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	<title>Symptom Advice .com &#187; progestin hormones</title>
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		<title>Doctors failing to prescribe low-dose menopausal hormone therapy, Stanford study finds</title>
		<link>http://symptomadvice.com/doctors-failing-to-prescribe-low-dose-menopausal-hormone-therapy-stanford-study-finds/</link>
		<comments>http://symptomadvice.com/doctors-failing-to-prescribe-low-dose-menopausal-hormone-therapy-stanford-study-finds/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Dec 2010 02:17:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Symptom Advice</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[hormone symptoms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[experience symptoms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hormone therapy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[progestin hormones]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Public release date: 2-Dec-2010 [ &#124; E-mail &#124; Share ] Contact: Susan Ipaktchiansusani@stanford.edu650-725-5375Stanford University Medical Center STANFORD, Calif. ? Doctors across &#116;&#104;&#101; country &#097;&#114;&#101; &#115;&#116;&#105;&#108;&#108; prescribing higher-dose menopausal hormone therapy pills, &#100;&#101;&#115;&#112;&#105;&#116;&#101; clinical evidence that &#108;&#111;&#119; doses and skin patches work just as &#119;&#101;&#108;&#108; and carry &#102;&#101;&#119;&#101;&#114; health risks. That&#8217;s &#119;&#104;&#097;&#116; researchers at &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p><img align="right" width="140" border="0" alt="[ Back to EurekAlert! ]" style="float: left;clear: both;margin-top: 0pt;margin-right: 12px;margin-bottom: 12px;margin-left: 0pt"><strong>Public release date: 2-Dec-2010</strong> [ | E-mail | <img src="eurekalert.org/images/share_icon.gif" width="11" height="11" border="0" alt="Share" style="float: left;clear: both;margin-top: 0pt;margin-right: 12px;margin-bottom: 12px;margin-left: 0pt"> Share ] Contact: Susan Ipaktchiansusani@stanford.edu650-725-5375Stanford University Medical Center
<p>STANFORD, Calif. ? Doctors across &#116;&#104;&#101; country &#097;&#114;&#101; &#115;&#116;&#105;&#108;&#108; prescribing higher-dose menopausal hormone therapy pills, &#100;&#101;&#115;&#112;&#105;&#116;&#101; clinical evidence that &#108;&#111;&#119; doses and skin patches work just as &#119;&#101;&#108;&#108; and carry &#102;&#101;&#119;&#101;&#114; health risks. That&#8217;s &#119;&#104;&#097;&#116; researchers at &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford University School of Medicine &#102;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; in a study that will &#098;&#101; published online Dec. 2 in <i>Menopause: &#116;&#104;&#101; Journal of &#116;&#104;&#101; North American Menopause Society</i>.</p>
<p>Doctors have &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; treating &#116;&#104;&#101; symptoms of menopause &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; hormone therapy for decades. &#100;&#117;&#114;&#105;&#110;&#103; menopause, &#116;&#104;&#101; ovaries decrease their estrogen production, and women experience symptoms to varying degrees; for some, symptoms &#097;&#114;&#101; non-existent &#119;&#104;&#105;&#108;&#101; for others they &#097;&#114;&#101; debilitating. In &#116;&#104;&#101; United States last year, formulations of estrogen and progestin hormones helped more &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; 6 million women who &#104;&#097;&#100; symptoms &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; as hot flashes, sleep disturbance and irritability.</p>
<p>Still, there &#097;&#114;&#101; risks. In 2002, a large, placebo-controlled clinical trial &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; Women&#8217;s Health Initiative ? which tested &#116;&#104;&#101; higher-dose, oral estrogen-plus-progestin therapy ? was halted because of &#116;&#104;&#101; increased incidence of breast cancer and cardiovascular disease in women taking &#116;&#104;&#101; hormones. &#116;&#104;&#101; results contradicted &#116;&#104;&#101; clinical wisdom of &#116;&#104;&#101; time: that hormone therapy could help protect &#097;&#103;&#097;&#105;&#110;&#115;&#116; heart disease. Since that trial, there has &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; evidence indicating that a &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; dose of hormones &#099;&#097;&#110; treat menopausal symptoms just as effectively in many women &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; minimal &#115;&#105;&#100;&#101; effects ? and &#8220;may incur &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; risks of breast cancer and cardiovascular disease,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Sandra Tsai, MD, MPH, clinical instructor of medicine and lead author of &#116;&#104;&#101; &#110;&#101;&#119; study.</p>
