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Hormone therapy (HT) can help women manage menopause symptoms into their 80s and the reasons are varied, according to a retrospective analysis being presented at the annual meeting of The Menopause Society.

“It’s important to know that this is a preselected group of women who had no contraindications to continuing their hormone therapy,” senior author Wendy Wolfman, MD, director of the Menopause Clinic and The Premature Ovarian Insufficiency Clinic at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, said in an interview. “They had the initiation of hormone therapy closer to menopause and carried on their hormones. We followed them for a long time and basically saw no real concerns about taking the hormones and the patients did very well. It’s important to emphasize this was not the new initiation of hormone therapy in elderly women.”

She said that, in her large tertiary referral center, “I still see patients who are referred who are told that they have to stop their hormones after 5 years based on a false assumption. Everybody ages at different rates and everybody has different risk factors.”

About 70%-80% of women experience menopause symptoms that restrict quality of life and productivity, the authors noted. HT has consistently been the most effective means for managing many of the side effects, especially hot flashes.

Hot flashes last on average 7-11 years. But they continue in up to 40% of women in their 60s and 10%-15% in their 70s, the authors wrote. 

The analysis included more than 100 women in Canada older than 65 who continue to use HT and explored the motivations of the women to use them.

The average age of the women was 71 and nearly 8% were age 80 or older. The mean age for starting HT was 52 years and the women continued HT for an average 18 years, though 42% used it regularly for more than 20 years. Most of the women (nearly 88%) used a transdermal form of estrogen; only 12% used oral estrogen pills. Fewer than 5% of participants used synthetic progestins.

Controlling hot flashes was the No. 1 reason the women continued HT beyond age 65 (55%), followed by a desire for a better quality of life (29%), and to reduce chronic pain and arthritis symptoms (7%).

Some adverse effects were reported – postmenopausal bleeding was the most common – but no strokes, myocardial infarctions, or uterine cancers were documented.

More than one fourth (26.4%) of the women tried stopping HT once, but 87% reported that the return of hot flashes was the main reason to restart HT.

In addition, “many women choose to continue hormone therapy long term for relief of nonvasomotor symptoms, preservation of bone density, and a desire to benefit from potential long-term cardiovascular protection,” said Lauren F. Streicher, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, who was not part of the research.

In 2022, The Menopause Society position statement on hormone therapy acknowledged that, on an individual basis, it is appropriate for women to continue hormone therapy long term with counseling on benefits and risks.

“However, few studies have evaluated the outcomes of using hormone therapy for more than 10 years, and individual motivation for doing so,” Dr. Streicher said. She pointed to a study that analyzed the insurance records of more than 10 million women who continued their HT past the age of 65 and reassuringly found that there were significant risk reductions in all-cause mortality, breast cancer, lung cancer, colorectal cancer, heart failure, venous thromboembolism, atrial fibrillation, acute myocardial infarction, and dementia. In that study, however, the reasons women chose to continue hormone therapy were not specified. 

“In this retrospective Canadian study,” she noted, “the outcomes were again reassuring, with no increase in strokes, myocardial infarctions, or uterine cancers. The reasons cited for continuing hormone therapy were not just to treat ongoing vasomotor symptoms, but also other menopause symptoms such as musculoskeletal aches and pains, and overall quality of life.

Dr. Streicher said that, while long-term longitudinal studies are needed to make definitive recommendations, “It is reassuring that women who choose to extend hormone therapy can safely do so. It is irresponsible, cruel, and nonsensical to continue to make blanket statements that hormone therapy should be discontinued based on age or years of use and commit women to enduring symptoms and depriving them of possible long-term benefits.”

Dr. Streicher gives lectures for Midi Health and owns Sermonix stock. Dr. Wolfman has been on the advisory boards for many pharmaceutical companies. She is the past president of the Canadian Menopause Society and is on the board of the International Menopause Society.

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Hormone therapy (HT) can help women manage menopause symptoms into their 80s and the reasons are varied, according to a retrospective analysis being presented at the annual meeting of The Menopause Society.

“It’s important to know that this is a preselected group of women who had no contraindications to continuing their hormone therapy,” senior author Wendy Wolfman, MD, director of the Menopause Clinic and The Premature Ovarian Insufficiency Clinic at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, said in an interview. “They had the initiation of hormone therapy closer to menopause and carried on their hormones. We followed them for a long time and basically saw no real concerns about taking the hormones and the patients did very well. It’s important to emphasize this was not the new initiation of hormone therapy in elderly women.”

She said that, in her large tertiary referral center, “I still see patients who are referred who are told that they have to stop their hormones after 5 years based on a false assumption. Everybody ages at different rates and everybody has different risk factors.”

About 70%-80% of women experience menopause symptoms that restrict quality of life and productivity, the authors noted. HT has consistently been the most effective means for managing many of the side effects, especially hot flashes.

Hot flashes last on average 7-11 years. But they continue in up to 40% of women in their 60s and 10%-15% in their 70s, the authors wrote. 

The analysis included more than 100 women in Canada older than 65 who continue to use HT and explored the motivations of the women to use them.

The average age of the women was 71 and nearly 8% were age 80 or older. The mean age for starting HT was 52 years and the women continued HT for an average 18 years, though 42% used it regularly for more than 20 years. Most of the women (nearly 88%) used a transdermal form of estrogen; only 12% used oral estrogen pills. Fewer than 5% of participants used synthetic progestins.

Controlling hot flashes was the No. 1 reason the women continued HT beyond age 65 (55%), followed by a desire for a better quality of life (29%), and to reduce chronic pain and arthritis symptoms (7%).

Some adverse effects were reported – postmenopausal bleeding was the most common – but no strokes, myocardial infarctions, or uterine cancers were documented.

