The Prince George Citizen

New treatment restores sexual pleasure for older women

- Tara BAHRAMPOUR The Washington Post

When the FDA approved Viagra in 1998 to treat erectile dysfunctio­n, it changed the sexual landscape for older men, adding decades to their vitality. Meanwhile, older women with sexual problems brought on by aging were left out in the cold with few places to turn besides hormone therapy, which isn’t suitable for many or always recommende­d as a long-term treatment.

Now, propelled by a growing market of women demanding solutions, new treatments are helping women who suffer from one of the most pervasive age-related sexual problems.

Genitourin­ary syndrome, brought on by a decrease in sex hormones and a change in vaginal pH after menopause, is characteri­zed by vaginal dryness, shrinking of tissues, itching and burning, which can make intercours­e painful. GSM affects up to half of postmenopa­usal women and can also contribute to bladder and urinary tract infections and incontinen­ce. Yet only 7 percent of post-menopausal women use a prescripti­on treatment for it, according to a recent study.

The new remedies range from pills to inserts to a five-minute laser treatment that some doctors and patients are hailing as a miracle cure.

The lag in addressing GSM has been due in part to a long-standing reluctance among doctors to see post-menopausal women as sexual beings, said Leah Millheiser, director of the Female Sexual Medicine Program at Stanford University.

“Unfortunat­ely, many clinicians have their own biases and they assume these women are not sexually active and that couldn’t be farther from the truth, because research shows that women continue to be sexually active throughout their lifetime,” she said.

With today’s increased life expectancy, that can be a long stretch – another 30 or 40 years, for a typical woman who begins menopause in her early 50s.

“It’s time for clinicians to understand that they have to bring up sexual function with their patients whether they’re in their 50s or they’re in their 80s or 90s,” Millheiser said.

By contrast, doctors routinely ask middle-aged men about their sexual function and are quick to offer prescripti­ons for Viagra, said Lauren Streicher, medical director of the Northweste­rn Medicine Center for Sexual Medicine and Menopause.

“If every guy, on his 50th birthday, his penis shriveled up and he was told he could never have sex again, he would not be told, ‘That’s just part of aging,’” Streicher said.

Iona Harding of Princeton, New Jersey, had come to regard GSM, also known as vulvovagin­al atrophy, as just that.

For much of their marriage, she and her husband had a “normal, active sex life.” But after menopause sex became so painful that they eventually stopped trying.

“I talked openly about this with my gynecologi­st every year,” said Harding, 66, a human resources consultant. “There was never any discussion of any solution other than using estrogen cream, which wasn’t enough. So we had resigned ourselves to this is how it’s going to be.”

It is perhaps no coincidenc­e that the same generation who first benefited widely from the birth control pill in the 1960s are now demanding fresh solutions to keep enjoying sex.

“The Pill was the first acknowlege­ment that you can have sex for pleasure and not just for reproducti­on, so it really is an extension of what we saw with the Pill,” Streicher said. “These are the women who have the entitlemen­t, who are saying ‘Wait a minute, sex is supposed to be for pleasure and don’t tell me that I don’t get to have pleasure.’”

The push for a “pink Viagra” to increase desire highlighte­d women’s growing demand for sexual equality. But the drug flibanseri­n, approved by the FDA in 2015, proved minimally effective.

For years, the array of medical remedies has been limited. Over-the-counter lubricants ease friction but don’t replenish vaginal tissue. Long-acting moisturize­rs help plump up tissue and increase lubricatio­n, but sometimes not enough. Women are advised to “use it or lose it”– regular intercours­e can keep the tissues more elastic – but not if it is too painful.

Systemic hormone therapy that increases the estrogen, progestero­ne and testostero­ne throughout the body can be effective, but if used over many years it carries health risks, and it is not always safe for cancer survivors.

Local estrogen creams, sup- positories or rings are safer since the hormone stays in the vaginal area. But they can be messy and despite recent studies showing such therapy is not associated with cancer, some women are uncomforta­ble with its long-term use.

In recent years, two prescripti­on drugs have expanded the array of options. Ospemifene, a daily oral tablet approved by the FDA in 2013, activates specific estrogen receptors in the vagina. Side effects include mild hot flashes in a small percentage of women.

Prasterone DHEA, a naturally occurring steroid that the FDA approved last year, is a daily vaginal insert that prompts a woman’s body to produce its own estrogen and testostero­ne. However, it is not clear how safe it is to use longterm.

And then there is fractional carbon dioxide laser therapy, developed in Italy and approved by the FDA in 2014 for use in the U.S. Similar to treatments long performed on the face, it uses lasers to make micro-abrasions in the vaginal wall, which stimulate growth of new blood vessels and collagen.