<p>The latest findings &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; Stanford researchers &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119; that as of 2009, physicians&#8217; practices weren&#8217;t keeping up &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; this clinical evidence about &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; hormone doses, which &#116;&#104;&#101; U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends. &#8220;We&#8217;re disappointed,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#101; paper&#8217;s senior author Randall Stafford, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine at &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford Prevention Research Center. &#8220;Yes, there was an increase in &#116;&#104;&#101; &#117;&#115;&#101; of low-dose preparations, but &#105;&#116; was not sizeable.&#8221;</p>
<p>To conduct &#116;&#104;&#101; study, &#116;&#104;&#101; researchers analyzed survey data collected &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; physicians &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2001 and 2009 &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; IMS National Disease and Therapeutic Index (a commercial data source &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; IMS Health Inc.). &#116;&#104;&#101; database reflects prescriptions that &#097;&#114;&#101; issued as a result of outpatient visits to physician offices.</p>
<p>While &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford researchers &#102;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; that &#116;&#104;&#101; &#117;&#115;&#101; of lower-dose therapy did increase &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2001 and 2009, &#105;&#116; was not &#110;&#101;&#097;&#114;&#108;&#121; enough to suggest that physicians were fully incorporating &#116;&#104;&#101; &#110;&#101;&#119; evidence into everyday practice. About two-thirds of women &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; menopausal symptoms &#097;&#114;&#101; likely to respond to low-dose therapy, Stafford &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100;, so &#104;&#101; and &#104;&#105;&#115; colleagues were surprised that not &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; one-third of &#116;&#104;&#101; women taking hormone therapy in 2009 were &#111;&#110; a &#108;&#111;&#119; dose.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s a &#109;&#097;&#114;&#107;&#101;&#100; contrast to &#116;&#104;&#101; response to &#116;&#104;&#101; 2002 trial findings. After &#116;&#104;&#111;&#115;&#101; initial results were publicized, &#116;&#104;&#101; number of women &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; prescriptions for &#116;&#104;&#101; higher-dose menopausal hormone therapy declined sharply ? &#105;&#116; fell &#098;&#121; 47 percent &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2001 and 2004, according to &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford study. &#8220;This is &#111;&#117;&#114; &#098;&#101;&#115;&#116; &#101;&#120;&#097;&#109;&#112;&#108;&#101; of clinical trial findings dramatically changing practice,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Stafford. &#116;&#104;&#101; &#110;&#101;&#119; study also &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#100; that &#116;&#104;&#101; decline continued, albeit much more gradually, &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2004 and 2009.</p>
<p>In addition to &#116;&#104;&#101; research &#111;&#110; &#116;&#104;&#101; effects of low-dose hormone therapy, recent studies have also established that delivering hormones through &#116;&#104;&#101; skin &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; a small patch, called transdermal delivery, reduces risk of serious health problems &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; as blood clots. Because of that, &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford team &#104;&#097;&#100; expected more of &#116;&#104;&#101; women &#111;&#110; hormone therapy &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#098;&#101; &#117;&#115;&#105;&#110;&#103; transdermal hormones in 2009 &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; in 2001. But &#116;&#104;&#101; data &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#100; no meaningful change at &#097;&#108;&#108;. &#8220;We thought that over time there might &#098;&#101; greater tailoring of therapy based &#111;&#110; characteristics of &#116;&#104;&#101; individual woman,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Stafford. &#8220;The &#098;&#111;&#116;&#116;&#111;&#109; line is that over time we didn&#8217;t &#115;&#101;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#101; level of refinement in clinical practice that we expected.&#8221;</p>
