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Hormone Replacement Therapy

Hormone Replacement Therapy. Dr Annice Mukherjee Consultant and Lecturer in Endocrinology Salford Royal NHS. Definition of Menopause. Failure of steroid production and ovulation and the final cessation of menstruation Average age 51 yrs

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Hormone Replacement Therapy

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  1. Hormone Replacement Therapy Dr Annice Mukherjee Consultant and Lecturer in Endocrinology Salford Royal NHS

  2. Definition of Menopause • Failure of steroid production and ovulation and the final cessation of menstruation • Average age 51 yrs • Incidence of natural premature ovarian failure before age 40 is estimated as 1%

  3. Menopause facts 70% women suffer with symptoms Symptoms may occur before menopause is biochemically or clinically evident Symptoms spontaneously improve over 2-5 years

  4. Symptoms of Menopause Menstrual irregularity indicating failing ovulation Vasomotor symptoms - hot flushes/flashes, night sweats Sleep disturbance Vaginal symptoms Mood changes Joint pains Physical Skin/body habitus/weight changes Sexual dysfunction

  5. Eleanor • 46, menopause began last year • Has had fractured humerus and pelvis after trivial injuries in past • Otherwise very healthy • BMI 19, FH osteoporosis • Tolerating menopause well with few symptoms

  6. The Effect of Age on Peak Bone Mass Consolidation Age-related bone mass Attainment of peak bone mass Males Females Fracture threshold Menopause 0 10 60 70 30 40 50 20 Years

  7. Eleanor • Has she had BMD checked?? • High risk of osteoporosis from history • Would benefit form HRT even in absence of symptoms in terms of bone protection

  8. Vicky • 33 year old female, married, no children • Menses stopped 18 months ago, several pregnancy tests negative, • Bloods LH 70, FSH 50, Oestradiol 42 • She wants to know if she can have children • She also complains of vaginal dryness and itching even thought she has had treatment for thrush

  9. Premature Menopause • Requires estrogen replacement until age of natural menopause • Symptoms may be more severe than natural menopause • Urogenital and sexual problems also impact • Cardiovascular risk increased • Osteoporosis • Fertility

  10. Vicky • Consider doing autoantibody screen • ?Family history prem. menopause/ behavioural problems in boys (-fragile X syndrome) • Estrogen replacement required for well being and bone protection-risk of osteoporosis • Can use high doses of HRT in this context • Pregnancy possible with egg donation

  11. Menopause Aims of Management To maximise the quality of life of hypogonadal women by: • Reducing the impact of menopausal symptoms • Addressing the increased risk of osteoporosis

  12. Treatment options Lifestyle Exercise, stop smoking, limiting alcohol, caffeine & stress, adopting a healthy diet Natural herbs & remedies Placebo treatment reduces hot flushes by 50% HRT Other prescription therapies

  13. Natural herbs & remedies • Phytoestrogens (Red clover) • Structural similarity to oestradiol • Efficacy data insufficient • Black cohosh • Buttercup family • Flushes & other symptoms • Data insufficient to date • Progesterone creams • Acupuncture

  14. Yvonne • 62 year old housewife • Severe MSK pain, hot flushes, sleep disturbance low libido, mood swings • Despirate for symptom control! • BMI 40, BP 160/95 • Tx for hyperlipidaemia • Strong FH of IHD & 2 sisters with breast cancer • Biochemistry- post-menopausal

  15. Prescription Remedies • HRT preparations • Progestogens • Venlafaxine and Paroxetine • Clonidine • Gabapentin

  16. Yvonne • 62 year old housewife • Identify ranking of symptoms • Is she depressed? • Would significant weight loss help well being? • If main symptom is flushing consider SSRI- upto 70% improvement in flushes/sweating • She may wish to start with a natural remedy

  17. The Role of HRT • Natural menopausal symptoms • Premature menopause • Surgical menopause • Other causes of oestrogen deficiency under age of 50 yrs • Menopausal women at significant risk of osteoporotic fracture • Consider contraindications risks carefully

  18. Risks of combined HRT Risks of oestrogen Only HRT • Breast cancer (1.24) • Stroke(1.41) • DVT (1.95) • IHD (1.24) • Billiary disease (1.59) • Ovarian cancer (1.2) • Malignant melanoma ? • Breast Cancer (0.77) • Stroke (1.39) • DVT (1.47) • IHD (0.77) • Billiary disease (1.67) • Ovarian cancer (1.2) • Malignant melanoma ? After women’s Health Initiative Study the number of women using HRT fell by almost half

  19. Benefits of HRT • Vasomotor symptoms • Mood changes and insomnia • Osteoporosis • Urogenital symptoms • Sexual dysfunction

  20. Use of HRT • Start during perimenopause in natural menopausal (earlier the better) • Most women use HRT for less than 5 years • Vaginal oestrogen is effective for urogenital symptoms • Merits of long term HRT should be assessed for each individual • Premature menopause • Osteoporosis

  21. HRT preparations/combinations • Oestrogen oral/patches/gels • With progestogen for women with an intact uterus • Sequential preparations (bleed) • Continuous combined preparations (non-bleed) • Intrauterine progestogen

  22. HRT; Dose and route • Use lowest dose for the shortest possible time in women with natural menopause • Women with premature menopause will need higher doses • Transdermal has less metabolic effect and probably safer

  23. Tibolone • Synthetic steroid with oestrogenic, progestogenic and androgenic actions • Relieves symptoms • Protects bones • Improves sexual function • Shares some of HRT risks although possibly not all

  24. Jenny • 50 yr old police officer • Menopausal symptoms++ • Had TAH for endometriosis 4 years before • Now feels so bad that she can’t work, thinks she will lose her job soon. Can’t afford to be un-employed • Has maternal aunt who died of breast cancer age 45

  25. Relative contraindications • Breast cancer • Thromboembolic disease • Coronary heart disease • Stroke • Gall bladder disease • Dementia • Migraine

  26. Jenny • Difficult problem • Quality of life vs. uncertain cancer risk • Could have trial of low dose oestrogen only transermal HRT with close monitoring & referral to breast cancer family history clinic • Spell out risks versus benefits

  27. Joan • 52 year old cleaner • Menses stopped 1 year ago • Reduced libido, low mood no flushes • Worried her partner is going to leave her • Tried HRT no benefit

  28. Sexual Dysfunction (PHSDS) p=0.0008 p=0.009 p=0.0004 p=0.0006 p=0.008 Hormone Therapy (HT) vs. HT + Testosterone on sexual function p=0.0007 p=0.0008 Somboonporn W et al. Testosterone for peri-and postmenopausal women (review), Oct 2005, Cochrane Library p=0.002

  29. Indications for Androgen Therapy • Progressive loss of libido and sexual enjoyment associated with non specific tiredness, loss of drive, motivation and sense of well being • Exclude clinical depression or other explanation

  30. Joan • 52 rear old cleaner management? • Is she depressed? • Is the reduced libido lack of interest or physical (vaginal discomfort/pain) or both • If complex psychosexual issues consider referral to specialist clinic • Consider topical oestrogen • Consider testosterone/HRT combination • Oral restandol/intrinsa patches

  31. Urogenital Atrophy • 10 - 40% of hypogonadal women are symptomatic • Oestrogens effective in the management • Most convincing evidence being in support of local treatment • Doses lower than conventionally used

  32. Conclusions • HRT has well recognised benefits and well publicised risks • Consider the indications and risk carefully and discuss them with the patient • Tailor the treatment offered to the needs of the individual patient

  33. Thank-You!

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