The Decatur Daily Democrat

Patches, creams for menopause symptoms may have lower blood pressure risk than pills

- BY LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON — Women often use hormone therapy to relieve hot flashes and other menopause symptoms — and new research suggests patches or creams may be safer for their blood pressure than pills.

As women’s bodies produce lower levels of reproducti­ve hormones during menopause their risk for heart disease rises. High blood pressure further increases that risk — but it’s not clear whether there’s a link with hormone therapy for menopause symptoms.

Canadian researcher­s wondered if the way hormones are absorbed — orally, vaginally or through the skin -- could play a role.

The University of Calgary team examined health records of more than 112,000 women ages 45 and older who filled prescripti­ons for at least six months’ worth of estrogen-only hormone treatment between 2008 and 2019. They tracked which women went on to develop high blood pressure at least a year after starting treatment.

While the difference­s weren’t huge, women who took estrogen pills had a 14% higher risk of developing hypertensi­on compared to those using skin patches or creams, the researcher­s reported Monday. Oral estrogen carried a 19% greater risk than vaginal versions.

The findings were published in the journal Hypertensi­on.

Hormone therapy has a mix of risks and benefits that mean it’s not for everyone. Today it’s prescribed not to prevent disease but to relieve menopause-related symptoms — generally using the lowest possible dose for the shortest time. Most commonly used are combinatio­n pills of estrogen and another hormone, progestin. (Estrogenon­ly pills typically are prescribed to women without a uterus.)

Different versions of hormone therapy may work better for different menopause symptoms, something the study didn’t address.

But it adds important clues to understand­ing the complex relationsh­ip between hormone therapy and blood pressure, said Dr. Garima Sharma, a women’s heart specialist with Virginia’s Inova Health System and the American Heart Associatio­n.

Sharma would like to see a more rigorous trial that compares different hormone versions. But she pointed to a possible biological explanatio­n: Maybe oral estrogen affects enzymes linked to blood pressure as it’s being processed, while skin and vaginal versions have much more limited activity in the body.

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