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Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Women's Health 

Timing of Hormone Replacement Therapy for Cardiac Benefit

While controversy on the safety of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) continues, a study reported in the Journal of Women's Health suggests that when a woman begins the therapy may be key to whether or not it will protect her from heart disease.

Picture of a woman sitting at a desk

According to the new report, women who start HRT when they are younger, near the onset of menopause, have about a 30 percent lower risk of coronary heart disease compared with women who never use hormones.

However, women who start HRT 10 years or more after menopause, or after the age of 60, gain no cardiovascular benefit from the therapy.

"The timing of hormone therapy in relation to age and time since menopause may be a key factor in whether these hormones protect the heart or increase risk of heart disease," says researcher Dr. JoAnn E. Manson, the chief of the division of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

These findings may help to address the discrepancies in results from earlier studies, explains Dr. Manson.

Starting Before or After Age 60 Studied

In their study, Dr. Manson and her colleagues looked at the association between heart disease and HRT as they relate to age. The women in the study had all participated in the Nurses' Health Study from 1976 to 2000.

The team found that women who started HRT near menopause had a significantly reduced risk of heart disease compared with women who did not start HRT.

In contrast, women who started HRT after age 60 or 10 or more years after menopause gained no protective effect from hormone replacement.

"What we need is a way to identify women who are good candidates for HRT versus women who are poor candidates for HRT," notes Dr. Manson. "The findings that age and time since menopause may be key factors is an important first step."

A lot of women who are good candidates for HRT may have been scared away by findings suggesting no heart benefit or that the risk of heart disease might outweigh the benefits, says Dr. Manson.

"The risk of heart disease and stroke are lower in the younger, recently menopausal women," she says.

But in older women, existing damage to vessels may be the reason HRT does not protect them from heart disease.

"If a blood vessel already has advanced atherosclerosis, hormone therapy may be more likely to cause a clot," suggests Dr. Manson.

"However, if the blood vessel is open, the increase in clotting risk usually will not translate into a heart event, and some of the benefits may predominate as improvement in cholesterol, improvement in insulin sensitivity, and antioxidant effects," she says.

"Estrogen may actually delay the development of atherosclerosis in those women," says Dr. Manson.

Look Closely at Proven Therapies

One expert does not think the findings should change current recommendations.

"This is an important question," says Dr. Nieca Goldberg, the chief of women's cardiac care at Lenox Hill Hospital, in New York City. "However, we would need a randomized trial. The results of this study are not going to change the current guidelines on the prescription of hormone therapy."

Dr. Goldberg believes that women who want to lower their risk of heart disease should stick to reducing the known risk factors.

"Women should continue to use proven therapy," she says, noting that lifestyle changes, such healthy diets and exercise, "clearly have been proven to reduce risk."

In addition, women who need treatment for risk factors like high blood pressure and high cholesterol should be taking medications that have been documented to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke in women, says Dr. Goldberg.

"We still do not prescribe HRT for heart disease prevention," she says.

Concerns about HRT were initially raised by the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), a landmark study involving 27,000 participants that caused many women to discontinue their use of hormone therapy.

Researchers halted the WHI study in 2002 after they found the regimen entailed more health risks - most notably an increased risk for breast cancer and stroke - than benefits.

Several subsequent studies have also questioned the WHI findings. One study noted some women in the WHI project were in their 60s and 70s who had not been on hormones before. Because these women were older, they were already at greater risk of cardiovascular problems, researchers reason.

Always consult your physician for more information.

April 2006

Timing of Hormone Replacement Therapy for Cardiac Benefit

Starting Before or After Age 60 Studied

Look Closely at Proven Therapies

Women and Heart Attack

Online Resources


Women and Heart Attack

It is a myth that heart disease is a man's disease.

In fact, one in 12 women ages 45 to 64 has heart disease. One in four women over the age of 65 has heart disease.

Currently, 6.6 million women have heart disease, states the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Consider the following facts about cardiovascular disease in women:

Coronary heart disease is the single largest cause of death for females in the US.

Almost 15 percent of girls ages six to 19 are overweight, which is a risk factor for heart disease.

About 30 percent of girls in grades nine through 12 report using tobacco, which is a risk factor for heart disease.

At menopause, a woman's heart disease risk starts to increase significantly.

Each year, about 86,000 women ages 45 to 64 have a heart attack.

Beginning at age 50, more women than men have an elevated cholesterol.

Each year, about 314,000 women age 65 and older have a heart attack.

About 14 million women age 65 and older have high blood pressure.

The average age for women to have a first heart attack is about 70, and women are more likely than men to die within a few weeks of a heart attack.

About 35 percent of women who have had a heart attack will have another within six years.

Always consult your physician for more information.

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Sisters of Mercy Health System