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Dont let your doctor give you
horse urine!
There are better treatments for menopause.
by Jonathan Wright M.D. and John Morgenthaler
No auto mechanic in his right mind would
replace worn parts on a Mercedes with new parts made from a Chevy. Unfortunately many
physicians (and pharmaceutical companies) seem to have less common sense than the average
auto-mechanic when it comes to treating menopausal women.
The "estrogen" replacement most
doctors prescribe today for menopausal and premenopausal women is a pill known generically
as conjugated equine estrogens (CEE). The best known brand of CEE is Premarin. Many
studies suggest that in many women, Premarin does help reduce symptoms of menopause,
including hot flashes, vaginal thinning, memory loss and urinary incontinence. It also
appears to reduce the risk of developing postmenopausal cardiovascular disease (the
leading killer of women) and osteoporosis (the crippling progressive bone weakness). It
also may help to prevent a significant proportion of Alzheimers disease and senile
dementia.
Premarin is horse estrogen derived from
horse urine!
So whats wrong with CEE? Take a close
look at the names. Notice the word "equine?" Yes, that equine! Premarin is horse
estrogen! It is derived from the urine of pregnant mares, hence its name. Premarin works
great in female horse just as Chevy parts work great in Chevys. But replacing human
estrogens with horse estrogens may be asking for trouble, and heres why.
For the last several million years, the
human female reproductive system has been running quite well on three separate estrogens;
Estriol, Estrone and Estradiol, which occur in an approximation of 90%; 3%; 7% (1) (Fig
1). Compare that with Premarin, which consists of Estrone (75-80%), equilin (6-15%),
Estradiol and two other equine estrogens (5-19%). (2)
Notice that, in addition to having larger
proportions of Estrone and Estradiol, Premarin also contains equilin and two other forms
of estrogen found exclusively in horses.
The female human body contains all the
enzymes and cofactors it needs to process Estriol, Estrone and Estradiol when they occur
in their natural human proportions. On the other hand, it has none of the enzymes and
cofactors required metabolizing equilin and the other horse estrogens, nor does it have
enough of these important substances to deal with the excessively large amounts of Estrone
and Estradiol found in Premarin (or in the 100% Estradiol "patch").
Horse, of course, is well equipped to
handle CEE. The difference in reproductive hormones is just one of many differences
between horse and humans. You may have noticed that horses also have four hooves and a
mane, whereas human females dont!
It should come as no surprise then,
that the presence of Premarin in the human body induces a hormonal imbalance that can have
important adverse consequences. To physicians who prescribe Premarin, this hormonal
imbalance doesnt seem to carry much weight. After all, the drug works doesnt
it? But, as two leading reproductive physiologists point out, when women take
Premarin,
"Levels [of equilin] can remain elevated for 13 weeks or more post-treatment due to
storage and sloe release from adipose [fat] tissue. In addition, metabolism of equilin to
equilenin and 17-hydroxyequilenin may contribute to the estrogen stimulatory effect of
[conjugated estrogen] therapy." Another metabolite of equilin, 17-dihydroequilin has
been found to be eight times more potent than equilin for inducing endometrial growth, a
possible precursor to cancer (3).
As a result, Premarin produces
"estrogenic effects" which are much more potent and longer lasting than those
produced by natural human estrogens.
This explains why so many women feel
"unnatural" on Premarin, why Premarin causes so many side effects and
discomforts (see box). It even explains why Premarin has been associated with a
significant risk of breast and endometrial cancer, because one of the primary effects of
equilin, Estradiol and Estrone is to promote the growth of tissue in the endometrial
(uterine) lining and also in the breast. This growth is important for preparing the
premenopausal body for pregnancy and lactation, but if some of that tissue becomes
cancerous or precancerous, look out!
According to Premarins official
labeling, taking it for a year (without also taking progesterone, see box), increases a
womens risk of endometrial cancer by as much as 14% (2).
Most conventional physicians, not to
mention the self-serving pharmaceutical industry, are quick to rationalize the cancer and
other risks of horse estrogens. Every treatment has its risks, they point out, but the
risk of a postmenopausal woman dying of a heart attack or stroke if she doesnt take
Premarin are far greater than her risk of dying from cancer or an osteoporosis related
fracture if she does.
Why not use human hormones for humans?
Well, this reasoning is true as far as it
goes, but it ignores one hugely important fact, that horse hormones are not the only
choice human females have. What about human hormones? Wouldnt it make sense to
replace human estrogens with human estrogens? Mercedes parts with Mercedes parts? Of
course, it does! The real question is why has no one thought of this before?
