No adverse effects of medroxyprogesterone treatment without estrogen in postmenopausal women: double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial

Obstetrics and gynecology, 83(1), 24-28

PMID 8272302 Source

Abstract

Objective

To determine whether cyclic medroxyprogesterone treatment given without estrogen causes adverse symptoms in postmenopausal women.

Methods

This was a placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover trial of 10 days/month of medroxyprogesterone and placebo treatments given during 2 consecutive months in random order. Participants recorded their physiologic and emotional experiences on a 0-4 scale using a daily diary form. Eleven postmenopausal women aged 43-63 completed the study. The subjects were not taking hormones. Height, weight, and serum estradiol concentration were measured once. In each woman, the sum of scores for the 10 days of medroxyprogesterone was compared to the sum of scores for the 10 days of placebo using nonparametric tests.

Results

No significant differences in scores were found between the 10 days on medroxyprogesterone and the 10 days on placebo. The median and range for the composite scores for premenstrual-like symptoms were 26 (20-67) during medroxyprogesterone and 25 (19-40) during placebo (P = .39).

Conclusions

Medroxyprogesterone given alone does not cause adverse symptoms in postmenopausal women. Therefore, medroxyprogesterone therapy, by itself, cannot explain the side effects reported by postmenopausal women taking combined hormones.

Topics

medroxyprogesterone postmenopausal side effects, cyclic progestin without estrogen menopause, progesterone alone postmenopause symptoms, medroxyprogesterone placebo controlled trial, progestin monotherapy postmenopausal women, hormone replacement progesterone only, medroxyprogesterone adverse effects crossover, postmenopausal progesterone treatment safety

Cite this article

Prior, J. C., Alojado, N., McKay, D. W., & Vigna, Y. M. (1994). No adverse effects of medroxyprogesterone treatment without estrogen in postmenopausal women: double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial. *Obstetrics and gynecology*, *83*(1), 24-28.

Related articles