TheraRadar

Pharma Intelligence, Simplified

Data updated: Mar 10, 2026

CRYSELLE

ETHINYL ESTRADIOL
Approved 2001-11-30
1
Indication
--
Phase 3 Trials
24
Years on Market

Details

Status
Prescription
First Approved
2001-11-30
Routes
ORAL-21, ORAL-28
Dosage Forms
TABLET

Companies

Active Ingredient: ETHINYL ESTRADIOL , NORGESTREL

CRYSELLE Approval History

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What CRYSELLE Treats

1 FDA approvals

Originally approved for its first indication in 2001 .

  • Other (1)

CRYSELLE Boxed Warning

CIGARETTE SMOKING AND SERIOUS CARDIOVASCULAR EVENTS Cigarette smoking increases the risk of serious cardiovascular events from combination oral contraceptive (COC) use. This risk increases with age, particularly in women over 35 years of age, and with the number of cigarettes smoked. For this reason, COCs are contraindicated in women who are over 35 years of age and smoke [see Contraindications ] ....

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Ongoing clinical trials by development phase

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Key Completed Trials

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Completed studies with published results, ranked by significance

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Trial Timeline

Full development history with FDA approval milestones

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Understanding FDA Approval Types
Count Type What it means
- ORIG Original approval - drug first enters market
- SUPPL - Efficacy New indication (new disease/condition approved)
- SUPPL - Labeling Label text changes (warnings, dosing updates)
- SUPPL - Manufacturing Production changes (new facility)
- SUPPL - Chemistry Formulation changes (new dosage strength)

Green lines in the timeline show ORIG and Efficacy approvals - the clinically meaningful milestones.

CRYSELLE FDA Label Details

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Indications & Usage

Cryselle is indicated for use by females of reproductive potential to prevent pregnancy. In a study of 1,287 women with a total of 11,085 cycles or 852.7 women-years of usage, the pregnancy rate in women age 15 to 40 years was approximately 1 pregnancy per 100 women-years of use.

⚠️ BOXED WARNING

WARNING: CIGARETTE SMOKING AND SERIOUS CARDIOVASCULAR EVENTS Cigarette smoking increases the risk of serious cardiovascular events from combination oral contraceptive (COC) use. This risk increases with age, particularly in women over 35 years of age, and with the number of cigarettes smoked. For th...

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Data Sources

Data sourced from official FDA and NIH databases. Click links to verify on original sources.