Literature DB >> 15749481

Postmenopausal hormone therapy: critical reappraisal and a unified hypothesis.

Lawrence S Phillips1, Robert D Langer.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To reconcile apparently conflicting evidence regarding the use of hormone therapy as a health-preserving strategy in postmenopausal women in light of that fact that findings from animal studies, human observation studies, and human clinical trials are consistent for outcomes such as fracture and breast cancer but differ for coronary heart disease (CHD).
DESIGN: Literature review and generation of a unified hypothesis consistent with all of the data.
SETTING: Animal trials, human observational studies, human studies of biologic intermediates, and human clinical trials. PATIENT(S): Premenopausal and postmenopausal women with or without antecedent CHD. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Coronary heart disease events, proxies, risk factors, and related mechanisms. RESULT(S): The complex CHD responses to hormone therapy in recent human trials likely reflect a combination of [1] early erosion/rupture of "vulnerable" coronary plaque, which is made worse by hormone therapy, [2] long-term reduction in plaque formation, which is improved by hormone therapy, and [3] modulation of the vasculoprotective actions of estrogens by systemic progestogens. CONCLUSION(S): The unified hypothesis predicts that hormone therapy initiated at the time of menopause should produce a decrease in CHD over time. In contrast, hormone therapy begun years after menopause should produce an increase in CHD events shortly after therapy is begun, followed later by benefit. In women who require progestogens for endometrial protection, there should be greater CHD benefit from use of progestogens with less systemic activity. The unified hypothesis is consistent both with plausible biologic mechanisms and with evidence from animal studies, human observational studies, and human clinical trials such as the Women's Health Initiative. In the absence of evidence from human trials that specifically involve initiation of hormone therapy in perimenopausal women, practitioners and patients can use the unified hypothesis as a rational tool to guide decisions about clinical management.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15749481     DOI: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2004.11.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fertil Steril        ISSN: 0015-0282            Impact factor:   7.329


  13 in total

Review 1.  Vascular effects of estrogenic menopausal hormone therapy.

Authors:  Ossama M Reslan; Raouf A Khalil
Journal:  Rev Recent Clin Trials       Date:  2012-02

Review 2.  Estrogen and Cardiovascular Disease: Is Timing Everything?

Authors:  Samantha Giordano; Fadi G Hage; Dongqi Xing; Yiu-Fai Chen; Steven Allon; Chongjia Chen; Suzanne Oparil
Journal:  Am J Med Sci       Date:  2015-07       Impact factor: 2.378

3.  Vasomotor symptoms and lipids/lipoprotein subclass metrics in midlife women: Does level of endogenous estradiol matter? The SWAN HDL Ancillary Study.

Authors:  Alexis Nasr; Karen A Matthews; Maria M Brooks; Daniel S McConnell; Trevor J Orchard; Jeffrey Billheimer; Daniel J Rader; Samar R El Khoudary
Journal:  J Clin Lipidol       Date:  2020-07-08       Impact factor: 4.766

4.  Combined hormone therapy at menopause and breast cancer: a warning--short-term use increases risk.

Authors:  Leslie Bernstein
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-09-14       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Estrogen-progestagen menopausal hormone therapy and breast cancer: does delay from menopause onset to treatment initiation influence risks?

Authors:  Agnès Fournier; Sylvie Mesrine; Marie-Christine Boutron-Ruault; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-09-14       Impact factor: 44.544

Review 6.  Estrogen and mechanisms of vascular protection.

Authors:  Dongqi Xing; Susan Nozell; Yiu-Fai Chen; Fadi Hage; Suzanne Oparil
Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol       Date:  2009-02-16       Impact factor: 8.311

7.  Estrogen effects on vascular inflammation are age dependent: role of estrogen receptors.

Authors:  Meaghan R Bowling; Dongqi Xing; Akash Kapadia; Yiu-Fai Chen; Alexander J Szalai; Suzanne Oparil; Fadi G Hage
Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol       Date:  2014-05-29       Impact factor: 8.311

8.  Hormone therapy and stroke: is it all about timing?

Authors:  Cheryl Bushnell
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2009-06

9.  An analytic framework for aligning observational and randomized trial data: Application to postmenopausal hormone therapy and coronary heart disease.

Authors:  Sengwee Toh; Joann E Manson
Journal:  Stat Biosci       Date:  2013-11-01

10.  Main morbidities recorded in the women's international study of long duration oestrogen after menopause (WISDOM): a randomised controlled trial of hormone replacement therapy in postmenopausal women.

Authors:  Madge R Vickers; Alastair H MacLennan; Beverley Lawton; Deborah Ford; Jeannett Martin; Sarah K Meredith; Bianca L DeStavola; Sally Rose; Anthony Dowell; Helen C Wilkes; Janet H Darbyshire; Tom W Meade
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2007-07-11
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