This realization occurred in 1982. All
ob-gyn textbooks discussed the naturally occurring human estrogens Estriol, Estrone and
Estradiol but completely neglected to recommend their use for treating menopausal
symptoms, inexplicably recommending horse estrogens instead!
The approximate circulating levels of the
three estrogens were checked in human females. This information was used to design a
combination estrogen replacement regimen that closely matched the natural conditions found
in premenopausal women. The result is "triple-estrogen", a combination of
natural Estriol, Estrone and Estradiol using molecules identical in structure to those
produced in the human body in as close to natural quantities and proportions as could be
calculated.
Triple estrogen was formulated by a
compounding pharmacist friend- Ed Thorp of Kripps Pharmacy, Vancouver BC, and the rest is
history. In the 16 years since triple estrogen was first prescribed, thousands of other
progressive physicians and their grateful patients have found that it works as well as, or
better than conventional ERT regiments, while producing far fewer unwanted side effects.
Estriol, the missing-in-action hormone
You may have noticed that one estrogen,
Estriol, is completely absent from Premarin and other forms of conventional estrogen
replacement regimens, although it comprises as much as 80-90% of triple estrogen. This is
not an insignificant omission. Most conventional physicians and pharmaceutical researchers
have long dismissed estriol as a weak and unimportant estrogen. They have considered it to
be primarily a metabolite of Estradiol and Estrone, which are far more potent in producing
estrogenic effects, such as inducing endometrial tissue growth. "Why go through all
the trouble of putting Estriol into a pill if you dont really need it?" seems
to be their reasoning.
Well potency isnt everything. In
fact, Estriol is vitally important precisely because it is a weak estrogen. A number of
studies, published over four decades, have demonstrated that estriols unique and
perhaps most important role, may be to oppose the growth of cancer, including cancer
promoted by its more potent cousins, Estrone and Estradiol. Well talk more about
this in a moment.
Estriol plays more than just a defensive
role though. European physicians have been open to the potential benefits of Estriol in
menopausal women than those in the US. As a result, most of the clinical research
evaluating Estriol has been conducted in Europe. In general, these studies show that
menopausal women who use natural Estriol to replace their natural estrogen experience a
reduction in typical menopausal symptoms like, hot flashes and thinning of the vaginal
tissue (vaginal atrophy) (4).
In one major trial, 22 practicing
gynecologists from 11 large hospitals in Germany treated 911 premenopausal women with
Estriol and evaluated them regularly for 5 years. They found Estriol to be "very
effective" against common menopausal symptoms and "well-tolerated" with
"no significant side effect." (5)
A Swedish study evaluated 40
postmenopausal women with urinary incontinence (leaky bladders) for up to 10 years. The
researchers found that Estriol treatment resulted in significant improvement in 75% of the
women, including eight whose ability to regulated urination completely returned to normal.
(6).
The same Swedish study found that
symptoms of vaginal atrophy disappeared in 79% of the women after just 4 months of Estriol
treatment. After 12 months, all but one woman were symptom free (6).
Built in cancer protection
There is no doubt that reasonable doses of
horse estrogens and 100%Estradiol patches and creams stimulate excessive proliferation of
endometrial cells, a precursor to endometrial cancer.
It is to reduce this risk that any
woman taking these drugs must also take natural progesterone or a synthetic progesterone
substitute (or "progestin") like the Provera (see box). This is in stark
contrast to Estriol, which appears to actually antagonize the proliferate effects of
Estrone and Estradiol, while having far less tendency to stimulate endometrial
proliferation, itself. Studies in experimental animals have shown that the proliferate
dose of Estriol (the dose that produces full endometrial growth) is at least double that
of horse estrogens and Estradiol (7).
Estriol apparently accomplishes its
protective role by benignly binding to estrogenic receptors in the uterine lining and
possibly the breast. Unlike the more potent estrogens though, it does not stimulate growth
nearly as much. At the same time, receptors covered by Estriol are shielded from more
carcinogenic Estrone and Estradiol (4).
This is thought to be the same mechanism by
which other weak estrogens, such as those found in soy products, protect against cancer.
In laboratory animal studies totaling more than 500 rat-years, Estriol has been shown to
be the most protective estrogen ever tested against cancers of the breast induced by
several potent carcinogenic agents, including radiation (8,9).
There is important evidence dating back to
the 1960s suggesting that Estriol may protect against breast cancer as well. At that
time, Henry Lemon, MD, who was head of the division of gynecologic oncology at the
University of Nebraska College of Medicine, hypothesized that some women who develop
breast cancer have too little Estriol relative to Estradiol and Estrone circulating in
their bodies.
