| Literature DB >> 22956886 |
Henri Leminen1, Ritva Hurskainen.
Abstract
Tranexamic acid has proven to be an effective treatment for heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB). It reduces menstrual blood loss (MBL) by 26%-60% and is significantly more effective than placebo, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, oral cyclical luteal phase progestins, or oral etamsylate, while the levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system reduces MBL more than tranexamic acid. Other treatments used for HMB are oral contraceptives, danazol, and surgical interventions (endometrial ablation and hysterectomy). Medical therapy is usually considered a first-line treatment for idiopathic HMB. Tranexamic acid significantly improves the quality of life of women treated for HMB. The recommended oral dosage is 3.9-4 g/day for 4-5 days starting from the first day of the menstrual cycle. Adverse effects are few and mainly mild. No evidence exists of an increase in the incidence of thrombotic events associated with its use. An active thromboembolic disease is a contraindication. In the US, a history of thrombosis or thromboembolism, or an intrinsic risk for thrombosis or thromboembolism are considered contraindications as well. This review focuses on the efficacy and safety of tranexamic acid in the treatment of idiopathic HMB. We searched for medical literature published in English on tranexamic acid from Ovid Medline, PubMed, and Cinahl. Additional references were identified from the reference lists of articles. Ovid Medline, PubMed, and Cinahl search terms were "tranexamic acid" and "menorrhagia" or "heavy menstrual bleeding." Searches were last updated on March 25, 2012. Studies with women receiving tranexamic acid for HMB were included; randomized controlled studies with a description of appropriate statistical methodology were preferred. Relevant data on the physiology of menstruation and the pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of tranexamic acid are also included.Entities:
Keywords: heavy menstrual bleeding; menorrhagia; tranexamic acid
Year: 2012 PMID: 22956886 PMCID: PMC3430088 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S13840
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Tranexamic acid in the treatment of heavy menstrual bleeding
| Trial | Intervention method | n | Selection criteria | Outcome measures | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andersch et al | 1. TA 1.5 g × 3 pd 1–3 and 1 g × 2 pd 4–7 | 15 | Women aged 34–49 years | MBL (AHM) | Mean MBL change from baseline: |
| 2. FLU 100 mg × 2 pd 1–5 | 15 | Regular cycle | |||
| Total | 15 | ||||
| Duration: 2 screening and 2 + 2 treatment cycles | |||||
| Bonnar and Sheppard | 1. ETM 500 mg × 4 pd 1–5 | 27 | Women aged 35–46 years | MBL (AHM) | Mean MBL change from baseline: |
| 2. TA 1 g × 4 pd 1–5 | 26 | MBL > 80 mL per cycle | Duration of bleeding | ||
| 3. MEF 500 mg × 3 pd 1–5 | 23 | Normal hysteroscopy, endometrial biopsy, and cervical cytology | Number of sanitary napkins used | ||
| Total | 76 | ||||
| Duration: 3 placebo and 3 treatment cycles | |||||
| Callender et al | 1. TA 1 g × 4 pd 1–4 | 20 | Women aged 33–48 years | MBL (Total body counter) | Mean MBL change from baseline: |
| 2. Placebo pd 1–4 | 20 | Subjectively perceived menorrhagia or iron deficiency anemia | |||
| Total | 20 | Duration of bleeding | |||
| Duration: 3 + 3 treatment cycles | Number of napkins used | ||||
| Freeman et al | 1. TA 650 mg × 3 pd 1–5 | 115 | Women aged 18–49 years | MBL (AHM) | Mean MBL change from baseline: |
