How to process hormone replacement therapy?
Women currently can expect to
live thirty or forty years of their life in the postmenopausal state.
The lower amount of estrogen during these decades puts them at greater
risk for cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and possibly even
Alzheimer's disease. Hormone replacement therapy is proving to reduce
many of these risks, but obtaining specific health benefits depends on
the selection of the appropriate hormone therapy. Estrogen replacement
therapy (ERT) uses estrogen alone, called unopposed estrogen, to combat
diseases related to estrogen loss, particularly heart disease and
osteoporosis. Unfortunately, ERT significantly increases the risk for
endometrial (uterine) cancer. Women who have had hysterectomies are
generally good candidates, then, because their uteruses have been
removed. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) combines estrogen with
natural progesterone or its synthetic version, called progestin, which
offsets the risk for uterine cancer. The HRT combination appears to
offer benefits similar to those of ERT and is now the usual choice for
many postmenopausal women who are at risk for osteoporosis or heart
disease. There are a number of other considerations, however, as well as
alternatives to HRT that women should discuss with their physician.
Timing. For women who choose
hormone replacement therapy, the next question is when to start it. Some
experts believe that HRT should begin as soon as possible after
menopause to achieve maximum benefits for the heart and bones and
possibly the brain. Because of possible increased risks for breast
cancer with long time use, some physicians suggest that therapy should
continue for about ten years or until a woman reaches her mid-sixties
and then stop. The problem with this approach is that the protective
value of HRT declines and ceases five years after stopping. Some
experts, then, advise waiting 10 years after menopause before taking
hormone therapy and then staying on HRT to life. They argue that HRT
still protects against osteoporosis and heart disease -- even after age
60 -- but the odds of a women then developing HRT-related cancers before
the end of her life are very low. It is a difficult issue, and women
should discuss the problem with their physician, in the context of their
particular risks and needs.