To test this hypothesis, Dr. Lemon ran a
preliminary study in which he employed a urinary estrogen quotient (EQ), which was simply
a measure of the ratio of Estriol to the total of Estradiol and estrogen in the urine over
a 24-hour period. The higher the quotient, the more Estriol there is relative to Estradiol
and Estrone (10).
In a small study of 34 women with no signs
of breast cancer, Dr. Lemon found the EQ to be a median of 1.3 before menopause and 1.2
after menopause. Only 21% of the women had an EQ <1.0 (i.e. Estriol was less than
Estradiol and Estrone combined). For 26 women with breast cancer, however, the picture was
quite different. Their median EQ was 0.5 before menopause and 0.8 after menopause; 62% of
these women had an EQ <1.0.
Thus, the women with breast cancer
seemed to be making substantially less Estriol relative to the other estrogens, compared
with the women without breast cancer.
Over the years some researchers have
published work disputing Dr. Lemons findings, while others have supported him. The
issue is complicated by the fact that a womans level of Estriol when breast cancer
becomes apparent may not be as important as a deviation from the norm in her Estriol
levels as a young woman.
Clearly, much more research, including
large-scale, long-term human trials are needed to answer the many unanswered questions
regarding estriols role in cancer. In the meantime, there can be little doubt that
an estrogen replacement regimen that includes the three human estrogens in triple
estrogen, (Estriol, Estrone and Estradiol) in identical-to-natural proportions is a
superior choice for premenopausal and postmenopausal women. Especially when compared with
the horse estrogens and 100% Estradiol patches and creams the pharmaceutical industry
promotes.
This sentiment was echoed in a 1978
editorial in the Journal of the American Medical Association titled, "Estriol, the
forgotten estrogen?" in which Alvin H. Follingstad, MD, bemoaned the lack of large
clinical trials on Estriol that would earn it an FDA stamp of approval. "Do we as
clinicians have to wait the years necessary for the completion of these trials before
Estriol becomes available to us?" he asked. "I think not, enough presumptive and
scientific evidence has been accumulated that we may say that orally administered Estriol
is safer than Estrone and Estradiol." (11)
Two decades later, we are still waiting for
those clinical trials, and what Dr. Follingstad dais then is even truer today.
Theres nothing to be gained by waiting. If a woman is concerned about her risk of
cancer from estrogen replacement (and who isnt?), then the logical choice is an
estrogen formula containing a majority of Estriol, in other words, triple estrogen.
Especially when you consider both modern scientific research and hundreds of
thousands of years of human experience producing and metabolizing estrogens)
Natural hormone formulations like triple
estrogen are normally available in the US only from compounding pharmacies with a
physicians prescription; they can not be found at standard pharmacies. You can also
order triple estrogen cream from some overseas pharmacies (ed., - note that IAS has the
precise 90/7/3 natural estrogen cream researched and formulated by Jonathan Wright MD, it
is called ESNATRI).
The business of menopause
If triple estrogen is so much better than
Premarin, why have so few people heard about it? The answer to this question can be summed
up in one word, patentability. Premarin is patentable, and hence, can be sold exclusively
only by its manufacturer and licensees, whereas triple estrogen is a natural product, like
vitamin C, and can be sold by anyone. Patentability has made Premarin a huge moneymaker
for its manufacturer, Wyeth-Ayerst Pharmaceuticals. For nearly 30 years, it has been at or
near the top of the drug best seller list. In just the first half of 1997, pharmacists
filled 22.1 million prescriptions for Premarin, amounting to revenues of $388.2 million in
the United States alone! Add in the rest of the worlds women, and you get a sense of
the high stakes involved in the business of menopause.
These enormous financial resources have
provided Wyeth-Ayerst the muscle to practically corner the estrogen market. Through
advertising, sponsorship of clinical trials, and conferences, free samples and other
common marketing techniques, they have created an atmosphere in which physicians virtually
equate estrogen replacement with Premarin.
Most physicians, who have little enough
time to keep up with the world of double blind, placebo-controlled drug trials reported in
medical journals (which are supported largely by pharmaceutical advertising) are
completely in the dark about the use of triple estrogen and other natural hormones. Their
use is not taught in medical schools, nor do any large pharmaceutical companies promote
it. With no money available to pay the enormous costs, the large, definitive studies that
might demonstrate the efficacy and safety of these natural hormone regimens will likely
never be done.