<p>Stafford and &#104;&#105;&#115; colleagues &#104;&#097;&#100; also expected that for women who needed treatment for menopausal symptoms, physicians &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#115;&#116;&#097;&#114;&#116; prescribing hormone therapy &#100;&#117;&#114;&#105;&#110;&#103; or just after menopause more &#111;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#110;. &#116;&#104;&#101; data, &#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#118;&#101;&#114;, &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#100; that in 2009, &#108;&#105;&#107;&#101; in 2001, &#116;&#104;&#101; preponderance of women &#111;&#110; &#116;&#104;&#101; drugs were older, and &#116;&#104;&#117;&#115; at greater risk for adverse effects.</p>
<p>The study reached no &#100;&#101;&#102;&#105;&#110;&#105;&#116;&#101; conclusions about &#119;&#104;&#121; clinical practice has not caught up &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; research findings. &#112;&#101;&#114;&#104;&#097;&#112;&#115; physicians &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; adjustments after &#116;&#104;&#101; 2002 trial, and that &#8220;clinical inertia&#8221; led &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; to maintain their prescribing practices since that time, &#116;&#104;&#101; study &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100;. It&#8217;s &#112;&#111;&#115;&#115;&#105;&#098;&#108;&#101; that older women who have &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; &#111;&#110; hormone therapy for many years &#097;&#114;&#101; satisfied &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; their results, don&#8217;t want to risk recurring symptoms and don&#8217;t realize that &#116;&#104;&#101; risks of breast cancer and heart disease increase &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; age, Stafford suggested. &#109;&#097;&#121;&#098;&#101; doctors who &#097;&#114;&#101; familiar &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#116;&#104;&#101; &#105;&#109;&#109;&#101;&#100;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101; benefits of higher-dose hormone therapy in relieving menopausal symptoms &#097;&#114;&#101; reluctant to change, &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Tsai.</p>
<p>&#8220;It takes &#116;&#111;&#111; long to disseminate research into practice,&#8221; Tsai added. &#8220;It helps when findings &#097;&#114;&#101; presented in &#116;&#104;&#101; media and when physicians discuss findings &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; their patients.&#8221; &#115;&#104;&#101; suggested that cooperation &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; research institutions, drug companies and professional societies could help produce consistent clinical guidelines and find &#116;&#104;&#101; &#098;&#101;&#115;&#116; ways to disseminate &#116;&#104;&#101; information to both physicians and patients. &#8220;There &#110;&#101;&#101;&#100;&#115; to &#098;&#101; a lot of collaboration to &#109;&#097;&#107;&#101; this work.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;It takes a &#104;&#117;&#103;&#101; event to change clinical practice,&#8221; Stafford &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100;. &#8220;We haven&#8217;t &#104;&#097;&#100; that &#098;&#105;&#103;, well-controlled clinical trial hitting &#116;&#104;&#101; &#102;&#114;&#111;&#110;&#116; page of &#116;&#104;&#101; newspapers, demonstrating that &#116;&#104;&#101; risks of standard-dose estrogen and progestin therapies &#097;&#114;&#101; potentially much higher &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; at &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; doses.&#8221;</p>
<p>The other co-author of this study is Marcia Stefanick, MD, PhD, professor of medicine at &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford Prevention Research Center. &#116;&#104;&#101; study was funded &#098;&#121; grants &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; &#116;&#104;&#101; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.</p>
<p>Information about Stanford&#8217;s Department of Medicine, which also supported &#116;&#104;&#101; research, is &#097;&#118;&#097;&#105;&#108;&#097;&#098;&#108;&#101; at medicine.stanford.edu/.</p>
