Examples
Oral (pills or tablets)
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| conjugated estrogens | CES, Premarin |
These medicines may contain plant-based, rather than animal-based,
estrogen. Risks and benefits are thought to be the same for both types of
estrogen.
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| esterified estrogens | Neo-Estrone |
| estradiol | Estrace |
| estropipate | Ogen |
| ethinyl estradiol | |
Transdermal (patch placed on the skin that releases
estrogen continuously)
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| estradiol (low-dose) | Climara |
| estradiol | Climara, Estraderm, Estradot, Oesclim |
Vaginal ring (inserted high into the vagina;
releases estrogen continuously for 3 months)
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| estradiol (low-dose) | Estring |
Skin cream (applied daily to the legs, thighs, or
calves)
Skin gel (applied daily to an arm from wrist to
shoulder)
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| estradiol | Estrogel |
How It Works
Estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) increases the
estrogen level in your body. Estrogen impacts multiple
systems of the body.
When given through an estrogen patch, vaginal ring, or skin cream
or gel (transdermal estrogen), estrogen enters the bloodstream directly,
without passing through the liver. The estrogen in pills must be processed by
the liver before entering the bloodstream, which stresses an impaired liver.
Low-dose vaginal estrogen affects only the urinary and genital
area. For more information, see
Low-dose vaginal estrogen for dryness and atrophy.
Patch warning. Direct sunlight or high heat
can increase, then lower, the amount of hormone released from a patch. This can
give you a big dose at the time and leave less hormone for the patch to release
later in the week. Avoid direct sunlight on the hormone
patch. Also avoid using a tanning bed, heating pad, electric blanket, hot tub,
or sauna while you are using a hormone patch.
Why It Is Used
Estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) is used to increase estrogen
levels in
post-menopausal women who have no uterus. This helps
prevent
perimenopausal symptoms,
osteoporosis, and colon cancer.
Women in their 20s, 30s, and 40s who experience early menopause
after having their ovaries removed (oophorectomy) or because of other medical
reasons typically take ERT to reduce their risk of early bone loss and
osteoporosis. Historically, women have continued using ERT for years beyond
menopause. Some women now discontinue ERT around the age of menopause.
Women with a uterus who take estrogen also need the hormone
progestin to prevent the estrogen from overgrowing the
uterine lining, which can lead to
endometrial (uterine) cancer. Estrogen-progestin is
called
hormone replacement therapy (HRT).
Do not use estrogen treatment if you:
- Are pregnant.
- Have unexplained
vaginal bleeding.
- Have active liver disease or chronic impaired
liver function. (Transdermal estrogen does not stress the
liver.)
- Have a personal history of
breast cancer,
ovarian cancer, or
endometrial cancer.
- Are a smoker.
Talk to your health professional about your risks
versus benefits if you have a family history of breast cancer, ovarian
cancer,
stroke, blood clots, or endometrial cancer.
How Well It Works
Systemic estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) affects your entire
body and reverses the effect of low estrogen. Systemic ERT:
- Helps prevent post-menopausal
osteoporosis by slowing bone loss and promoting some
increase in bone density.1
- Reduces the
frequency and severity of
hot flashes.1
- Improves
depression and sleep problems related to hormone
changes.2
- Maintains the lining of the
vagina, reducing irritation.
- Increases skin
collagen levels, which decline as estrogen levels
decline. Collagen is responsible for the stretch in skin and muscle.
- Reduces the risk of dental problems, such as tooth loss and gum
disease.
- May reduce the risk of colon cancer.3
Low-dose estrogen. Researchers are studying
the effects of low-dose estrogen therapy. A small early study has shown that a
low estrogen dose—0.25 mg per day—may keep the
bones as strong as the higher dose.4 However, the
long-term risks of taking low-dose estrogen are not yet known.
