Nation’s Retail Pharmacies: Obligations under Federal Civil Rights Laws to Ensure Access to Comprehensive Reproductive Health Care Services." On page 3, it lists two examples of how denying methotrexate may constitute sex or disability discrimination. Noblin, for example, could use this to refuse to give invasive, personal information. If you are up to it, you can also file a complaint with the HHS Office for Civil Rights or bring a lawsuit against the discriminating party.

Other Avenues for Help

The Arthritis Foundation recommends the following:

  • Contact its toll-free Helpline for one-on-one support from licensed social workers and trained staff at 800-283-7800.
  • Ask your doctor to write the purpose of the prescription on it — that way, the pharmacist will be informed that the prescription isn’t for abortion.
  • Patients can also try to send their prescription to a different pharmacy, consider mail-order deliveries or alternative medication options with their doctor if they are having trouble.

Global Healthy Living Foundation and CreakyJoints?The?Global Healthy Living Foundation?and?CreakyJoints, advocacy organizations, are encouraging people to contact their elected officials to let them know the importance of this vital medication. To share your story with CreakyJoints, send a tweet to @zoerothblatt?????.

Alexa Meara, MD

Medical Reviewer

Alexa Meara, MD, is an assistant professor of immunology and rheumatology at The Ohio State University.?She maintains a multidisciplinary vasculitis clinic and supervises a longitudinal registry of lupus nephritis and vasculitis patients. Her clinical research is in improving patient–physician communication. She is involved in the medical school and the Lead-Serve-Inspire (LSI) curriculum and serves on the medical school admissions committee; she also teaches multiple aspects of the Part One curriculum. Her interests in medical-education research include remediation and work with struggling learners.

Dr. Meara received her medical degree from Georgetown University School of Medicine in Washington, DC.? She completed her internal medicine training at East Carolina University (ECU) at Vidant Medical Center in Greenville, North Carolina, then spent two more years at ECU, first as chief resident in internal medicine, then as the associate training program director for internal medicine. She pursued further training in rheumatology at The Ohio State University in Columbus, completing a four-year clinical and research fellowship?there in 2015.?

Beth Levine

Author

Beth Levine is an award-winning health writer whose work has appeared in The Washington Post, The New York Times, O: The Oprah Magazine, Woman's Day, Good Housekeeping, Reader's Digest, AARP Bulletin, AARP The Magazine, Considerable.com, and NextTribe.com. She has also written custom content for the Yale New Haven Hospital and the March of Dimes.

Levine's work has won awards from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, the Connecticut Press Club, and the Public Relations Society of America. She is the author of Playgroups: From 18 Months to Kindergarten a Complete Guide for Parents and Divorce: Young People Caught in the Middle. She is also a humor writer and in addition to her editorial work, she coaches high school students on their college application essays.

See Our Editorial PolicyMeet Our Health Expert Network
xxfseo.com