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Low
Hormone Doses Work
TRENTON,
N.J. (AP) - A major study funded by the top seller of a hormone
therapy for menopause finds low doses of estrogen and progestin
worked as well as higher doses, with fewer side effects.
``This is
an important advance'' as women and doctors increasingly debate
the benefits of hormone replacement therapy, said Dr. Margery
Gass, director of the Menopause and Osteoporosis Center at University
Hospital in Cincinnati.
``Now we finally
have some good evidence that lower doses can be satisfactory for
many people,'' she said.
Dr. Wulf Utian,
one of the principal investigators, predicted on Monday that low-dose
pills now will be given to many women who are just starting hormone
therapy or who are bothered by side effects, such as irregular
bleeding and breast tenderness.
Women taking
hormones without problems ``will do just as well to stay on what
they're currently taking,'' added Utian, executive director of
the North American Menopause Society.
Roughly a
third of American women 50 and older take hormones to control
menopause symptoms such as hot flashes, or to cut their risk of
osteoporosis.
Two reports
on the two-year Women's Health, Osteoporosis, Progestin, Estrogen
(Women's HOPE) study appear in the June issue of the journal Fertility
and Sterility.
The 57-site
study included 2,673 healthy, postmenopausal women who still had
their uterus. Some received pills containing the most common estrogen
dosage, 0.625 mg a day, with or without 2.5 mg of progestin. Other
women were given combinations of progestin and two lower estrogen
doses.
One report
states that combining 1.5 mg of progestin with 0.45 mg or 0.3
mg of estrogen daily was as effective as higher doses in reducing
hot flashes and preventing thinning of the vaginal lining, which
causes infections and painful intercourse for many older women.
The other
report shows the same low-dose combinations worked about as well
as higher doses in preventing ``breakthrough'' bleeding, the main
reason many women stop hormone therapy.
Worries that
the therapy can increase the risk of breast cancer also may make
low doses more appealing.
The research
was funded by Wyeth-Ayerst Research, part of American Home Products.
The company
makes Premarin, which accounted for about two-thirds of the $1.7
billion in hormone replacement medications sold last year, according
to health-care data company IMS Health.
There are
currently no low-dose forms of popular hormone pills combining
estrogen and progestin, but American Home hopes to sell a version
of its Prempro, containing 0.45 mg of estrogen and 1.5 mg of progestin,
by year's end.
``It's really
good to have the options,'' said Gass, who has been giving patients
low doses for a decade, although that required taking two different
pills.
On
the Net:
American
Home Products: http://www.ahp.com
American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists: http://www.acog.org
Reference
Source 102
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