Side Effects
Risks of estrogen replacement therapy
Systemic estrogen replacement therapy increases your risks
of:3
- Stroke. ERT use slightly increases the risk
of stroke.5
- Blood clots. ERT slightly
increases the risk of blood clots in the legs (deep vein
thrombosis) and lungs (pulmonary embolism), which can be
life-threatening. This risk is greatest in the first year of use.6 A recent small study suggests that oral ERT slightly
increases blood clot risk, but the ERT patch does not. When taken orally, ERT
seems to increase a clotting factor in the blood; this does not happen with ERT
that is absorbed through the skin.7
- Breast
cancer. The Million Women Study has shown that, in women using ERT for 10
years, the number of breast cancers is slightly higher than in women not taking
ERT.8 Although the
Women's Health Initiative (WHI) trial found no
increase in breast cancer over 7 years of ERT use, experts continue to take the
breast cancer risk seriously.9
- Uterine (endometrial) cancer (only if you have a
uterus). Taking progestin with estrogen eliminates this risk.8
- Gallstones. Women who use estrogen
replacement therapy are more likely to have gallstones that cause symptoms than
women who do not use ERT. (High estrogen levels are linked to gallbladder
disease.)
- Ovarian cancer (which is rare). In women using ERT
over 5 years, the number of ovarian cancers is slightly higher than normal.
Using ERT causes ovarian cancer in about 0.4 per 1,000 women. (This is the same
as 1 in 2,500 women.) This risk only applies to women who have their ovaries
and are taking estrogen.
ERT breast cancer risk is lower than the estrogen-progestin
(HRT) breast cancer risk. In the British Million Women
study of women who took hormone therapy for 10 years till age 60:8
- Estrogen-progestin use increased breast
cancer by 19 per 1,000 women.
- Estrogen-alone use increased breast
cancer by 5 per 1,000 women.
Side effects that can occur with all forms
of estrogen but are more common with oral estrogen (and less common with a
patch, cream, gel, or vaginal ring) include:
- Headaches.
- Nausea.
- Vaginal
discharge.
- Fluid retention.
- Weight
gain.
- Breast tenderness.
- Spotting or darkening of the
skin, particularly on the face.
- Asthma. Newly
diagnosed asthma appears to be more common among women taking ERT or HRT than
women who are not. (Estrogen is thought to be a factor that causes or worsens
asthma across the lifespan.)10
- Rarely, an
increased growth of pre-existing
uterine fibroids or a worsening of
endometriosis.
Some of these side effects, such as headaches, nausea, fluid
retention, weight gain, and breast tenderness, may go away after a few weeks of
use.
The estrogen patch (transdermal estrogen) may cause skin
irritation.
An estrogen ring must be replaced every 3 months. If the ring falls
out at any time during the 3-month treatment period, you may rinse it with
lukewarm water and reinsert it.
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference
is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
In the Million Women Study of British women ages 50 to 64, taking
any form of estrogen for 10 years increased breast
cancer risk. The Women's Health Initiative study did not show this increased
risk for women taking estrogen alone (ERT) for 7 years.9 Therefore, taking long-term ERT probably slightly increases
breast cancer risk; taking it with progestin (HRT) further increases breast
cancer risk.8 However, only women who have had a
hysterectomy can take estrogen alone without also
worrying about endometrial (uterine) cancer risk.8
ERT use slightly increases the risk of stroke. For this reason, the
Women's Health Initiative ERT trial was stopped sooner
than originally planned. In this large trial, women using ERT had no change in
heart disease risk, had fewer hip fractures (a sign of estrogen's
bone-protecting effect), and (unlike the larger Million Women Study) had no
increase in breast cancer risk during the study's nearly 7 years of ERT
treatment.9
If you are taking ERT after early menopause caused by a surgical
hysterectomy, talk with your health professional about long-term ERT risks and
benefits.
If you have your uterus but are unable to tolerate the side effects
of
progestin in hormone replacement therapy (HRT) or you
are concerned about increased breast cancer risk, you may consider
estrogen-only replacement therapy (ERT) if testing shows no abnormalities of
the uterine lining (endometrium). However, close
observation for precancerous changes of the endometrium is required, including
an annual
pelvic examination and an annual endometrial
biopsy.
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