Needless Fear of Estrogen Replacement Causes Suffering

Needless Fear of Estrogen Replacement Causes Massive Suffering and Increased Mortality

by Jeffrey Dach MD

According to a new study, fifty thousand women died needlessly because of fear of estrogen replacement after hysterectomy.(3) Both Time Magazine and the LA Times  declared 50,000 women’s lives could have been saved.(3,4)  Hysterectomy causes estrogen deficiency, a heath risk associated with increased mortality. Above Left Image Actress Elizabeth Taylor  underwent hysterectomy, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

USMC-Arlington Cemetary Wreaths Left Image Arlington Cemetary courtesy of wikimedia commons.

The Mortality Toll of Estrogen Avoidance Yale University-

Published on Jul 18, 2013.

Dr Phillip M. Sarrel says: “Estrogen therapy has been widely misunderstood, and may offer important benefits to women in their 50s who have had a hysterectomy.”  Watch this video from Philip M. Sarrel, MD , professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Yale Medical School.(3)

This information is old news. For many years, medical studies show HRT after hysterectomy reduces mortality and improves quality of life.

Bioidentical Estrogen Hormones Reduce Mortality After Hysterectomy

For example, Dr. Parker followed 30,000 women over 24 years after hysterectomy.  Half the women had ovaries removed and half had ovaries preserved. The group with ovaries removed had estrogen deficiency, and higher all cause mortality rate.  Therefore, Dr. Parker recommended ovarian preservation.

Dr Parker also found that post-operative hormone replacement is very beneficial for reducing heart disease risk in women after hysterectomy. (1)

In a second study, Dr Cathleen Rivera followed 1,000 Pre-Menopausal women, under age 45, after hysterectomy, and found that removal of the ovaries resulted in a disturbing 84% increase in death from heart disease. However, if these women were given estrogen replacement after ovarian removal, they were protected with a 35% decrease in mortality from heart disease.(2) I thought this was rather impressive.

Second Arm of Women’s Health Initiative- Premarin Only for Women After Hysterectomy

The Second Arm of the Women’s Health Initiative showed reduced mortality in the Estrogen users after hysterectomy. (11)

For the Premearin treated post-menopausal women 50-59 years of age, the authors reported an impressive  27% reduction in mortality compared to placebo group. (11)   The obvious take-home message is that estrogen replacement is beneficial for women after hysterectomy.  Doctors who deny women estrogen replacement cause needless suffering and increased mortality. Left Image: Pregnant Horse source of Premarin courtesy of wikimedia commons

Here is the quote from the 2011 JAMA publication of the Women’s Health Initiative (8):

“Younger postmenopausal women (aged 50-59 years) who were randomized to Premarin estrogen (CEE) vs. placebo had a lower risk of death (HR, 0.73) Note: HR is Hazard Ratio. This represents a 27% decrease in mortality for the estrogen users compared to placebo users (8)

Avoid Carcinogenic Synthetic Progestins

Synthetic versions of progesterone called “Progestins” such as medroxyprogesterone (MPA) are known to be carcinogenic based on data from the 2002 Womens Health Initiative WHI First Arm.(12)  This study was halted early because synthetic progestins increased the risk of breast cancer.  For this reason, avoiding carcinogenic progestins is recommended.  Instead, use natural human bioidentical progesterone having the same chemical structure as ovarian progesterone, made by the female ovary.

Conclusion

We have known for decades the benefits of estrogen replacement after hysterectomy.  Yet, thousands of women have been denied estrogen replacement causing needless suffering. Our stated mission at TrueMedMD is to oppose this trend by offering bioidentical hormones for every post menopausal woman who requests hormone replacement. That is our goal and mission.

Update 2016:  Dr JoAnn Mason is in Agreement. See:  Menopause-management-getting-clinical-care-back-on-track-new-england-journal-manson-joann-2016  Manson, JoAnn E., and Andrew M. Kaunitz. “Menopause Management Getting Clinical Care Back on Track New England Journal Manson JoAnn 2016 .(10)

A few quotes from Dr. Jo Ann Manson’s editorial in NEJM 2016: (10)

HRT Effective, Yet Few Woman Are Treated

“Despite the availability of effective hormonal …treatments for menopausal symptoms, few women with these symptoms are evaluated or treated.1,2″

Leading Medical Societies Agree that HRT is Effective and Should Be Recommended

Leading medical societies …agree that hormone therapy is the most effective treatment currently available for (menopausal) symptoms and should be  recommended.”

Yet 20% of Symptomatic Women in Early Menopause Remain Untreated

Yet, “20% of women in early menopause… remain untreated despite having symptoms that adversely affect their daily activities, sleep, and quality of life.”