More than one fourth (26.4%) of the women tried stopping HT once, but 87% reported that the return of hot flashes was the main reason to restart HT.

In addition, “many women choose to continue hormone therapy long term for relief of nonvasomotor symptoms, preservation of bone density, and a desire to benefit from potential long-term cardiovascular protection,” said Lauren F. Streicher, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, who was not part of the research.

In 2022, The Menopause Society position statement on hormone therapy acknowledged that, on an individual basis, it is appropriate for women to continue hormone therapy long term with counseling on benefits and risks.

“However, few studies have evaluated the outcomes of using hormone therapy for more than 10 years, and individual motivation for doing so,” Dr. Streicher said. She pointed to a study that analyzed the insurance records of more than 10 million women who continued their HT past the age of 65 and reassuringly found that there were significant risk reductions in all-cause mortality, breast cancer, lung cancer, colorectal cancer, heart failure, venous thromboembolism, atrial fibrillation, acute myocardial infarction, and dementia. In that study, however, the reasons women chose to continue hormone therapy were not specified. 

“In this retrospective Canadian study,” she noted, “the outcomes were again reassuring, with no increase in strokes, myocardial infarctions, or uterine cancers. The reasons cited for continuing hormone therapy were not just to treat ongoing vasomotor symptoms, but also other menopause symptoms such as musculoskeletal aches and pains, and overall quality of life.

Dr. Streicher said that, while long-term longitudinal studies are needed to make definitive recommendations, “It is reassuring that women who choose to extend hormone therapy can safely do so. It is irresponsible, cruel, and nonsensical to continue to make blanket statements that hormone therapy should be discontinued based on age or years of use and commit women to enduring symptoms and depriving them of possible long-term benefits.”

Dr. Streicher gives lectures for Midi Health and owns Sermonix stock. Dr. Wolfman has been on the advisory boards for many pharmaceutical companies. She is the past president of the Canadian Menopause Society and is on the board of the International Menopause Society.

 

Hormone therapy (HT) can help women manage menopause symptoms into their 80s and the reasons are varied, according to a retrospective analysis being presented at the annual meeting of The Menopause Society.

“It’s important to know that this is a preselected group of women who had no contraindications to continuing their hormone therapy,” senior author Wendy Wolfman, MD, director of the Menopause Clinic and The Premature Ovarian Insufficiency Clinic at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, said in an interview. “They had the initiation of hormone therapy closer to menopause and carried on their hormones. We followed them for a long time and basically saw no real concerns about taking the hormones and the patients did very well. It’s important to emphasize this was not the new initiation of hormone therapy in elderly women.”

She said that, in her large tertiary referral center, “I still see patients who are referred who are told that they have to stop their hormones after 5 years based on a false assumption. Everybody ages at different rates and everybody has different risk factors.”

About 70%-80% of women experience menopause symptoms that restrict quality of life and productivity, the authors noted. HT has consistently been the most effective means for managing many of the side effects, especially hot flashes.

Hot flashes last on average 7-11 years. But they continue in up to 40% of women in their 60s and 10%-15% in their 70s, the authors wrote. 

The analysis included more than 100 women in Canada older than 65 who continue to use HT and explored the motivations of the women to use them.

The average age of the women was 71 and nearly 8% were age 80 or older. The mean age for starting HT was 52 years and the women continued HT for an average 18 years, though 42% used it regularly for more than 20 years. Most of the women (nearly 88%) used a transdermal form of estrogen; only 12% used oral estrogen pills. Fewer than 5% of participants used synthetic progestins.

Controlling hot flashes was the No. 1 reason the women continued HT beyond age 65 (55%), followed by a desire for a better quality of life (29%), and to reduce chronic pain and arthritis symptoms (7%).

Some adverse effects were reported – postmenopausal bleeding was the most common – but no strokes, myocardial infarctions, or uterine cancers were documented.

More than one fourth (26.4%) of the women tried stopping HT once, but 87% reported that the return of hot flashes was the main reason to restart HT.

In addition, “many women choose to continue hormone therapy long term for relief of nonvasomotor symptoms, preservation of bone density, and a desire to benefit from potential long-term cardiovascular protection,” said Lauren F. Streicher, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, who was not part of the research.

In 2022, The Menopause Society position statement on hormone therapy acknowledged that, on an individual basis, it is appropriate for women to continue hormone therapy long term with counseling on benefits and risks.

“However, few studies have evaluated the outcomes of using hormone therapy for more than 10 years, and individual motivation for doing so,” Dr. Streicher said. She pointed to a study that analyzed the insurance records of more than 10 million women who continued their HT past the age of 65 and reassuringly found that there were significant risk reductions in all-cause mortality, breast cancer, lung cancer, colorectal cancer, heart failure, venous thromboembolism, atrial fibrillation, acute myocardial infarction, and dementia. In that study, however, the reasons women chose to continue hormone therapy were not specified. 

“In this retrospective Canadian study,” she noted, “the outcomes were again reassuring, with no increase in strokes, myocardial infarctions, or uterine cancers. The reasons cited for continuing hormone therapy were not just to treat ongoing vasomotor symptoms, but also other menopause symptoms such as musculoskeletal aches and pains, and overall quality of life.

Dr. Streicher said that, while long-term longitudinal studies are needed to make definitive recommendations, “It is reassuring that women who choose to extend hormone therapy can safely do so. It is irresponsible, cruel, and nonsensical to continue to make blanket statements that hormone therapy should be discontinued based on age or years of use and commit women to enduring symptoms and depriving them of possible long-term benefits.”

Dr. Streicher gives lectures for Midi Health and owns Sermonix stock. Dr. Wolfman has been on the advisory boards for many pharmaceutical companies. She is the past president of the Canadian Menopause Society and is on the board of the International Menopause Society.

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