<p>The Stanford University School of Medicine consistently ranks &#097;&#109;&#111;&#110;&#103; &#116;&#104;&#101; nation&#8217;s top medical schools, integrating research, medical education, patient care and community service. For more news about &#116;&#104;&#101; school, &#112;&#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#101; visit mednews.stanford.edu. &#116;&#104;&#101; medical school is &#112;&#097;&#114;&#116; of Stanford Medicine, which includes Stanford Hospital &amp; Clinics and Lucile Packard Children&#8217;s Hospital. For information about &#097;&#108;&#108; three, &#112;&#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#101; visit stanfordmedicine.org/about/news.html. </p>
<p> PRINT MEDIA CONTACT: Susan Ipaktchian at (650) 725-5375 () BROADCAST MEDIA CONTACT: M.A. Malone at (650) 723-6912 ()</p>
<p> <img src="eurekalert.org/images/back2e.gif" align="right" width="140" height="36" border="0" alt="[ Back to EurekAlert! ]" style="float: left;clear: both;margin-top: 0pt;margin-right: 12px;margin-bottom: 12px;margin-left: 0pt"> [ | E-mail | <img src="eurekalert.org/images/share_icon.gif" width="11" height="11" border="0" alt="Share" style="float: left;clear: both;margin-top: 0pt;margin-right: 12px;margin-bottom: 12px;margin-left: 0pt"> Share ] &nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Doctors failing to prescribe low-dose menopausal hormone therapy, study finds</title>
		<link>http://symptomadvice.com/doctors-failing-to-prescribe-low-dose-menopausal-hormone-therapy-study-finds/</link>
		<comments>http://symptomadvice.com/doctors-failing-to-prescribe-low-dose-menopausal-hormone-therapy-study-finds/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 17 Dec 2010 18:17:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Symptom Advice</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[hormone symptoms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hot flashes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[progestin hormones]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://symptomadvice.com/doctors-failing-to-prescribe-low-dose-menopausal-hormone-therapy-study-finds/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Doctors &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; been treating &#116;&#104;&#101; symptoms &#111;&#102; menopause &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; hormone therapy &#102;&#111;&#114; decades. &#100;&#117;&#114;&#105;&#110;&#103; menopause, &#116;&#104;&#101; ovaries decrease their estrogen production, and women experience symptoms to varying degrees; &#102;&#111;&#114; some, symptoms are non-existent while &#102;&#111;&#114; &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114;&#115; they are debilitating. In &#116;&#104;&#101; United States &#108;&#097;&#115;&#116; year, formulations &#111;&#102; estrogen and progestin hormones helped &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; than 6 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p><img src="http://symptomadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/1292609832-61.jpg" style="clear:both;clear:both;margin:0 15px 15px 0" />
<p>Doctors &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; been treating &#116;&#104;&#101; symptoms &#111;&#102; menopause &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; hormone therapy &#102;&#111;&#114; decades. &#100;&#117;&#114;&#105;&#110;&#103; menopause, &#116;&#104;&#101; ovaries decrease their estrogen production, and women experience symptoms to varying degrees; &#102;&#111;&#114; some, symptoms are non-existent while &#102;&#111;&#114; &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114;&#115; they are debilitating. In &#116;&#104;&#101; United States &#108;&#097;&#115;&#116; year, formulations &#111;&#102; estrogen and progestin hormones helped &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; than 6 million women who had symptoms such as hot flashes, sleep disturbance and irritability.</p>
<p>Still, there are risks. In 2002, &#097; large, placebo-controlled clinical trial &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; Women&#8217;s Health Initiative &#8212; &#119;&#104;&#105;&#099;&#104; tested &#116;&#104;&#101; higher-dose, oral estrogen-plus-progestin therapy &#8212; &#119;&#097;&#115; halted &#098;&#101;&#099;&#097;&#117;&#115;&#101; &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; increased incidence &#111;&#102; breast cancer and cardiovascular disease in women taking &#116;&#104;&#101; hormones. &#116;&#104;&#101; results contradicted &#116;&#104;&#101; clinical wisdom &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; time: that hormone therapy could help protect against heart disease. &#115;&#105;&#110;&#099;&#101; that trial, there &#104;&#097;&#115; been evidence indicating that &#097; &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; dose &#111;&#102; hormones &#099;&#097;&#110; treat menopausal symptoms &#106;&#117;&#115;&#116; as effectively in many women &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; minimal side effects &#8212; and &#8220;may incur &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; risks &#111;&#102; breast cancer and cardiovascular disease,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Sandra Tsai, MD, MPH, clinical instructor &#111;&#102; medicine and lead author &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; new study.</p>
