Title: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
1Hormone Replacement Therapy(HRT)
2Recent MHRA/CHM advice Drug Safety Update 2007
1(2)2-4
- The decision to prescribe HRT should be based on
a thorough evaluation of the potential benefits
and potential risks of treatment. - Healthcare professionals should assess every
womans overall risk, including cardiovascular
risk, particularly in those older than 60 years
who have increased baseline risk of serious
adverse events. - Evidence for the risks of HRT in women who had
premature menopause is limited. However, the
baseline risk of adverse events in these younger
women is low, and the balance of benefits and
risks may be more favourable than in older women.
3Benefits from HRTDrug Safety Update 2007
1(2)2-4
- Menopausal symptoms
- HRT effectively relieves vasomotor symptoms.
- In most cases, 23 years therapy is sufficient,
but some women may need longer. - For all women, the lowest effective dose should
be used for the shortest time. - Osteoporosis
- HRT is effective for prevention of osteoporosis,
but its beneficial effect on bone diminishes soon
after stopping treatment. - Because of the risks associated with long-term
use, HRT should be used for prevention of
osteoporosis only in women who are unable to use
other medicines that are authorised for this
purpose.
4Effects on fracture of the femurDrug Safety
Update 2007 1(2)2-4
From placebo group in oestrogen-only arm of WHI
From placebo group in oestrogenprogestogen arm
of WHI
5Harms from HRT cancersDrug Safety Update 2007
1(2)2-4
- Breast cancer
- The risk of breast cancer is increased in women
who take HRT for several years. - Combined HRT has been associated with the highest
risk. - For oestrogen-only HRT, risk is lower than with
combined HRT. Some studies have not shown an
increased risk for oestrogen-only HRT. - Risk increases with duration of use and returns
to baseline within a few years of stopping
treatment. - HRT, especially combined therapy, may increase
mammographic density, which may adversely affect
radiological detection of breast cancer. - Ovarian cancer
- Observational studies suggest that long-term use
of oestrogen-only or combined HRT may be
associated with a small increased risk of ovarian
cancer. - Risk returns to baseline a few years after
stopping treatment.
6Effects on cancersDrug Safety Update 2007
1(2)2-4
7Harms from HRT CV disease (1)Drug Safety
Update 2007 1(2)2-4
- Coronary heart disease (CHD)
- RCTs found increased CHD risk in women who
started combined HRT more than 10 years after
menopause. - Very few RCTs have assessed younger, newly
menopausal women, and some have suggested a lower
relative risk in these women compared with older
women. - The low baseline risk of CHD in most younger
women, and the very low attributable risk due to
HRT, means that their overall CHD risk is likely
to be low. - No increased risk of CHD with use of
oestrogen-only HRT has been identified to date. - Importantly, there are no data from RCTs to
suggest a cardiovascular benefit with
oestrogen-only or combined HRT. - Healthcare professionals should assess carefully
every womans risk of CHD before prescribing HRT,
irrespective of her age or time since menopause.
8Harms from HRT CV disease (2)Drug Safety
Update 2007 1(2)2-4
- Stroke
- Increased risk of stroke (mostly ischaemic) with
oestrogen-only and combined HRT. - Increase in relative risk similar irrespective of
age. - Baseline risk of stroke increases with age and
therefore older women have a greater absolute
risk. - Limited observational data suggest that stroke
risk may depend on oestrogen dose. - Venous thromboembolism (VTE)
- Oral HRT increases the risk of VTE (DVT or PE).
- Events are more likely in the first year of use.
- Risk appears higher with combined HRT than with
oestrogen-only HRT. - Risk associated with other routes of
administration not established, but it may be
lower with transdermal HRT.
9Effects on CVDDrug Safety Update 2007 1(2)2-4
10Alternatives to HRTCKS guidance. January 2008
- For many women, lifestyle adjustments, education,
and reassurance may be sufficient. - Vaginal lubricants and vaginal moisturizers can
help ease vaginal dryness and related symptoms. - Other potential treatments for menopausal
symptoms include tibolone, clonidine, various
antidepressants and testosterone. - Complementary therapies are widely used, but are
not recommended - few efficacy or safety data available
- some herbs e.g. soy foods, gingseng, black cohosh
and red clover have oestrogenic properties - Black cohosh also possibly associated with
hepatic impairment - EMEA Committee on Herbal Medicinal Products
(HMPC) www.emea.europa.eu/pdfs/human/hmpc/26925806
en.pdf
11Benefits and risks of tiboloneDrug Safety Update
2007 1(2)5-6
- Benefit-risk balance in licensed indications
- In younger women, the risk profile of tibolone is
broadly similar to that for conventional combined
HRT. - For women older than about 60 years, the risks
associated with tibolone start to outweigh the
benefits because of the increased risk of stroke. - Before starting tibolone, every womans overall
risk of stroke, breast cancer, and, in those with
an intact uterus, endometrial cancer should be
assessed carefully, taking into consideration any
baseline risk factors, the increased risk due to
tibolone use, and her therapeutic preferences. - Healthcare professionals should weigh the
increased risk of stroke with tibolone against
the increased risk of breast cancer with combined
HRT for women with a uterus.
12Results from the WHI trialJAMA 2002288321-33
HR for HRT vs. Placebo (95CI) Events per 10,000py for placebo Events per 10,000py for HRT Excess events per 10,000 py
CHD (non-fatal MI CHD death) 1.29 (1.02-1.63) 30 37 7
Stroke 1.41 (1.07-1.85) 21 29 8
Breast cancer 1.26 (1.00-1.59) 30 38 8
VTE 2.11 (1.58-2.82) 16 34 18
Hip fracture 0.66 (0.45-0.98) 15 10 -5
Colorectal cancer 0.63 (0.43-0.92) 16 10 -6
Total mortality 0.98 (0.82-1.18) 53 52 NS
13Summary
- 80 of women experience menopausal symptoms and
45 find them distressing. - For many women, lifestyle adjustments, education,
and reassurance are sufficient. - HRT is the main treatment
- Tibolone is an alternative, but note risks and
benefits. - For individual women, need to weigh benefits of
HRT against side-effects. - Reassess appropriateness of treatment annually
- Treatment longer than 5 years needs careful
thought.