Health & Medical Menopause health

Panel: Hormone Therapy Not for Disease Prevention

Panel: Hormone Therapy Not for Disease Prevention May 29, 2012 -- Women should not use hormone therapy (HT) to prevent chronic conditions, such as bone loss, after menopause.

The advice is the draft recommendation of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF). It does not apply to women using hormone therapy to treat menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes.

"We are just looking at women without symptoms who are trying to prevent something bad from happening in the future," the leader of the task force's HT analysis, Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, MD, PhD, tells WebMD. Bibbins-Domingo is associate professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

The task force made its recommendation after reviewing an analysis of the latest HT research by Heidi D. Nelson, MD, MPH, and colleagues at Oregon Health & Science University.

"The last time the task force looked at this, they discouraged use of HT for any chronic condition," Nelson tells WebMD. "And in the real world, there may be some women who took HT for menopausal symptoms and are wondering whether to stay on it. These findings really apply to using HT after the symptoms of menopause are over."

The updated analysis relies heavily on the now-famous Women's Health Initiative (WHI) study in which older, mostly postmenopausal women received either a placebo or HT. In that trial, treated women got a form of estrogen called conjugated equine estrogen (CEE, derived from horse urine) plus progestin. Women who had undergone hysterectomy received estrogen (CEE) alone.

Benefits of Hormone Therapy to Prevent Disease


Hormone therapy clearly had some benefits in preventing chronic conditions. Women getting estrogen plus progestin had:

Women getting estrogen alone had:

Harms of Hormone Therapy to Prevent Disease


But hormone therapy had clear harms as well. Women getting estrogen plus progestin had:

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