What makes a hormone natural?
The word "natural" gets thrown
around a lot in discussions of hormone replacement therapy. Premarin, for example, is
widely considered to be a "natural hormone." So is the Estradiol in the estrogen
"patch" and "cream" products. Triple estrogen is also considered to be
a "natural" estrogen product. Are they are natural? Does it really matter? The
answers depend on how you define "natural."
Triple estrogen consists of three separate
estrogens. Estriol, Estrone and Estradiol, all of which are derived from a plant, the wild
yam (Diascoreacomposita). How can a hormone that got its start in a vegetable be
considered "natural" in the human body? The wild yam is rich in
"precursor" molecules that can be easily converted by biochemists into estrogens
and other steroid hormones. The molecular structure of these hormones is indistinguishable
from that of the "natural" hormones produced in the human body, and as a result,
they function exactly like those the body produces, especially when used in their natural
proportions. Thus, the crucial variable defining "natural" is not the origin of
the hormone or how it is produced, but whether its chemical structure matches that of the
hormone it is intended to replace.
Premarin is natural for horses but not for
humans!
Premarin is widely considered by physicians
to be a "natural" hormone product, because it is derived from horse urine and is
not synthesized in a laboratory. But is it really natural? Certainly, its natural in
horses. But when placed in the human body, the hormones in Premarin are as foreign as any
synthetic drug, because the body lacks the enzymes and cofactors to metabolize them
safely.
What about estrogen "patch" and
"cream" products? These are composed of 100% Estriol, the most potent and most
carcinogenic of all the estrogens. The Estradiol is derived from the same source as the
Estradiol in triple estrogen, the wild yam, so in that sense, these products can be
considered "natural." However, because they are 100% Estradiol, with no Estrone
and most importantly, no Estriol, these products must be considered unnatural once inside
the human body.
The human physiology is designed to
work with three forms of estrogen, Estriol, Estradiol and Estrone, in a ration of about
90:7:3. Exposing the body to 100% Estradiol creates an unbalanced, and therefore,
unnatural and potentially dangerous situation.
Natural Progesterone protects against
cancer, heart disease and osteoporosis
Women who replace estrogen also need to
replace progesterone. This may seem obvious to anyone who has studied human reproductive
physiology, because estrogen and progesterone are closely linked in the normal menstrual
cycle.
Each month, as estrogen levels rise,
progesterone levels fall, and vice versa. Unfortunately, it wasnt always so obvious
to physicians and pharmaceutical companies.
In the early days of ERT, tens of thousands
of women developed endometrial cancer as a result of taking Premarin in the absence of
progesterone. In the absence of progesterone, the estrogen in Premarin can cause excessive
proliferation of endometrial tissue, which, in an alarming number of instances, can turn
malignant. Progesterone largely prevents this excessive growth. But conventional medicine
being what it is, most physicians do not prescribe natural progesterone for their
menopausal patients. Instead, they prescribe a synthetic progesterone-like drug, or
"progestin," called Provera (medroxyprogesterone), or one of its clones.
Synthetic progestins are not the same thing
as progesterone. Thanks to the pharmaceutical industrys promotional abilities, few
physicians ever make that distinction.
Women who take Provera pay a high price for
the protection it affords against Premarin-induced endometrial cancer.
That price includes an increased risk of
cardiovascular disease (CVD), because progestins strip away most of the protection against
CVD that they gain from estrogen replacement. Since this protection is one of the main
reasons they take Premarin in the first place, and since Provera causes a long list of
unpleasant side effects. Including breast tenderness, weight gain, depression, and
breakthrough bleeding, to name just a few, you have to wonder whether they wouldnt
be better off not taking anything!
Natural progesterone, which comes from the
same source as the natural estrogens in triple estrogen, is a completely different story.
Because it is structurally and functionally identical to the progesterone the body
produces, replacing missing progesterone with natural progesterone puts back the same
hormone the body is accustomed to.
As a result, when used properly, natural
progesterone affords the same protection against endometrial cancer as synthetic
progestins, but does not interfere with estrogens ability to protect against CVD.
This was most clearly demonstrated in a large scale federal government sponsored clinical
trial, known as PEPI (Postmenopausal Estrogen/ progestin Interventions) (12).
In the PEPI trial, 875 postmenopausal women
were randomly placed in one of four treatment groups. (A) Placebo (B) Estrogen (i.e.
Premarin) only (C) Premarin and Provera or (D) Premarin and natural progesterone (oral).
