Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) 

Introduction 

Menopause

The menopause is marked by the ending of menstruation (when a woman's periods stop), and changes in the hormones. As a result of these hormonal changes, many women have physical and emotional symptoms, such as hot flushes, night sweats and irritability. In this video, family doctor Dawn Harper talks about how to ease the symptoms of the menopause, whether to take HRT, and more.

Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is a treatment used to replace the female hormones that a woman’s body is no longer producing because of the menopause.

The menopause – sometimes known as the ‘change of life’ – occurs when levels of the female hormones oestrogen and progesterone fall and your ovaries stop producing eggs. Menstruation (your periods) ends and you are no longer able to conceive (become pregnant).

Oestrogen and progesterone have very important roles in a woman’s body. When levels fall, this causes a wide range of physical and emotional symptoms. HRT can restore these hormone levels and enable the body to function normally again.

The role of oestrogen

Oestrogen plays an important role in the release of eggs from the ovaries. It regulates a woman’s periods and helps her to conceive.

Oestrogen also helps to regulate many other body functions, including bone density, the temperature of your skin and keeping the vagina moist. It is the reduction of oestrogen that causes most of the symptoms associated with the menopause, including:

  • hot flushes
  • vaginal dryness
  • loss of sex drive
  • mood changes
  • stress incontinence (leaking urine when you cough or sneeze)
  • night sweats
  • thinning of the bone, which can lead to brittle bones (osteoporosis)

Most of these symptoms pass within two to five years, although vaginal dryness is likely to get worse if it is not treated. The risk of osteoporosis also increases with age.

The role of progesterone

The main function of progesterone is to prepare the womb for a possible pregnancy. It also helps to protect the lining of the womb (endometrium).

A falling level of progesterone does not have the same wide-ranging effects on your body as falling levels of oestrogen. However, it increases your risk of developing cancer of the womb lining (endometrial cancer).

Therefore, progesterone is usually used in combination with oestrogen in HRT (although women who have had a hysterectomy do not need progesterone and can take oestrogen-only HRT). See HRT - types for more information.

Benefits and risks

HRT has been extensively studied and a great deal of information is known about the benefits and the risks.

The main and most obvious benefit of HRT is that it has proved very successful in controlling the symptoms of the menopause. Taking HRT can make a huge difference to a woman’s quality of life and wellbeing.

HRT can also reduce a woman’s risk of developing osteoporosis and cancer of the colon and rectum. However, the long-term use of HRT to prevent osteoporosis is not usually recommended. This is because HRT slightly increases the risk of developing breast cancer, endometrial cancer, ovarian cancer and stroke, and there are other medicines available for osteoporosis that do not carry the same level of associated risk. For more information, see HRT - risks

Most experts agree that if HRT is used on a short-term basis (no more than five years) then the benefits of it outweigh any associated risk. If it is taken for longer, especially for more than 10 years, you should discuss your individual risks with your GP and review these risks on a yearly basis.




Last reviewed: 26/04/2024

Next review due: 26/04/2024

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Comments are personal views. Any information they give has not been checked and may not be accurate.

silveriver said on 08 August 2024

Spritey

this is a misconception.
Bio identical progesterone (as opposed to artificial/synthetic progesteron) is available for HRT on the NHS.

The problem here is that Gps are very ignorant in these women's matters.
My (female) gp hadn't even heard of the term "bio identical" and learned it from me showing her a magazine.

I suspect all gps will give you the same answer.

it is a dire state of affairs when you get more information from women's magazines and internet chats than your doctor.

The only doctor knowledgeable about bioidentical hormones in the Uk is the menopause expert , founder of the journal "the climacteric" Nick Panay in london.

He has recently written a medical article entitled "Bio identicals: why the hype?" however to read his conclusions you have to subscribe.
ask your gp about it.
It is your responsibility to push for complete info regarding your health inho.Noone but you will really care.

in his book "what your doctor don't tell you about the pre-menopause" Dr John Lee recommends taking bioidentical progesterone in low doses through the skin.
So administration and dosages are still experimental.

But we should still be given the option to try it

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spritey said on 06 March 2024

@jeani - Unless the NHS has made it to the US you should read the comments in context - this site is advice for people under the UK NHS system.

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hrtfan said on 30 December 2024

Excellent advice and I have made an appointment to see a female gp. Sadly I got negative response from receptionist when I said to discuss HRT. I think my practice is anti it and that is astonishing having just watched the video from NHS. We all have the right to make choices about our lives and balance risk versus gains. It should be possible for someone like me to go to an NHS gynaecologist direct and I should not be made to jump through hoops at my gp practice.Lets see what happens next...my sex life is suffering my sleep is deprived my weight is soaring and my well being is on the floor...vaginal dryness and incontinence due to oestrogen loss is affecting evry waking minute of my life. Dont write off older women as not requiring help. I have only been married 3 years and have an active sex life thats going down the pan at a rate of knots ..

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jeani said on 26 August 2024

This is not accurate. You say that HRT has progesterone in it and what is in it is a progesterone substitute - progestogen in England, progestin in the US. This is only because the manufacturers want to patent and exploit the hormone financially. Natural progesterone is harmless, modern HRT can have very bad side effects.

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