Cardiovascular and metabolic effects of medroxyprogesterone acetate versus conjugated equine estrogen after premenopausal hysterectomy with bilateral ovariectomy

Pharmacotherapy, 30(5), 442-452

DOI 10.1592/phco.30.5.442 PMID 20411996 Source

STUDY

Objective

To compare the cardiovascular and metabolic effects of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) with those of conjugated equine estrogen (CEE) as single-hormone therapies in women who underwent hysterectomy with bilateral ovariectomy.

Design

Secondary analysis of a 12-month, double-blind, randomized, parallel-therapy trial.

Setting

Four teaching hospitals and one community hospital in Vancouver, Canada.

Participants

Thirty-three healthy women who underwent premenopausal hysterectomy with bilateral ovariectomy.

Intervention

Subjects received either MPA 10 mg/day (18 women) or CEE 0.6 mg/day (15 women) for 12 months, started immediately after hysterectomy with bilateral ovariectomy. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN

Results

Lipid profiles (high-density lipoprotein cholesterol [HDL], total cholesterol, apolipoprotein B, and triglyceride levels), homeostatic measures (hemoglobin A(1c) and fasting blood glucose level), hormone levels (free and bioavailable testosterone, cortisol, sex hormone-binding globulin [SHBG], and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate), inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein [CRP] and serum albumin levels), and anthropometric measures (body mass index [BMI], truncal fat, and total body fat) were assessed over the 12-month period. After 12 months, the women assigned to MPA had lesser increases in BMI (p=0.04), triglyceride (p=0.003), HDL (p<0.0005), SHBG (p<0.0005), total testosterone (p=0.003), and CRP values (p=0.01) and higher serum albumin levels (p<0.0005) compared with the women receiving CEE.

Conclusion

Therapy with CEE, but not MPA, after surgical menopause appears to predispose healthy women to low-grade inflammation, as evidenced by its independent associations with elevated CRP and reduced albumin levels. In women treated with MPA, the favorable levels of inflammatory markers, BMI, and triglyceride levels need to be confirmed in larger controlled trials, as progesterone therapy may provide a safe and effective alternative to estrogen for vasomotor symptoms in women with surgical menopause.

medroxyprogesterone acetate cardiovascular effects, surgical menopause hormone therapy, mpa versus conjugated estrogen, progesterone after hysterectomy, inflammatory markers hormone therapy, c-reactive protein estrogen therapy, triglyceride levels progesterone, vasomotor symptoms treatment alternatives, bilateral ovariectomy hormone replacement, metabolic effects progesterone therapy, body mass index hormone therapy, premenopausal hysterectomy treatment

Kalyan, S., Hitchcock, C. L., Sirrs, S., Pudek, M., & Prior, J. C. (2010). Cardiovascular and metabolic effects of medroxyprogesterone acetate versus conjugated equine estrogen after premenopausal hysterectomy with bilateral ovariectomy. *Pharmacotherapy*, *30*(5), 442-452. https://doi.org/10.1592/phco.30.5.442