Why are physicians reluctant to use estrogens for anything – or do they prefer ‘PROFOX’?

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Abstract

The reluctance of physicians to use estrogens in women with hormone responsive disorders is a tragic result of the 2002 WHI study. Although their hostility to estrogen therapy antedated these studies, the flawed data is now used as justification for the denial of estrogens for treatment of low bone density and various types of hormone responsive depression in women. Estrogens should be first choice therapy for osteoporosis in women under the age of 60 years, but in practice bisphosphonates, with its increasing number of long-term side-effects, has become first-line therapy for physicians. These side-effects include osteonecrosis of the jaw, mid-shaft femoral fractures and the need for proton pump inhibitors, which further reduce bone density and add to the fracture risk. Pyschiatrists fail to use transdermal estradiol for postnatal depression, premenstrual depression and perimenopausal depression in spite of randomized trials demonstrating their efficacy. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor therapy for depression independently decreases bone density and is also responsible for loss of libido, loss of mental acuity and dependence. Thus postmenopausal women with vasomotor symptoms, depression, loss of libido, vaginal dryness or low bone density are frequently denied effective estrogen therapy and given a combination of low-cost generic prozac and fosamax, which is in danger of becoming a post-WHI nightmare drug PROFOX (PROzacFOsamaX). This can only be avoided if advisory bodies review the reassuring evidence concerning estrogen therapy in women under the age of 60 years and advise accordingly. © 2009, The British Menopause Society. All rights reserved.

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APA

Studd, J. (2009). Why are physicians reluctant to use estrogens for anything – or do they prefer ‘PROFOX’? Menopause International. https://doi.org/10.1258/mi.2009.009019

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