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Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy-Local and Systemic: A Pharmacologic Perspective
- Source :
- Journal of clinical pharmacologyReferences. 60
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Every woman, if she lives long enough, will transition into menopause, and as the US population ages, women will be spending more time in a postmenopausal state than before. For postmenopausal women, the decision to initiate menopausal hormone therapy should be individualized. A thorough evaluation of the patient's cardiovascular, venous thromboembolic, cancer, and fracture risk should be considered along with the woman's quality of life. Hormone therapy exerts its therapeutic effects on vasomotor symptoms, the skeleton, and the genitourinary system independent of age since menopause and these benefits are lost once hormone therapy is stopped. Here we review the pharmacologic properties dose, formulation, mode of administration, timing of initiation, and duration of hormonal therapies in regard to optimizing benefit and minimizing risk to the patient. This discussion will focus on the effects of common hormonal therapies including estrogen (local and systemic), progesterone, estrogen receptor agonist/antagonist, and local dehydroepiandrosterone and include a brief review of compounded bioidentical hormone therapy.
- Subjects :
- Oncology
medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.drug_class
medicine.medical_treatment
Population
Dehydroepiandrosterone
Estrogen receptor
030226 pharmacology & pharmacy
Bazedoxifene
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Internal medicine
medicine
Humans
Pharmacology (medical)
Testosterone
education
Pharmacology
education.field_of_study
business.industry
Estrogen Replacement Therapy
Estrogens
medicine.disease
Female Urogenital Diseases
Menopause
Receptors, Estrogen
Estrogen
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Female
Hormone therapy
Vaginal atrophy
Progestins
business
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15524604
- Volume :
- 60
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of clinical pharmacologyReferences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....de02966475ffee8b86c435f3dd54ed9a