New Doctors Lack Training in Managing Menopausal Symptoms

“the new generation of …primary care providers often lacks training and core competencies in management of menopausal
symptoms and prescribing of hormonal …treatments.
2,3″

Doctor’s Reluctance to Treat has Created Needless Burden of Suffering

“Reluctance to treat menopausal symptoms has derailed and fragmented the clinical care of midlife women, creating a large and unnecessary burden of
suffering.”

Articles with Related Interest:

Bioidentical Hormones Found Beneficial After Hysterectomy

Bioidentical Hormones Prevent Osteoarthritis

Bioidentical Hormones Prevent Heart Disease

The Safety of Bioidentical Hormones

The Importance of Bioidentical Hormones

References:

(1) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19384117
Obstet Gynecol. 2009 May;113(5):1027-37.  Ovarian conservation at the time of hysterectomy and long-term health outcomes in the nurses’ health study. Parker WH, Broder MS, Chang E, Feskanich D, Farquhar C, Liu Z, Shoupe D, Berek JS, Hankinson S, Manson JE. John Wayne Cancer Institute at Saint John’s Health Center, Santa Monica, California 90401, USA. Comment in:

OBJECTIVE: To report long-term health outcomes and mortality after oophorectomy or ovarian conservation.

METHODS: We conducted a prospective, observational study of 29,380 women participants of the Nurses’ Health Study who had a hysterectomy for benign disease; 16,345 (55.6%) had hysterectomy with bilateral oophorectomy, and 13,035 (44.4%) had hysterectomy with ovarian conservation. We evaluated incident events or death due to coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, lung cancer, colorectal cancer, total cancers, hip fracture, pulmonary embolus, and death from all causes.

RESULTS: Over 24 years of follow-up, for women with hysterectomy and bilateral oophorectomy compared with ovarian conservation, the multivariable hazard ratios (HRs) were1.12 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.03-1.21) for total mortality, 1.17 (95% CI 1.02-1.35) for fatal plus nonfatal CHD, and 1.14 (95% CI 0.98-1.33) for stroke. Although the risks of breast (HR 0.75, 95% CI 0.68-0.84), ovarian (HR 0.04, 95% CI 0.01-0.09, number needed to treat=220), and total cancers (HR 0.90, 95% CI 0.84-0.96) decreased after oophorectomy, lung cancer incidence (HR=1.26, 95% CI 1.02-1.56, number needed to harm=190), and total cancer mortality (HR=1.17, 95% CI 1.04-1.32) increased.

For those never having used estrogen therapy, bilateral oophorectomy before age 50 years was associated with an increased risk of all-cause mortality, CHD, and stroke. With an approximate 35-year life span after surgery, one additional death would be expected for every nine oophorectomies performed.

CONCLUSION: Compared with ovarian conservation, bilateral oophorectomy at the time of hysterectomy for benign disease is associated with a decreased risk of breast and ovarian cancer but an increased risk of all-cause mortality, fatal and nonfatal coronary heart disease, and lung cancer. In no analysis or age group was oophorectomy associated with increased survival.

(2) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2755630/?tool=pubmed
Menopause. 2009 Jan–Feb; 16(1): 15–23.
Increased cardiovascular mortality following early bilateral oophorectomy
Cathleen M. Rivera, MD,1 Brandon R. Grossardt, MS,2 Deborah J. Rhodes, MD,1 Robert D. Brown, Jr., MD, MPH,3 Véronique L. Roger, MD, MPH,4,5 L. Joseph Melton, III, MD, MPH,5 and Walter A. Rocca, MD, MPH3,5

We conducted a cohort study with long-term follow-up of women in Olmsted County, MN, who underwent either unilateral or bilateral oophorectomy before the onset of menopause from 1950 through 1987. Each member of the oophorectomy cohort was matched by age to a referent woman from the same population who had not undergone any oophorectomy. We studied the mortality associated with cardiovascular disease in a total of 1,274 women with unilateral oophorectomy, 1,091 women with bilateral oophorectomy, and 2,383 referent women.

Results: Women who underwent bilateral oophorectomy before age 45 years experienced anincreased mortality associated with cardiovascular disease compared with referent women (HR, 1.44; 95% CI, 1.01–2.05; P = 0.04).

Within this age stratum, the HR for mortality was significantly elevated in women who were not treated with estrogen through age 45 years or longer (HR, 1.84; 95% CI, 1.27–2.68; P = 0.001) but not in women treated (HR, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.30–1.41; P = 0.28; test of interaction, P = 0.01). Mortality was further increased after excluding deaths associated with cerebrovascular causes.

Conclusions: Bilateral oophorectomy performed before age 45 years is associated with increased cardiovascular mortality, especially with cardiac mortality. However, estrogen treatment may reduce this risk.

