Estrogen-progestin therapy causes a greater increase in spinal bone mineral density than estrogen therapy - a systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled trials with direct randomization

Journal of musculoskeletal & neuronal interactions, 17(3), 146-154

DOI 10.1515/jmni-2017-0020 PMID 28860416 Source
Objective

To assess whether progesterone (P4) or osteoblast P4 receptor-acting progestin (P) contributed to estrogen (E) therapy-related increased areal bone mineral density (BMD) in randomized controlled trials (RCT) with direct randomization to estrogen (ET) or estrogen-progestin (EPT) therapy.

Methods

Systematic literature searches in biomedical databases identified RCT with direct randomization and parallel estrogen doses that measured spinal BMD change/year. Cyclic P4/P was included in this random effects meta-analysis only if for ≥ half the number of E-days.

Results

Searches yielded 155 publications; five met inclusion criteria providing eight dose-parallel ET-EPT comparisons in 1058 women. Women averaged mid-50 years, ⟨five years into menopause and took conjugated equine E daily at 0.625 mg with/without 2.5 mg medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA). The weighted mean EPT minus ET percentage difference in spinal BMD change was +0.68%/year (95% CI 0.38, 0.97%) (P=0.00001). This result was highly heterogeneous (I²=81%) but this may reflect the small number of studies.

Conclusion

Estrogen with an osteoblast P4R-acting progestin (EPT) in these five published RCT provides Level 1 evidence that MPA caused significantly greater annual percent spinal BMD gains than the same dose of ET. These data have implications for management of vasomotor symptoms and potentially for osteoporosis treatment in menopausal women.

progesterone bone density menopause, estrogen progestin therapy spinal bmd, medroxyprogesterone acetate bone health, osteoblast progesterone receptor, hormone replacement therapy bone formation, progesterone versus estrogen only bone effects, postmenopausal osteoporosis prevention, conjugated equine estrogen mpa bone density, systematic review hormone therapy bone mineral density, progesterone osteoblast activity

Prior, J. C., Seifert-Klauss, V. R., Giustini, D., Adachi, J. D., Kalyan, S., & Goshtasebi, A. (2017). Estrogen-progestin therapy causes a greater increase in spinal bone mineral density than estrogen therapy - a systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled trials with direct randomization. *Journal of musculoskeletal & neuronal interactions*, *17*(3), 146-154. https://doi.org/10.1515/jmni-2017-0020