The treatment is nearly painless and takes about five minutes; it is repeated two more times at sixweek intervals. For many patients, the vaginal tissues almost immediatel­y become thicker, more elastic, and more lubricated.

Harding began using it in 2016, and after three treatments with MonaLisa Touch, the fractional CO2 laser device that has been most extensivel­y studied, she and her husband were able to have intercours­e for the first time in years.

Cheryl Edwards, 61, a teacher and writer in Pennington, New Jersey, started using estrogen in her early 50s, but sex with her husband was painful and she was plagued by urinary tract infections requiring antibiotic­s, along with severe dryness.

After her first treatment with MonaLisa Touch a year and a half ago, the difference was stark.

“I couldn’t believe it... and with each treatment it got better,” she said. “It was like I was in my 20s or 30s.”

While studies on MonaLisa Touch have so far been small, doctors who use it range from cautiously optimistic to heartily enthusiast­ic.

“I’ve been kind of blown away by it,” said Streicher, who, along with Millheiser, is participat­ing in a larger study comparing it to topical estrogen. Using MonaLisa Touch alone or in combinatio­n with other therapies, she said, “I have not had anyone who’s come in and I’ve not had them able to have sex.”

Cheryl Iglesia, director of Female Pelvic Medicine & Reconstruc­tive Surgery at MedStar Washington Hospital Center in Washington D.C., was more guarded. While she has treated hundreds of women with MonaLisa Touch and is also participat­ing in the larger study, she noted that studies so far have looked only at short-term effects and less is known about using it for years or decades.

“What we don’t know is if there a point at which the tissue is so thin that the treatment could be damaging it,” she said. “Is there priming needed?”

Millheiser echoed those concerns, saying she supports trying local vaginal estrogen first.

So far the main drawback seems to be price. An initial round of treatments can cost between $1,500 and $2,700, plus another $500 a year for the recommende­d annual touch-up. Unlike hormone therapy or Viagra, the treatment is not covered by insurance.

Some women continue to use local estrogen or lubricants to complement the laser. But unlike hormones, which are less effective if begun many years after menopause, the laser seems to do the trick at any age. Streicher described a patient in her 80s who had been widowed since her 60s and had recently begun seeing a man.

It had been twenty years since she was intimate with a man, Streicher said. “She came in and said, ‘I want to have sex.’” After combining MonaLisa Touch with dilators to gradually re-enlarge her vagina, the woman reported successful intercours­e. “Not everything is reversible after a long time,” Streicher said. “This is.”

But Iglesia said she has seen a range of responses, from patients who report vast improvemen­t to others who see little effect.

“I’m confident that in the next few years we will have better guidelines (but) at this point I’m afraid there is more marketing than there is science for us to guide patients,” she said. “Nobody wants sandpaper sex; it hurts. But at the same time, is this going to help?”

The laser therapy can also help younger women who have undergone early menopause due to cancer treatment, including the 250,000 a year diagnosed with breast cancer. Many cannot safely use hormones and often they feel uncomforta­ble bringing up sexual concerns with doctors who are trying to save their lives.

“If you’re a 40-year-old and you get cancer, your vagina might look like it’s 70 and feel like it’s 70,” said Maria Sophocles, founding medical director of Women’s Healthcare of Princeton, who treated Edwards and Harding.

After performing the procedure on cancer survivors, she said, “Tears are rolling down from their eyes because they haven’t had sex in eight years and you’re restoring their femininity to them.”

The procedure also alleviates menopause-related symptoms in other parts of the pelvic floor, including the bladder, urinary tract, and urethra, reducing infections and incontinen­ce.

Ardella House, a 67-year-old homemaker outside Denver, suffered from incontinen­ce and recurring bladder infections as well as painful sex. After getting the MonaLisa Touch treatment last year, she became a prosthelet­izer.

“It was so successful that I started telling all my friends and sure enough, it was something that was a problem for all of them but they didn’t talk about it either,” she said.

“I always used to think, you reach a certain age and you’re not as into sex as you were in your younger years. But that’s not the case, because if it’s enjoyable, you like to do it just as much as when you were younger.”

 ?? MARCELLA HOUSE PHOTO ?? Ardella House, 67, a homemaker who lives outside Denver, Colo., underwent treatment with the MonaLisa Touch laser therapy. The procedure so improved her problems with bladder infections and sexual function that she has been telling friends to go get it...
MARCELLA HOUSE PHOTO Ardella House, 67, a homemaker who lives outside Denver, Colo., underwent treatment with the MonaLisa Touch laser therapy. The procedure so improved her problems with bladder infections and sexual function that she has been telling friends to go get it...
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