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HRT might up Incontinence Risk in
Postmenopausal Women
Newswise — Grappling with the risks and
benefits of hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
is nothing new for postmenopausal women.
Researchers have now added more fuel to the
fire, with evidence that HRT could play a
role in incontinence.
“Our main finding, which comes in particular
from one huge trial, is that one type of HRT
— systemic conjugated equine estrogen (CEE)
— may make urinary incontinence worse,” said
June Cody, a methodologist at the Cochrane
Incontinence Review Group at the University
of Aberdeen in Scotland.
“In addition, in this large trial, women who
did not have incontinence at first were more
likely to develop incontinence than those
who took a placebo.”
In an updated systematic review in the
upcoming issue of The Cochrane Library, Cody
and colleagues also found that significantly
more women who used local (vaginal) estrogen
reported that their incontinence symptoms
improved when compared to women who used a
placebo.
This result comes from small studies,
however, which might have had limitations.
Millions of women experience incontinence —
an involuntary and embarrassing leakage of
urine that can lead to social isolation and
even stigma.
There
are several kinds of urinary incontinence,
including stress and urge incontinence.
Stress incontinence can occur when someone
is coughing or sneezing, while urge
incontinence occurs when one feels a sudden
strong urge to urinate.
“The original (2003) Cochrane review on
incontinence grouped women according to
different types of incontinence — stress,
urge or mixed,” Cody said.
“In this update, we rearranged things to
look separately at local or systemic
delivery. We then honed in on the different
types of estrogen. When we looked at the
research with CEE, it seemed to make all
types of incontinence worse.”
The review appears in the current issue of
The Cochrane Library, a publication of The
Cochrane Collaboration, an international
organization that evaluates research in all
aspects of health care. Systematic reviews
draw evidence-based conclusions about
medical practice after considering both the
content and quality of existing trials on a
topic.
This systematic review of 33 randomized
trials comprised 19,313 incontinent
postmenopausal women.
In the review as a whole, 9,417 women
received estrogen systemically, from oral
tablets, skin patches or subcutaneous
implants.
Another 735 women received estrogen locally
by means of a vaginal cream, tablet, vaginal
ring or other device.
The studies included control groups of women
who received a placebo or a different
treatment. Half of the trials took place in
the United States.
Cody said that the results of two trials,
which included 17,642 women, dominated the
findings.
One
study reported on a subset of women from the
Women’s Health Initiative, which collected
incontinence data on 23,296 women — 16,117
of whom were incontinent.
The second largest study included 1,525
women with incontinence.
The main purpose of the studies was to look
at outcomes such as breast cancer, stroke,
heart disease and bone fracture, but they
also looked at incontinence.
The findings of both studies were the same,
whether women were taking estrogen alone, or
estrogen and progestogen (for women with an
intact uterus): Incontinence worsened for
those using HRT with conjugated equine
estrogen.
Curiously, smaller studies suggested that
systemic estrogen helps incontinence, Cody
said.
Women
in these trials, however, received different
types of estrogen, such as estriol or
estradiol — but not CEE.
One-fourth of women on systemic estrogen
reported vaginal bleeding and one-fifth
reported breast tenderness during the
trials.
The women in the largest study “were
reportedly healthy, post-menopausal women
and, on average, their incontinence got
worse if they were allocated CEE.
This is what the data show from a randomized
trial — the best level of evidence for
comparing different interventions,” said
Cody, who is also a member of the Academic
Urology Unit at the University of Aberdeen.
Charla Blacker, M.D., of the Henry Ford
Health System in Detroit, who did not take
part in the review, said that doctors should
take note that the way estrogen therapy is
administered — by local estrogen therapy or
systemic hormone treatments — could make a
difference in whether incontinence improves
or gets worse.
“These findings should be discussed with
women who are contemplating using estrogen
or hormonal therapy for relief of menopausal
symptoms, particularly those who already
have incontinence symptoms,” Blacker said.
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