Literature DB >> 15772570

The effect of hormone therapy on plasma homocysteine levels: a randomized clinical trial.

Levent Tutuncu1, Ali Rustu Ergur, Ercument Mungen, Ismet Gun, Aktug Ertekin, Yusuf Ziya Yergok.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: An elevated plasma homocysteine level is a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. Hormone therapy (HT) may reduce fasting plasma homocysteine levels. We studied 80 postmenopausal women to determine the effect of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) combined with conjugated equine estrogens (CEE) on fasting plasma homocysteine levels.
DESIGN: In a randomized, double blind, prospective, placebo-controlled study, we randomly assigned 80 healthy postmenopausal women between CEE 0.625 mg/d combined with MPA 2.5 mg/d (n = 20), CEE 0.625 mg/d combined with MPA 5 mg/d (n = 20), unopposed CEE 0.625 mg/d (n = 20), and placebo (n = 20) all given for a duration of 6 months. Fasting plasma homocysteine levels were measured before and at the end of the treatment.
RESULTS: Before treatment, plasma homocysteine concentrations were similar in all groups. After 6 months of unopposed CEE, the mean fasting plasma homocysteine levels decreased by 19.02% when compared with baseline levels (P < 0.05). The mean fasting plasma homocysteine concentrations decreased by 17.63% and 19.56% from baseline in both the CEE plus MPA 2.5 mg/d and CEE plus MPA 5 mg/d groups, respectively (P < 0.05 for each group). In contrast, plasma homocysteine levels increased by 11.66% in the placebo group. The homocysteine lowering effect did not differ significantly among the three groups of women receiving unopposed CEE alone and CEE plus MPA at two different doses.
CONCLUSION: Six months of estrogen therapy (ET) and combined estrogen-progestogen therapy (EPT) significantly lower fasting plasma homocysteine levels in healthy postmenopausal women with equal efficacy.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15772570     DOI: 10.1097/00042192-200512020-00017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Menopause        ISSN: 1072-3714            Impact factor:   2.953


  2 in total

1.  Circulating tumor cell detection during chemotherapy in patients with breast cancer is not associated with plasma homocysteine levels.

Authors:  Renata Nunes Yoshihara; Bianca Marinelli Teixeira; Fernando Adami; Renata K Kuniyoshi; Beatriz C A Alves; Flávia S Gehrke; Viviane A Vilas-Bôas; Ligia A Azzalis; Virginia B C Junqueira; Edimar Cristiano Pereira; Fernando L A Fonseca
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2013-05-19

2.  What is the influence of hormone therapy on homocysteine and crp levels in postmenopausal women?

Authors:  Eli Marcelo Lakryc; Rogério Bonassi Machado; José Maria Soares; César Eduardo Fernandes; Edmund Chada Baracat
Journal:  Clinics (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2015-02       Impact factor: 2.365

  2 in total

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