| Literature DB >> 31416164 |
Margherita Zanello1, Giulia Borghese2, Federica Manzara1, Eugenia Degli Esposti1, Elisa Moro1, Diego Raimondo1, Layla Omar Abdullahi1, Alessandro Arena1, Patrizia Terzano1, Maria Cristina Meriggiola1, Renato Seracchioli1.
Abstract
Hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) is effective in treating the symptoms of menopause. Endometriosis is defined as the presence of functional endometrial tissue outside the uterine cavity with a tendency towards invasion and infiltration. Being an estrogen-dependent disease, it tends to regress after menopause. Nevertheless, it affects up to 2.2% of postmenopausal women. Conclusive data are not available in the literature on the appropriateness of HRT in women with endometriosis or a past history of the disease. The hypothesis that exogenous estrogen stimulation could reactivate endometriotic foci has been proposed. The aim of this state-of-the-art review was to revise the current literature about endometriosis in perimenopause and menopause and to investigate the possible role of HRT in this setting of patients. An electronic databases search (MEDLINE, Scopus, ClinicalTrials.gov, EMBASE, Sciencedirect, the Cochrane Library at the CENTRAL Register of Controlled Trials, Scielo) was performed, with the date range of from each database's inception until May 2019. All of the studies evaluating the impact of different HRT regimens in patients with a history of endometriosis were selected. 45 articles were found: one Cochrane systematic review, one systematic review, five narrative reviews, two clinical trials, two retrospective cohort studies, 34 case reports and case series. Some authors reported an increased risk of malignant transformation of endometriomas after menopause in patients assuming HRT with unopposed estrogen. Low-quality evidence suggests that HRT can be prescribed to symptomatic women with a history of endometriosis, especially in young patients with premature menopause. Continuous or cyclic combined preparations or tibolone are the best choices. HRT improves quality of life in symptomatic post-menopausal women, who should not be denied the replacement therapy only due to their history of endometriosis. Based on low-grade literature evidence, we recommend to prescribe combined HRT schemes; tibolone could be considered.Entities:
Keywords: endometriosis; hormone replacement therapy; menopause; menopause hormonal therapy; pelvic pain
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31416164 PMCID: PMC6723930 DOI: 10.3390/medicina55080477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Studies comparing post-menopausal women with history of endometriosis assuming versus not assuming hormonal replacement therapy (HRT).
| Author | Study Design | Patients | Type of HRT | Duration of HRT (Months) | Recurrence Rate (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomized clinical trial | 172 submitted to BSO (115 study group, 57 controls) | Study group: 50 μg estradiol daily plus oral micronized progesterone for 14 days out of 30 days | ns | Study group: 4/115 (3.5%) | ||
| Control group: no treatment | Controls: 0/57 (0.0%) | |||||
| Retrospective observational study | 27 submitted to HBSO (14 study group, 13 controls) | Study group: combined HRT, followed by low dose ERT or tibolone | 67.2 ± 43.2 | Study group: 0/14 (0.0%) | na | |
| Control group: no treatment | Controls: 0/13 (0.0%) | |||||
| Retrospective observational study | 107 submitted to HBSO (90 study group, 17 controls) | Study group 1: ERT ( | 41.2 | Study group 1: 4/50 (8.0%) (1/50 (2.0%) endometriosis recurrence, 3/50 (6.0%) symptoms recurrence) | na | |
| Study group 2: cyclic E/P ( | Study group 2: 0/16 (0.0%) | |||||
| Study group 3: ccE/P ( | Study group 3: 0/24 (0.0%) | |||||
| Control group: no HRT, ( | Control group: 0/17 (0.0%) |
Legend: BSO = bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; ERT = estrogen-only replacement therapy; HBSO = hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; HRT = hormonal replacement therapy; cyclic E/P = cyclic combined estrogen/progestogen regimen; cc E/P = continuous combined estrogen/progestogen; na = not assessed.