Expert Commentary

Does BSO status affect health outcomes for women taking estrogen for menopause?

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

OBG Management: Did taking estrogen therapy prior to trial enrollment make a difference when it came to study outcomes?

Dr. Manson: We found minimal if any effect in our analyses. In fact, even the women who did not have prior (pre-randomization) use of estrogen therapy tended to do well on estrogen-alone therapy if they were younger than age 60. This was particularly true for the women who had BSO. Even if they had not used estrogen previously, and they were many years past the BSO, they still did well on estrogen therapy if they were below age 60.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Office hysteroscopic evaluation of postmenopausal bleeding
MDedge ObGyn
Hormone therapy and cognition: What is best for the midlife brain?
MDedge ObGyn
Product Update: Osphena’s NDA, new hysteroscope, TempSure RF technology, Resilient stirrup covers
MDedge ObGyn
Higher BMD linked to family history of diabetes in postmenopausal women
MDedge ObGyn
Try testosterone for some women with sexual dysfunction, but not others
MDedge ObGyn
Can we discern optimal long-term osteoporosis treatment for women?
MDedge ObGyn
Postmenopausal women would benefit from clinician-initiated discussion of GSM symptoms
MDedge ObGyn
What does the REPLENISH trial reveal about E2/P4’s ability to affect VMS and sleep and appropriate dosing for smokers?
MDedge ObGyn
Ovarian cryopreservation should no longer be experimental
MDedge ObGyn
Product Update: Addyi alcohol ban lifted, fezolinetant trial, outcomes tracker, comfort gown
MDedge ObGyn