<p>The latest findings &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; Stanford researchers &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119; that as &#111;&#102; 2009, physicians&#8217; practices weren&#8217;t keeping up &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; this clinical evidence &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; hormone doses, &#119;&#104;&#105;&#099;&#104; &#116;&#104;&#101; U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends. &#8220;We&#8217;re disappointed,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#101; paper&#8217;s senior author Randall Stafford, MD, PhD, associate professor &#111;&#102; medicine at &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford Prevention Research Center. &#8220;Yes, there &#119;&#097;&#115; &#097;&#110; increase in &#116;&#104;&#101; use &#111;&#102; low-dose preparations, &#098;&#117;&#116; it &#119;&#097;&#115; &#110;&#111;&#116; sizeable.&#8221;</p>
<p>To conduct &#116;&#104;&#101; study, &#116;&#104;&#101; researchers analyzed survey data collected &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; physicians &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2001 and 2009 &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; IMS National Disease and Therapeutic Index (a commercial data source &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; IMS Health &#105;&#110;&#099;.). &#116;&#104;&#101; database reflects prescriptions that are issued as &#097; result &#111;&#102; outpatient visits to physician offices. </p>
<p>While &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford researchers found that &#116;&#104;&#101; use &#111;&#102; lower-dose therapy &#100;&#105;&#100; increase &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2001 and 2009, it &#119;&#097;&#115; &#110;&#111;&#116; nearly enough to suggest that physicians were fully incorporating &#116;&#104;&#101; new evidence &#105;&#110;&#116;&#111; everyday practice. &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; two-thirds &#111;&#102; women &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; menopausal symptoms are &#108;&#105;&#107;&#101;&#108;&#121; to respond to low-dose therapy, Stafford &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100;, &#115;&#111; he and &#104;&#105;&#115; colleagues were surprised that &#110;&#111;&#116; &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; one-third &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; women taking hormone therapy in 2009 were on &#097; low dose.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s &#097; marked contrast to &#116;&#104;&#101; response to &#116;&#104;&#101; 2002 trial findings. &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; those initial results were publicized, &#116;&#104;&#101; number &#111;&#102; women &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; prescriptions &#102;&#111;&#114; &#116;&#104;&#101; higher-dose menopausal hormone therapy declined sharply &#8212; it fell &#098;&#121; 47 percent &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2001 and 2004, &#097;&#099;&#099;&#111;&#114;&#100;&#105;&#110;&#103; to &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford study. &#8220;This is our &#098;&#101;&#115;&#116; example &#111;&#102; clinical trial findings dramatically changing practice,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Stafford. &#116;&#104;&#101; new study &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#100; that &#116;&#104;&#101; decline continued, albeit much &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; gradually, &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 2004 and 2009.</p>
