Teen says blood clot after taking Yaz destroyed her life

Courtesy of Lynsey Lee

Lynsey Lee, 19, was diagnosed two years ago with a blood clot in her left lung, months after she began taking the birth control pill Yaz.

Lynsey Lee hoped Yaz would relieve her severe menstrual cramping and pelvic pain, so she began taking the birth control pills when she was only 16. But, instead of getting better, she started experiencing extreme mood swings, nausea and even more pain.

“I got really, really sick,” says Lee, now 19, of White Bluff, Tenn. “I was just constantly throwing up, and it was getting hard to breathe sometimes.”

Then, she started having unbearable chest pains that sent her to the hospital what seemed like every few days. Doctors initially couldn’t figure out what was wrong. “They kept telling me that it was just my body getting used to the medicine,” she says. “Finally, [when I was 17] I just stopped taking it.”

Later that year, after numerous medical exams, doctors diagnosed a blood clot lodged in her left lung. During one emergency room visit, doctors asked Lee what would become a life-changing question for thousands of young women like her: “Have you ever taken Yaz?”

Now, she is among the more than 10,000 American women who have filed class action lawsuits or claims against the German pharmaceutical giant Bayer, which makes Yaz, a popular birth control pill. Thousands more claims are expected. In documents released Tuesday, the Food and Drug Administration raised questions about conflicting evidence about the risks of taking Yaz and other similar pills, including life-threatening blood clots, and said warning information should appear on labels for doctors and patients.

Thursday, the FDA's panel of outside experts voted 21-5 that current labeling on the medications isn't enough and should be updated with more information on the risks. But that news comes too late for Lee.

“I wish I had known before,” she says. “I never would have taken Yaz.”

A representative from Bayer said the company did not have an immediate response.

The side effects of taking the birth control pill that was touted as having fewer side effects than others have destroyed her life, Lee says.

She had been the captain of the high school dance team, but Lee said after she began developing symptoms, she had to sit on the sidelines because she couldn’t catch her breath. She ended up missing the second half of her senior year in high school, including her senior prom. But, she says, her biggest sacrifice was giving up a full dance team scholarship to Vanderbilt University -- all because of the blood clot that doctors can do little about.

Removing it is too dangerous, they say; Lee takes blood thinners and hopes the clot will dissolve and work its way through her system.

Today, Lee says, she lives with pain and fatigue and isn't strong enough to work. Instead of attending college classes to earn a business degree, Lee makes weekly visits to her doctor for monitoring.

She’s hired Oklahoma City attorney Noble McIntyre, a member of the attorney group The Injury Board, which advocates for patient safety. McIntyre represents 60 Yaz victims and partners with another firm representing 600 Yaz clients.

“She’s missed out on her youth, and she missed out on a scholarship that probably was worth $200,000,” McIntyre says. “We try to give our clients hope that somebody understands what they are going through. We’re trying to communicate with the defendant what these women, through no fault of their own, have experienced. She lost her prom. She lost her freedom, something so valuable to people, because she’s mostly confined to her home.”

 

Story: FDA panel: Add stronger warnings to birth control labels

Lee says she’s depressed because her compromised health keeps her from living a normal teenager’s life. “I cry a lot,” she says. "It just hurts so much."

She dreams of someday opening a pastry shop and bakes cakes now for her family when she’s up to it. Shehas helped coordinate fundraising efforts for the Ronald McDonald House and the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis. But she's still not sure what her future may hold.

“I don’t pray to get better because it’s in [God’s]  hands,” she says. “I pray for happiness.  I pray for others in this world that have it much worse than I do.”

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Discuss this post

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I too developed multiple pulmonary emboli after taking birth control pills to help curb abnormally heavy bleeding. It took 12 days before I ended up in the hospital unable to breathe. It took them less than an hour to figure out the cause. 18 months later I am thankful to be alive, but occasionally feel the effects from the damage done to my lungs. There are other alternatives to help with heavy bleeding. I hope this girl and others know that there are options and there is a life after having an embolism.

    Reply#99 - Wed Dec 14, 2011 6:38 PM EST

    This is a side effect of being sexually active. If she would have abstained from sex none of this would have ever happened. Going to have to side with Bayer on this one.

      Reply#100 - Wed Dec 14, 2011 7:21 PM EST

      Why don't you people read? The reason she took the pills in in the first sentence, jeez....and I know first-hand that there are women who take the pill for severe cramps and not because of being sexually active; my best friend did just that and I am POSITIVE she was not having sex at the time.

        #100.1 - Wed Dec 14, 2011 8:21 PM EST
        Reply

        The lungs make a great filter to keep clots out of more dangerous places such as the heart and brain. She's lucky to be doing as well as she is. Better living through chemistry has its risks. Medicine is an art based on statistical studies. Her doctor(s) jsut told her what the statistical studies indicated and failed to think about other possible but not as probable causes. If Bayer didn't tell anyone about these risks, then the doctors aren't going to know either. Still, doctors should listen closely to their patients and just presume things. No one at Bayer wants these kinds of liabilities. People make mistakes and bad decisions and what we see with Yaz and this girl are the consequences.

          Reply#101 - Thu Dec 15, 2011 10:02 AM EST

          Should have said "Still, doctors should listend closely to their patients and not just presume things."

            #101.1 - Thu Dec 15, 2011 10:47 AM EST
            Reply

            I also take birth control pills to even out my menstrual cycle. I'm in my twenties and have been doing so since my early teens-somewhere around 13-15 years old-with no side effects. That said, I know there's a risk of blood clots. It's in the booklet that comes with the pills, plus my mom buys the newest edition of The Pill Book whenever she can. I do feel sorry for this girl, but since blood clots have been a risk of taking birth control for years, I think she should be suing the doctors who misdiagnosed her instead of the pill manufacturer.

              Reply#102 - Tue Jan 3, 2012 3:40 AM EST

              Doctors down-play side-effects so they can make a quick buck off patients. Why would they tell you not to take something and cost themselves a sale? To top it off, if you DO get side-effects, that means you have to go back in for help, which is another pay day for doctors. I took Yaz for 3 weeks to supposedly help with my migraines. I had horrible mood swings and heart palpitations. I called the doctor who had examined me and prescribed it, and she said "Stop taking it and use condoms instead." When I tried to tell her I wasn't on it to prevent pregnancy, she hung up on me. Doctors want your money. VERY RARELY do they want to truly help you.

              This girls parents should have researched the side-effects and read reviews from other women who had already taken it before tossing their 16 year old (who still trusts doctors and thinks her parents know what's right) on a pill that causes more problems than it could ever solve. Birth control is terrible for your body, especially for a 16 year old who is still getting used to her body's hormonal changes.

                Reply#103 - Fri Feb 17, 2012 10:25 AM EST
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