NEXPLANON is placed discreetly just under the skin of your non-dominant upper arm by a trained healthcare provider.
During this minor surgical procedure, the area is numbed, and an applicator guides NEXPLANON into place.
Immediately after insertion, you and your healthcare provider will feel for NEXPLANON to ensure that it was inserted correctly.
*In clinical trials, 5.2% of patients experienced insertion site pain.
Once the implant is placed, you and your healthcare provider should check that it is in your arm by feeling for it. If you cannot feel the implant immediately after insertion, the implant may not have been inserted, or it may have been inserted deeply. A deep insertion may cause problems with locating and removing the implant. Once the healthcare professional has located the implant, removal is recommended.
If at any time you cannot feel the NEXPLANON implant, contact your healthcare provider immediately and use a non-hormonal birth control method (such as condoms) until your healthcare provider confirms that the implant is in place.
Following the insertion, you’ll have to wear a pressure bandage for 24 hours and a small bandage for 3 to 5 days.
You will get a USER CARD to keep at home with your health records. Your healthcare provider will fill out the USER CARD with the date the implant was inserted and the date the implant is to be removed. Keep track of the date the implant is to be removed. Schedule an appointment with your healthcare provider to remove the implant on or before the removal date.
Be sure to have checkups as advised by your healthcare provider.
The timing of the insertion is important. Your healthcare provider may:
Perform a pregnancy test before inserting NEXPLANON.
Schedule the insertion at a specific time of your menstrual cycle (for example, within the first 5 days of your regular menstrual bleeding). If the implant is placed after the fifth day of menses, then you should use an additional contraceptive method (such as a condom) for the first 7 days after insertion.
A trained healthcare provider can remove NEXPLANON at any time during the 3-year period.*
Removal of NEXPLANON involves a minor surgical procedure by your healthcare provider and can be performed in the office through a small incision in your arm where NEXPLANON is located.
You may become pregnant as early as a week after the removal of NEXPLANON. If you do not want to get pregnant after your healthcare provider removes the NEXPLANON implant, you should start another birth control method right away.
*NEXPLANON must be removed by the end of the third year.
You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.
Please read the accompanying Patient Information for NEXPLANON and discuss it with your healthcare provider. The physician Prescribing Information also is available.