MEDICAL NEWS:
COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES SHOW LITTLE BENEFIT IN TREATING
MENOPAUSE SYMPTOMS
Aug. 3, 2006 — Insufficient evidence exists to support the use of
complementary and alternative therapies to relieve menopause-related symptoms,
according to a review article in the July 24 issue of Archives of Internal
Medicine, a journal of the American Medical Association.
Twenty-five million women will go through menopause in the next decade, and
many of them will experience hot flashes, night sweats, vaginal dryness, sleep
problems and other associated symptoms. Approximately 40 percent of women seek
medical help for these complaints, according to background information in the
article. After the Women's Health Initiative, a large clinical trial of hormone
therapy, was halted because of an increased risk of breast cancer, many
physicians and patients began to seek other options for menopausal symptoms.
Anne Nedrow, M.D., Oregon Evidence-based Practice Center and Oregon Health
and Science University, Portland, and colleagues reviewed 70 previous studies of
alternative and complementary therapies for menopause-related symptoms.
Forty-eight of the studies examined vitamins, proteins, complete diets or other
biologically based treatments; nine focused on mind-body therapies, including
meditation and guided imagery; one studied osteopathic manipulation, a
body-based therapy; two looked at the energy-based treatments reflexology and
magnet therapy; and 10 assessed whole medical systems, such as traditional
Chinese medicine or ayurvedic medicine (a traditional therapy from India that
includes yoga and dietary modifications).
Although some of the individual studies suggested benefits for certain
therapies, the overall quality and quantity of data was not sufficient to
recommend any of the treatments, the authors write. The 48 studies of
biologically based treatments had mixed results. For example, of 15 fair- or
good-quality studies of the soy-derived compounds known as phytoestrogens, only
four suggested the supplements provided a benefit in relieving menopause
symptoms. In the four qualifying studies of black cohosh, the root of a native
North American shrub, one large study showed an overall improvement in several
symptoms, while three did not show any benefit for hot flashes. The studies of
energy, mind-body and other types of therapies suggested few benefits for these
treatments for menopause-related symptoms.
Many of the studies had a large placebo effect, meaning that even women who
were not assigned to receive active therapy still reported improvement in their
symptoms. "The large placebo effect is consistent with preexisting work of
menopausal hormonal therapies," the authors write. "A study of estrogen compared
with placebo reported a 50 percent improvement in frequency of hot flashes in
the placebo group. The placebo effect likely plays an important role in the
expanding number of dietary supplements marketed to menopausal women."
Because many women are using alternative and complementary therapies to treat
their symptoms, often without telling their physicians, additional rigorous
studies are needed to identify which of these treatments are safe and effective,
the authors write. In the meantime, "the most important thing that the health
professionals can do for symptomatic menopausal women is to encourage open
communication that allows patients to disclose treatments they are using," they
conclude. "Women value partnership, choice and shared decision making. Because
there is no universal menopausal presentation or treatment, it is essential that
health care professionals provide accurate information and options for midlife
women."
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