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Enter any health-food store
and you will be overwhelmed by an alphabet of products
promising menopausal relief. Black cohosh. Chasteberry.
Dong quai. Licorice. Red clover. Soy. And then there
are the blends of herbs, the creams and the gels.
Before the National Institutes
of Health (NIH) dropped its bombshell in July —
a landmark trial of hormone-replacement therapy would
be halted early because of slight increased risks of
blood clots, heart disease, stroke and breast cancer
— hormone therapy was the treatment of choice
for many women. But now that thousands have gone off
HRT, the spotlight is on alternatives. And confusion
is rampant. “It’s very chaotic,” says
Dr. JoAnn Manson, chief of preventative medicine at
Harvard’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital,
and “very difficult for women to get a clear message
on what to do.”
The first thing to do is
understand the NIH study. Researchers tested a combination
of estrogen and progestin, a synthetic form of progesterone,
and found the risks outweighed the benefits long-term.
The trial did not examine the short-term benefits of
HRT, chief among them: damping down hot flashes, the
most common menopausal complaint among American women.
Nor did it find similar problems to date in an ongoing
trial of estrogen alone, which is given only to women
with hysterectomies, who no longer need progesterone’s
protective effect on the uterine lining. The consensus
now is that HRT should not be prescribed to ward off
chronic conditions. But some patients, who have severe
hot flashes and no risk factors for heart disease or
breast cancer, are staying on short-term. For symptom
relief, says Dr. Lorraine Fitzpatrick, of the Mayo Clinic
in Rochester, Minn., “there’s really nothing
better.”
‘BIOIDENTICAL’ HORMONES
There is, however, variation
among hormones. The NIH trial, and most other HRT studies
before it, tested the drug Prempro, which combines progestin,
with estrogen derived from the urine of pregnant horses.
Prempro’s estrogen is similar to the human hormone,
but it also includes additional equine molecules. An
alternative: so-called natural hormones, made from yam
and soy, which are available in prescription drugs such
as Estrace (estrogen) and Prometrium (progesterone).
Proponents believe these “bioidentical”
hormones are a safer and more natural option because
their chemical structures more closely mimic the hormones
in a woman’s body.
Such hormones are also available
in customized formulations prepared by special compounding
pharmacies. Marla Ahlgrimm founded Women’s Health
America in Madison, Wis., where she screens women for
factors like diet, bone loss and hormone levels, then
mixes bioidentical estrogen and progesterone, adjusting
ingredients to match a woman’s individual profile.
An overweight woman, for example, may have higher levels
of estrogen (produced in fat cells) than a lean woman,
says Ahlgrimm, and may do better with less estrogen
in her treatment. “It’s really designer,”
she says.
While most doctors agree that
a natural and individualized approach to treating menopausal
symptoms makes logical sense, there are no reliable
long-term data to prove that natural hormones are safer
or more effective than drugs like Prempro. “We
have to be very cautious about jumping from one hormone
to another,” says Dr. Elizabeth Barrett-Connor
of the University of California, San Diego. Unfortunately,
we may never know how different formulations compare.
Trials are time-consuming and expensive and, given the
recent NIH results, women may be less than eager to
sign up as volunteers. And when it comes to compounding
pharmacies, while some do a fine job, there’s
no way to be sure that what a pharmacist mixes together
is precisely what the doctor ordered — or even
that what’s ordered is best for the patient.
ARE THEY WORTH IT?
If not hormones, then what?
For those who want to go the more conventional route,
antidepressants may help control hot flashes. But the
herbal market is getting the most attention: last year
sales for over-the-counter menopause remedies hit $100
million, according to SPINS, a market-research firm.
Are they worth it? Last week, in a paper published in
the Annals of Internal Medicine, researchers reviewed
29 studies on complementary therapies and concluded
that many popular treatments, including dong quai, evening
primrose oil and vitamin E, were ineffective against
hot flashes — at least according to the small
amounts of reliable data so far. “On most herbs,
the jury is still out,” says Fredi Kronenberg,
a physiologist at Columbia University and the study’s
coauthor. “We need to do more work.”
One therapy that’s
gained significant interest is soy, which contains isoflavones
— plant hormones that resemble human estrogen
in a much weaker form. Isoflavones can take the edge
off hot flashes, but the data are mixed, and no study
has shown an impressively strong effect. The critical
issue is safety: because isoflavones contain estrogenic
compounds, Kronenberg and others worry about capsules
or powders that pack isoflavones in high concentrations.
Ingesting them through diet in foods like tofu, nuts
and soybeans may be the most sensible approach.
Of all the herbal products
on the market, black cohosh has the largest body of
data backing it up. German studies have shown that the
plant helps alleviate hot flashes with no significant
side effects. The NIH is now funding a 12-month trial
of the herb, under Kronenberg’s direction. The
goal is to look at not just how well it works, but how
it affects the body. So far, researchers have found
that black cohosh contains no estrogen compounds and
does not stimulate breast-cancer cells in the lab. They’re
also testing for changes in uterine tissue before and
after treatment. Anne Moffat, 60, is one of the first
participants to finish the trial. She’s still
not sure if she received a placebo or the real thing,
but when her hot flashes returned, Moffat began taking
Remifemin, a black-cohosh extract, on her own: “I
definitely noticed the difference.” More research
is taking place at the University of Illinois, where
scientists are testing black cohosh against standard
HRT and the herb red clover, which contains isoflavones.
Theresa Girolami, 50, has been “hot-flash-free”
since taking the standardized red-clover supplement
Promensil. But more data are needed to judge effectiveness
and long-term safety.
As always, exercise and
diet are crucial for a healthy lifestyle and may even
ease hot flashes. Swedish studies show that women who
exercise suffer fewer hot flashes. Limiting spicy foods
and caffeine can help regulate the body’s temperature.
And even relaxation therapy, like yoga or meditation,
may lower the heat. Right now, says Dr. Marianne Legato,
a women’s-health specialist at Columbia, “the
whole field is in a half-answered, half-studied state.”
Each woman experiences menopause in her own way; her
decisions about treatment need to be individual as well.
With
Karen Springen and Joan Raymond
© 2002 Newsweek, Inc.,
Dec. 2, 2002 |