| 2. TA 1.3 g × 3 pd 1–5 | 112 | Average MBL ≥ 80 mL over two cycles | QOL (MIQ) | ||
| 3. Placebo pd 1–5 | 67 | Number of large stains | |||
| Total | 294 | Regular cycle | |||
| Duration: 2 screening and 3 treatment cycles | Uterine fibroids not excluded unless surgical management warranted | ||||
| Kouides et al | 1. TA 1 g × 4 pd 1–5 | 67 | Women aged 18–50 years | MBL (PBAC) | Mean MBL (PBAC) change from baseline: |
| 2. IN-DDAVP 300 μg × 1 pd 2–3 | 49 | Abnormal laboratory hemostasis | QOL (HRQOL, SF-36, CES-D, and RUTA) | ||
| Total | 116 | ||||
| Duration: 2 + 2 treatment cycles | PBAC score ≥ 100 | ||||
| Kriplani et al | 1. TA 500 mg × 4 pd 1–5 | 49 | Women presenting with heavy | MBL (PBAC) | Mean MBL (PBAC) change from baseline: |
| 2. MPA 10 mg × 2 pd 5–25 | 45 | menstrual bleeding | Duration of bleeding | ||
| Total | 94 | PBAC score > 100 | Hemoglobin | ||
| Duration: 3 months of treatment and 3 months of follow-up | QOL (VAS) | ||||
| Lukes et al | 1. 1.3 g × 3 pd 1–5 | 115 | Women aged 18−49 years | MBL (AHM) | Mean MBL change from baseline: |
| 2. Placebo pd 1–5 | 72 | Average MBL ≥ 80 mL over two cycles | QOL (MIQ) | ||
| Total | 187 | Number of large stains | |||
| Duration: 2 screening and 6 treatment cycles | Regular cycle | Hemoglobin and ferritin | |||
| Milsom et al | 1. LNG-IUS (release of 20 μg/day) | 16 | Women aged 31−49 years | MBL (AHM) | Mean MBL change from baseline: |
| 2. FLU 100 mg × 2 pd 1–5 | 15 | MBL > 80 mL per cycle | Hemoglobin | ||
| 3. TA 1.5 g × 3 pd 1–3 and 1 g × 2 pd 4–5 | 15 | Regular cycle | |||
| Total | 15 | ||||
| LNG-IUS 12 months open-label, then randomization to non-blind treatment (FLU and TA) for 2 + 2 cycles in cross-over fashion | |||||
| Nilsson and Rybo | 1. TA 250 mg × 6 pd 1–4 and 500 mg × 6 pd 1–4 | Women aged 15–49 years | MBL (AHM) | Mean MBL change from baseline: | |
| 2. TA 500 mg × 6 pd 1–4 and 1 g × 6 hourly pd 1–4 | |||||
| 3. Placebo × 6 pd 1–4 | |||||
| Total | 36 | ||||
| Duration: 2 screening and 1 + 1 + 1 treatment cycles | |||||
| Preston et al | 1. TA 1 g × 4 pd 1–4 | 25 | Age 18 years or more | MBL (AHM) | Mean MBL change from baseline: |
| 2. NOR 5 mg × 2 pd 19–26 | 21 | Average MBL > 80 mL over two cycles | QOL (using 5-point scale) | ||
| Total | 46 | ||||
| Duration: 2 placebo and 2 treatment cycles | Regular cycle | ||||
| Vermylen et al | 1. TA 500 mg × 6 starting from pd 1 until bleeding stops | 22 | Subjectively perceived menorrhagia | MBL (mean hemoglobin loss from sanitary napkins) | Mean MBL reduction 35% in TA-group |
| 2. Placebo × 6 starting from pd 1 until bleeding stops | 22 | ||||
| Total | Duration of bleeding | ||||
| Randomized double-blind cross-over study | 22 | Number of sanitary napkins used |
Notes:
P < 0.05;
P < 0.02;
P < 0.01;
P < 0.005;
P < 0.001;
P < 0.0001.
Abbreviations: AHM, alkaline hematin method; CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; ETM, etamsylate; FLU, flurbiprofen; HRQOL, Health-Related Quality of Life; IN-DDAVP, intranasal desmopressin; IUCD, intrauterine copper device; IUD, intrauterine device; LNG-IUS, levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system; MBL, menstrual blood loss; MEF, mefenamic acid; MIQ, Menorrhagia Impact Questionnaire; MPA, medroxyprogesterone acetate; NOR, norethisterone; OC, oral contraceptive; PBAC, Pictorial Blood loss Assessment Chart; pd, period day; QOL, quality of life; RUTA, Modified Ruta Menorrhagia Severity Scale; SF-36, Short Form-36; TA, tranexamic acid; VAS, visual analog scale.