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Menopause
The timing of hormone replacement therapy could be key to success
By Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center : Contact:
Karen Richardson
Mar 3, 2003, 10:31pm
Public release date: 3-Mar-2003
Contact: Karen Richardson
krchrdsn@wfubmc.edu
336-716-4453
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
The timing of hormone replacement therapy could be key to
success
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – The timing of treatment may be
a key factor in whether hormone replacement therapy (HRT) can
slow heart vessel disease, report researchers from Wake Forest
University Baptist Medical Center and Tufts-New England Medical
Center in the winter issue of Menopausal Medicine.
"
Mounting evidence points to the conclusion that HRT can help
prevent heart vessel disease – if the therapy begins
around the time that the body stops making its own estrogen," said
Thomas B. Clarkson, D.V.M., of Wake Forest. "The question
may not be if estrogen helps, but when is the optimum time
to begin therapy."
Clarkson, a professor of comparative medicine, and Richard
H. Karas, M.D., Ph.D., director of the preventive cardiology
center at Tufts, reviewed numerous studies of postmenopausal
women and monkeys that evaluated the cardiovascular effects
of HRT.
Their evaluation included the Women's Health Initiative (WHI),
which showed an increased risk of heart attacks in women taking
HRT and led to recommendations that women not begin hormone
replacement therapy for the purpose of preventing heart disease.
They also reviewed trials of postmenopausal monkeys conducted
at Wake Forest over the past 12 years.
"The literature demonstrates that HRT has beneficial
effects in inhibiting the early stages of heart vessel disease,
but can have deleterious effects if initiated at older ages
when some women have already developed disease," said
Clarkson.
For years, doctors had prescribed hormone replacement therapy
to prevent heart disease in postmenopausal women. These treatment
decisions were based on observational studies showing that
women who took estrogen had fewer heart attacks. But, these
assumptions were called into question with studies such as
WHI.
Clarkson and Karas said there are several possible explanations
for the discordant findings between observational studies and
WHI. "One of the most striking differences is the age
of the patients being studied," they wrote. "In the
observation studies, women began HRT at a relatively young
age. WHI women, however, averaged 63 years old when therapy
was begun."
Clarkson and Karas believe that the timing of HRT initiation
significantly influences its potential for cardiovascular benefits
or harm.
"When estrogen replacement was administered to monkeys
at the onset of estrogen deficiency – which compares
to the postmenopausal transition in women – there was
a 70 percent inhibition of fatty build-up in the heart's arteries.
In contrast, when estrogen replacement was delayed for a period
comparable to six years in women, there was no benefit on the
heart's arteries," they wrote.
Clarkson and Karas said the data they reviewed support their
theory that HRT may be able to maintain vessel health when
it is initiated in younger women without an advanced buildup
of fatty deposits in their heart vessels. But, the treatment
may be either ineffective or potentially harmful when it is
given to older women with more advanced vessel disease.
"It is noteworthy that 70 percent of the women in the
WHI were in the age groups that would be expected to experience
deleterious effects of HRT, while only 10 percent were in the
age groups that are likely benefited by HRT," they wrote.
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