Progesterone for treatment of symptomatic menopausal women.
Jerilynn C PriorPublished in: Climacteric : the journal of the International Menopause Society (2018)
This review's purpose is to highlight evidence that oral micronized progesterone (progesterone) is effective for hot flushes and night sweats (vasomotor symptoms, VMS), improves sleep and is likely safe in menopausal women (who are more than 1 year since last menstruation). Methods include randomized controlled clinical trials (RCT) supplemented with basic science, population and observational data as needed. The barrier to use of progesterone is lack of awareness that safety concerns with estrogen-including 'menopausal hormone therapy' (MHT) are not applicable to progesterone. In a single 3-month RCT, progesterone (300 mg at bedtime) was effective treatment of VMS in 133 healthy menopausal women. It caused an overall 55% VMS decrease, no withdrawal-related VMS rebound and a greater VMS decrease in 46 women with ≥50 moderate-intense VMS/week. Progesterone is equally or more effective than estradiol in improving cardiovascular endothelial function and caused no cardiovascular safety concerns in a 3-month RCT. An 8-year prospective cohort study (E3N) in more than 80 000 menopausal women showed progesterone prevented breast cancer in estrogen-treated women. Multiple RCTs confirm that progesterone (300 mg daily at bedtime) does not cause depression and improves deep sleep. In conclusion, progesterone effectively treats VMS, improves sleep and may be the only therapy that symptomatic women, who are menopausal at a normal age and without osteoporosis, need.
Keyphrases
- estrogen receptor
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- pregnancy outcomes
- clinical trial
- sleep quality
- breast cancer risk
- physical activity
- cervical cancer screening
- type diabetes
- public health
- randomized controlled trial
- stem cells
- depressive symptoms
- machine learning
- open label
- electronic health record
- bone marrow
- phase iii
- phase ii
- high intensity
- mesenchymal stem cells
- placebo controlled
- deep learning
- drug induced