<p>In addition to &#116;&#104;&#101; research on &#116;&#104;&#101; effects &#111;&#102; low-dose hormone therapy, &#114;&#101;&#099;&#101;&#110;&#116; studies &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; established that delivering hormones through &#116;&#104;&#101; skin &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#097; small patch, called transdermal delivery, reduces risk &#111;&#102; &#115;&#101;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; health problems such as blood clots. &#098;&#101;&#099;&#097;&#117;&#115;&#101; &#111;&#102; that, &#116;&#104;&#101; Stanford team had expected &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; women on hormone therapy would &#098;&#101; &#117;&#115;&#105;&#110;&#103; transdermal hormones in 2009 than in 2001. &#098;&#117;&#116; &#116;&#104;&#101; data &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#100; no meaningful change at &#097;&#108;&#108;. &#8220;We &#116;&#104;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104;&#116; that over time there might &#098;&#101; greater tailoring &#111;&#102; therapy based on characteristics &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; individual woman,&#8221; &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Stafford. &#8220;The bottom line is that over time we didn&#8217;t see &#116;&#104;&#101; level &#111;&#102; refinement in clinical practice that we expected.&#8221;</p>
<p>Stafford and &#104;&#105;&#115; colleagues had &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; expected that &#102;&#111;&#114; women who needed treatment &#102;&#111;&#114; menopausal symptoms, physicians would start prescribing hormone therapy &#100;&#117;&#114;&#105;&#110;&#103; or &#106;&#117;&#115;&#116; &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; menopause &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; &#111;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#110;. &#116;&#104;&#101; data, however, &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#100; that in 2009, &#108;&#105;&#107;&#101; in 2001, &#116;&#104;&#101; preponderance &#111;&#102; women on &#116;&#104;&#101; drugs were older, and thus at greater risk &#102;&#111;&#114; adverse effects.</p>
<p>The study reached no &#100;&#101;&#102;&#105;&#110;&#105;&#116;&#101; conclusions &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#119;&#104;&#121; clinical practice &#104;&#097;&#115; &#110;&#111;&#116; caught up &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; research findings. &#112;&#101;&#114;&#104;&#097;&#112;&#115; physicians made adjustments &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; &#116;&#104;&#101; 2002 trial, and that &#8220;clinical inertia&#8221; led &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; to maintain their prescribing practices &#115;&#105;&#110;&#099;&#101; that time, &#116;&#104;&#101; study &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100;. It&#8217;s possible that older women who &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; been on hormone therapy &#102;&#111;&#114; many years are satisfied &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; their results, don&#8217;t &#119;&#097;&#110;&#116; to risk recurring symptoms and don&#8217;t realize that &#116;&#104;&#101; risks &#111;&#102; breast cancer and heart disease increase &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; age, Stafford suggested. Maybe doctors who are familiar &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#116;&#104;&#101; &#105;&#109;&#109;&#101;&#100;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101; benefits &#111;&#102; higher-dose hormone therapy in relieving menopausal symptoms are reluctant to change, &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Tsai.</p>
<p>&#8220;It takes too long to disseminate research &#105;&#110;&#116;&#111; practice,&#8221; Tsai added. &#8220;It helps &#119;&#104;&#101;&#110; findings are presented in &#116;&#104;&#101; media and &#119;&#104;&#101;&#110; physicians discuss findings &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; their patients.&#8221; She suggested that cooperation &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; research institutions, drug companies and professional societies could help produce consistent clinical guidelines and find &#116;&#104;&#101; &#098;&#101;&#115;&#116; ways to disseminate &#116;&#104;&#101; information to &#098;&#111;&#116;&#104; physicians and patients. &#8220;There needs to &#098;&#101; &#097; lot &#111;&#102; collaboration to make this work.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;It takes &#097; &#104;&#117;&#103;&#101; event to change clinical practice,&#8221; Stafford &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100;. &#8220;We haven&#8217;t had that &#098;&#105;&#103;, well-controlled clinical trial hitting &#116;&#104;&#101; &#102;&#114;&#111;&#110;&#116; page &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; newspapers, demonstrating that &#116;&#104;&#101; risks &#111;&#102; standard-dose estrogen and progestin therapies are potentially much higher than at &#108;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#114; doses.&#8221;</p></p>
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