ESTROGENS INCREASE THE RISK OF ENDOMETRIAL CANCER Close clinical surveillance of all women taking estrogens is important. Adequate diagnostic measures, including endometrial sampling when indicated, should be undertaken to rule out malignancy in all cases of undiagnosed persistent or recurring abnormal vaginal bleeding. There is no evidence that the use of “natural” estrogens results in a different endometrial risk profile than synthetic estrogens at equivalent estrogen doses.
CARDIOVASCULAR AND OTHER RISKS Estrogens with or without progestins should not be used for the prevention of cardiovascular disease or dementia.
The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) estrogen alone substudy reported increased risks of stroke and deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in postmenopausal women (50 to 79 years of age) during 6.8 years and 7.1 years, respectively, of treatment with oral conjugated estrogens (CE 0.625 mg) per day relative to placebo.
The estrogen plus progestin WHI substudy reported increased risk of myocardial infarction, stroke, invasive breast cancer, pulmonary emboli, and deep vein thrombosis in postmenopausal women (50 to 79 years of age) during 5.6 years of treatment with oral conjugated estrogens (CE 0.625 mg) combined with medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA 2.5 mg) per day relative to placebo.
The Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS), a substudy of the WHI study, reported increased risk of developing probable dementia in postmenopausal women 65 years of age or older during 5.2 years of treatment with CE 0.625 mg alone and during 4 years of treatment with CE 0.625 mg combined with MPA 2.5 mg relative to placebo. It is unknown whether this finding applies to younger postmenopausal women.
Other doses of conjugated equine estrogens with medroxyprogesterone acetate and other combinations and dosage forms of estrogens and progestins were not studied in the WHI clinical trials and, in the absence of comparable data, these risks should be assumed to be similar. Because of these risks, estrogens with or without progestins should be prescribed at the lowest effective doses and for the shortest duration consistent with treatment goals and risks for the individual woman.
*Please note: When you access these resources, you are leaving the Elestrin Web site. Therefore, Elestrin and Azur Pharma Inc. do not endorse the accuracy of the information you may find. We encourage you to talk to your doctor about the accuracy of any information you discover through these Internet resources.
Agree and continueA Survey of 300 untreated menopausal women reveal what they want from the application of transdermal estrogen therapy†:
"I want a product I can apply and forget it."
"I’d rather just rub the product in and forget it’s there."
"For me, it’s easier to get into a daily habit."
"I like the control of applying [it] right on my upper arm."
"Make it clear and easy to apply."
†A blinded survey of 300 women with hot flashes to evaluate the importance of various attributes of transdermal estrogen therapy and the preference for various topical estrogen therapy products. Azur Pharma; 2009.