From a clinical perspective, our findings suggest that women who underwent bilateral oophorectomy at a young age are at increased risk of cardiovascular death, especially of cardiac death. This increased mortality may be attenuated by adequate estrogen treatment. Our findings provide new evidence to guide the individualized assessment of the risks and benefits of prophylactic bilateral oophorectomy in young women.1,4–6,8,14 This preventive practice currently involves approximately 4.5 million women older than 55 years living in the United States who have undergone bilateral oophorectomy before reaching natural menopause.28,34

In addition, our findings provide observational evidence for a long-term cardiovascular protective effect of estrogen either naturally produced by the ovaries or given as treatment to women who underwent bilateral oophorectomy at younger ages. These findings emphasize the importance of estrogen treatment after the surgery.6,9–14

We focused our analyses on age at estrogen deficiency rather than on the length of estrogen treatment after the surgery to study the combined effects of age at the surgery and length of treatment.

Several studies have shown increased cardiovascular mortality in women who experienced early menopause (before age 45 years) from either natural or medical causes,35–40 and a statistical model has linked prophylactic bilateral oophorectomy before age 65 years with an increase in overall mortality and coronary heart disease mortality.1,4,5

Similarly, in the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study, hysterectomy plus oophorectomy performed over a broad age range was a significant predictor of cardiovascular disease during a short-term follow-up.28

Recent analyses from the Women’s Health Initiative Coronary Artery Calcium Study showed an increased risk of subclinical coronary artery disease in women who underwent both hysterectomy and bilateral oophorectomy and were not treated with estrogen compared to women who underwent hysterectomy alone. The increased risk was independent of traditional cardiovascular risk factors.12

Our results for estrogen treatment after bilateral oophorectomy are consistent both with findings from previous clinical studies40–44 and with findings from animal studies. Primates who underwent premenopausal oophorectomy and did not receive exogenous estrogen had significantly accelerated atherosclerosis compared with those that did not have oophorectomy

This study showed that women who underwent early bilateral oophorectomy are at increased risk of death involving cardiovascular disease, especially cardiac diseases. However, treatment with estrogen through age 45 years or longer may reduce this risk. These findings, in conjunction with the results of other studies,1,4,5,8 have important clinical implications and should prompt a reassessment of prophylactic bilateral oophorectomy in premenopausal women.6,14

3) http://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/abs/10.2105/AJPH.2013.301295 American Journal of Public Health. The Mortality Toll of Estrogen Avoidance: An Analysis of Excess Deaths Among Hysterectomized Women Aged 50 to 59 Years. Philip M. Sarrel, MD, Valentine Y. Njike, MD, MPH, Valentina Vinante, MD, and David L. Katz, MD, MPH

Objectives. We examined the effect of estrogen avoidance on mortality rates among hysterectomized women aged 50 to 59 years.
Methods. We derived a formula to relate the excess mortality among hysterectomized women aged 50 to 59 years assigned to placebo in the Women’s Health Initiative randomized controlled trial to the entire population of comparable women in the United States, incorporating the decline in estrogen use observed between 2002 and 2011.
Results. Over a 10-year span, starting in 2002, a minimum of 18 601 and as many as 91 610 postmenopausal women died prematurely because of the avoidance of estrogen therapy (ET).
Conclusions. ET in younger postmenopausal women is associated with a decisive reduction in all-cause mortality, but estrogen use in this population is low and continuing to fall. Our data indicate an associated annual mortality toll in the thousands of women aged 50 to 59 years. Informed discussion between these women and their health care providers about the effects of ET is a matter of considerable urgency. (Am J Public Health. Published online ahead of print July 18, 2013:)

Time Magazine

4) http://healthland.time.com/2013/07/20/hormone-replacement-therapy-could-estrogen-have-saved-50000-lives/

Hormone-Replacement Therapy: Could Estrogen Have Saved 50,000 Lives?
By Alexandra Sifferlin July 20, 201316
Dr. Philip Sarrel, professor emeritus of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at Yale University School of Medicine and lead author of the study, said in a video discussing the study that none of these women, who were aged 50 to 59 at the start of the study, lived to reach their 70s. Most died of heart disease, bolstering the connection that earlier studies had found between estrogen-only therapy and a lower risk of heart problems among women who had a hysterectomy.

LA Times

5) http://www.latimes.com/news/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-estrogen-alone-hormone-therapy-deaths-20130718,0,7828032.story

Avoiding estrogen therapy proved deadly for nearly 50,000: study
By Eryn Brown This post has been updated. See below for details.
July 18, 2013, 3:44 p.m.

