Title: Menopause
1Menopause
- Paul Beck, MD, FACOG, FACS
2What is Menopause
- Loss of ovarian activity loss of menses
- Loss of estrogen-significant impact
- Life span in menopause 1/3 to ½
3MenopauseDemographics
- 42 million women over age 50
- 52 million by 2010
- 8.8 million women age 50 to 54
- Average age at menopause 51.4 years
- (range 45 to 55 years)
4Epidemiology
5Primary Symptoms of Menopause
- Cycle changes
- Oligoamenorrhea amenorrhea
- Vasomotor
- Vaginal dryness
6Secondary Symptoms of Menopause
- Urinary stress/urge incontinence
- Frequency burning ( cystitis)
- Psychophysiologic changes
- Musculoskeletal pains
- Decrease concentration
- Decreased libido
7Actions of Estrogen
- Development of ovaries, tubes, uterus and vagina
- Secondary sexual characteristics
- HPO axis interaction
- Proliferative changes in the endometrium
- Increases fat deposition and vascular profusion
of skin
8Actions of Progesterone
- Specific
- Interacts with hypothalmus and pituitary to
regulate menstrual cycle - Produces secretory changes in the endometrium
- Increases viscosity of cervical mucus
- Prepares breast for lactation during pregnancy
9Consequences and Impact of Estrogen Loss
- Hot flashes
- Sleep disturbance
- Urogenital Atrophy
- Osteoporosis
- Skin Dryness
- Aging
10Managment
- Hormone therapy
- Alternative therapy
- Grin and bear it
11Estrogen/Progesterone TherapyPotential Risks and
Concerns
- Womens health initiative study
- Breast cancer
- Cardio vascular disease
- Venous thrombosis
- Endometrial cancer
- Compliance/therapy
12WHI Objective
- Assess benefits and risks of the most commonly
used E/P combination in the US - 16,608 women randomized
- 8, 506 EP (.625 CEE 2.5 MP)
- 8, 102 placebo
- Planned duration 8.5 years
- Post menopausal women age 50 79 years
13WHI Main Outcome Measures
-
- Primary outcome
- coronary heart disease (CHD) non-fatal
- myocardial infarction and CHD death
- Primary adverse outcome
- invasive breast cancer
- Secondary outcomes
- stoke
- pulmonary embolism
- endometrial cancer
- cholorectal cancer
- hip fracture
- death due to other causes
14WHI Continued
- No substantive difference between groups at
baseline - Mean age 63.2 for EP group
- Mean age 63.3 for placebo group
- 2/3 between 60 and 79 years
15WHI Status
- EP study stopped early 531 2002, mean 5.2
years - Reason increase in invasive breast cancer
exceeded the safety boundary for harm - Evidence for some increase in CHD, stroke and
pulmonary embolism - Outweighed evidence fracture decrease
- Unopposed estrogen study continued
16Womens Health InitiativeClinical Outcomes
17WHI Time Trends
- CHD began to develop soon after randomization
(first year) - Breast Cancer comparable through first four
years then curve for estrogen began to rise more
rapidly then placebo - 5.2 years sharper increase- more pronounced
18Womens Heath Initiative Primary Conclusion
- The risk-benefit profile found in this trial is
not consistent with the requirements for a viable
intervention for primary prevention of chronic
diseases, and the results indicate that this
regiment should not be initiated or continued for
primary prevention of CHD. - Writing Group for the Womens Health Initiative
Investigators - JAMA 2002288321-333
19WHI Implications/Limitations
- Absolute risks small-previously described
- E/PT for treatment of menopausal symptoms not
evaluated - Only one drug used not comparable for other E/PTs
20WHI Preliminary Findings for Estrogen Alone As
Reported by the NIH
21Summary (WHI Trials)
22Alternative MeasuresVasomotor Symptoms
- Progesterone/oral and transdermal works/adverse
affect on lipid profile - Micronized natural plant progesterone no
adverse effect on lipid profile no trials
regarding vasomotor symptoms - Exercise beneficial (selection bias)
- Soy significant reduction in hot flashes-
requires large amounts lowers LDL
23Vasomotor Symptoms(continued)
- Black Cohosh significant improvement
- Dong Quai no improvement when used alone
- Evening Primrose Oil no more effective than
placebo - Antidepressants SSRIs 50 improvement
- St. Johns Wort use in mild depression
beneficial for menopausal symptoms
questionable efficacy - Other Herbal Supplements/Homeopathy flaxseed
oil, fish oil, omega 3, red clover, ginseng, rice
bran oil, wild yam, calcium, gotukola, licorice
root, sage, sarsaparilla, passion flower, ginkgo
biloba and valerian root no evidence
24MenopausePreventing Cardiovascular Disease
- Soy claim based on lipid lowering effects
- Vitamin C, E, and B Carotene no good evidence
- Fish Oil Omega-3 fatty acids and N-3
polyunsaturated fatty acids effective for
secondary prevention of cardiac events no large
trials as a means of primary prevention in
postmenopausal women who are at risk - Red Clover does not improve plasma lipids- no
long term studies
25MenopausePreventing Bone Loss
- Soy (i.e., isoflavone) - small studies on
postmenopausal women show increase in lumbar
spine BMD no difference in hip - Hip Fracture no studies documenting reduction
- Magnesium deficiency may contribute to
decreased BMD
26Summary
- Black Cohosh good for vasomotor symptoms
- Soy good for VMS bone lowers lipid levels
- Exercise good for VMS
- Fish Oil good for secondary prevention of
cardiac events, not VMS - Magnesium good for bone density no evidence
of prevention of hip fractures