Huffington Post

6) http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-katz-md/estrogen-meopause_b_3639915.html

Huffington Post – David Katz, M.D. Director, Yale Prevention Research Center. Estrogen and Evidence Posted: 07/23/2013 2:48 pm

Web MD

7) http://www.webmd.com/menopause/news/20130718/avoidance-of-hormone-therapy-may-have-harmed-hysterectomy-patients-study

Did Avoidance of Hormone Therapy Harm Certain Women?
For older women without a uterus, estrogen may save lives, researchers say
The use of hormone therapy — both estrogen-only and the combination of estrogen plus progestin — declined greatly after the U.S. Women’s Health Initiative Study found in 2002 that combination therapy had ill effects, including an increase in breast cancer, heart disease, stroke and blood clots. Prescriptions for both regimens plummeted even though the research didn’t apply to women without a uterus or to women on estrogen-only therapy, said Sarrel, who is a consultant for Noven Therapeutics, which makes an estrogen patch.

They found that use of estrogen-only therapy in U.S. women aged 50 to 59 declined nearly 79 percent between 2001 and 2011.
During that time, at least 18,000 excess deaths occurred because of estrogen avoidance and possibly more than 91,000, depending on the calculations used, Sarrel’s team said. For this reason, their best estimate — of about 50,000 deaths — may be conservative, said Sarrel.

=====================

JAMA WHI

8) http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=896193  April 6, 2011, Vol 305, No. 13 Health Outcomes After Stopping Conjugated Equine Estrogens Among Postmenopausal Women With Prior Hysterectomy A Randomized Controlled Trial   the WHI Investigators

The HRs for total mortality and the global index of chronic diseases differed by age as previously suggested.7

Younger postmenopausal women (aged 50-59 years) who were randomized to CEE vs placebo had a lower risk of death (0.35% [n = 65] vs 0.48% [n = 89], respectively; HR, 0.73 [95% CI, 0.53-1.00]) compared with no increased risk among women in their 60s (1.00% [n = 254] vs 0.96% [n = 253], respectively; HR, 1.04 [95% CI, 0.88-1.24]), and a slight increased risk of death among women in their 70s (2.02% [n = 258] vs 1.83% [n = 239], respectively; HR, 1.12 [95% CI, 0.94-1.33]; P = .04 for interaction). A similar pattern was observed by age for women randomized to CEE vs placebo for the global index of chronic diseases with a possible overall benefit among younger women (aged 50-59 years: 1.04% [n = 184] vs 1.22% [n = 217], respectively; HR, 0.85 [95% CI, 0.70-1.03]) and possible harm among the oldest women (aged 70-79 years: 4.04% [n = 466] vs 3.56% [n = 423], respectively; HR, 1.15 [95% CI, 1.01-1.32]; P = .009 for interaction).

9) http://www.pr.com/press-release/505829
Dr. Tim Bilash Announces New Findings Refuting Previous Studies on Hormone Replacement Therapy, Offers Free Consultations
Dr. Timothy Bilash, MD’s has announced his new research findings that refute a 2002 WHI study that post menopausal women should not take estrogen.

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Bioidentical Hormones could have saved 50,000 Lives according to Dr. Philip Sarrel

Dr Cathleen Rivera followed 1,000 Pre-Menopausal women (under age 45) after hysterectomy, and found that removal of the ovaries resulted in a disturbing 84% increase in death from heart disease. However, if these women were given estrogen replacement after ovarian removal, they were protected with a 35% decrease in mortality from heart disease. I thought this was rather impressive.

The 2nd arm of the Women’s Health Initiative also showed reduced mortality in the estrogen users (50-59 yrs) after hysterectomy. They showed a 27% reduction in mortality with estrogen use. So this supports the hypothesis that estrogen deficiency is associated with increased mortality and other health risks, while estrogen replacement for post-hysterectomy women is very beneficial. Of course, women should avoid Progestins and other synthetic hormones such as medroxyprogesterone (MPA) which is known to be carcinogenic from the First Arm WHI data. The use of natural, bioidentical estrogen and progesterone in the proper balance is the preferred choice. Bioidentical hormones are not chemically altered, having chemical structures identical to our own hormones, naturally occurring in ourselves.

10) menopause-management-getting-clinical-care-back-on-track-new-england-journal-manson-joann-2016  
Manson, JoAnn E., and Andrew M. Kaunitz. “Menopause Management—Getting Clinical Care Back on Track.” New England Journal of Medicine 374.9 (2016): 803-806.

11) Anderson, G. L., et al. “Women’s Health Initiative Steering Committee. Effects of conjugated equine estrogen in postmenopausal women with hysterectomy: the Women’s Health Initiative randomized controlled trial.” Jama 291.14 (2004): 1701-1712.

12) Writing Group for the Women’s Health Initiative Investigators. “Risks and benefits of estrogen plus progestin in healthy postmenopausal women: principal results from the Women’s Health Initiative randomized controlled trial.” Jama 288.3 (2002): 321-333.

14) Seven Celebrities Who Braved a Hysterectomy.

Jeffrey Dach MD
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