The relevant measure was the level of HDL-cholesterol, which is known as the
"good" cholesterol, since it protects against CVD. The results clearly
demonstrated that when Provera was added to Premarin, HDL levels dropped to nearly
baseline. By contrast, when natural progesterone was added to Premarin, there was no
significant loss of HDL-based CVD protection.
If this werent enough to recommend
natural progesterone, theres also the protection it provides against osteoporosis.
This ability has been most clearly been shown by the work of John R. Lee, MD (13,14).
Osteoporosis is the bone thinning disease
that commonly occurs following menopause. It appears to be due to a loss of both estrogen
and progesterone. Replacing estrogen will usually help slow or even halt the thinning
process, but it does nothing to restore bone that has already been lost.
Dr. Lee took regular bone mineral density
measurements of 62 postmenopausal women who were taking Premarin plus progesterone (in a
cream base) or progesterone alone for a period of at least 3 months. The women also took
calcium supplements and maintained a diet and lifestyle designed to minimize bone loss. He
found that natural progesterone replacement resulted in a remarkable increase in bone
mineral density. Some of Dr. Lees patients increased the density of their lumbar
vertebrae by 20-25% in the first year! Over the 3 years of the study, the mean
increase in bone mineral density was 15.4%.
According to other studies, including PEPI,
a 4-5% decrease in bone density would have been expected in women not using natural
progesterone. Not surprisingly, Provera appears to provide no protection against
osteoporosis and definitely does not enhance bone growth.
IAS comments
This excellent article has been contributed
by Jonathan Wright, MD and John Morgenthaler and is extracted from their must read book -Natural
Hormone Replacement for Women over 45. It is available from Smart Publications
(707-769 8308 (fax 707-763-3944) at a cost of $9.95 plus $3.95 shipping.
IAS offers a natural triple estrogen cream
of 90% Estriol, 7% Estradiol and 3% Estrone called ESNATRI as well as progesterone cream..
It is important to stress that your
physician must guide a natural hormone replacement therapy (NHRT). DO NOT start any
NHRT
program if you have ever suffered from cancer.
References
(1). Schliesman B, Robinson L. Serum
estrogens, quantitative analysis of the concentration of Estriol compared to Estradiol and
Estrone. Meridian Valley Laboratories, 1997, Kent WA; Data on file.
(2). Premarin (conjugated estrogen
tablets). Wyeth-Ayerst Company. Physicians Desk Reference, 52nd edition. Montvale,
NJ; Medical Economics Company 1998: 3111-3113.
(3). Barnes R, Lobo R, Pharmacology of
Estrogens. In: Mishell D, JR, ed. Menopause; Physiology and Pharmacology, Chicago; Year
Book Medical Publishers, Inc. 1987.
(4). Heimer G. Estriol in the
postmenopausal. Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand. 1987; Suppl 139;1-23.
(5). Lauritzen C. Results of a 5-year
prospective study of Estriol succinate treatment in patients with climacteric complaints.
horm metabol res. 1987; 19; 579-584.
(6). Iosif C. Effects of protracted
administration of Estriol on the lower genito urinary tract in postmenopausal women. Arch
Gynecol Obstet 1992; 251; 115-120.
(7). Utian W. The place of oestriol therapy
after menopause. Acta Endocrinol, 1980; 223(suppl) 51-56.
(8). Lemon H. Oestriol and prevention of
breast cancer. Lancet 1973; 546-547.
(9). Lemon H, Kumar P, Peterson C,
Rodriguez-Sierra J, Abbo K. Inhibition of radiogenic mammary carcinoma in rats by Estriol
or tamoxifen. cancer 1989;63:1685-1692.
(10). Lemon H, Wotiz H, Parsons L, Mozden
P. Reduced Estriol secretion in patients with breast cancer prior to endocrine therapy.
JAMA 1966; 196;112-120.
(11). Follingstad A. Estriol the forgotten
hormone? JAMA, 1978;239:29-30.
(12). The writing group for the PEPI trial.
Effects of estrogen or estrogen/ progestin regimens on heart disease risk factors in
postmenopausal women. The premenopausal estrogen/ progestin interventions (PEPI) trial.
JAMA 1995;273:199-208.
(13). Lee J. What your doctor may not tell
you about menopause. New York; Warner Books; 1996.
(14). Lee J. Is natural progesterone the
missing link in osteoporosis prevention and treatment? Medical Hypotheses 1991,
35;316-318.
ALL INFORMATION IS EDUCATIONAL AND
SHOULD NOT REPLACE THE ADVICE OF
YOUR PHYSICIAN.
The above article is
copyrighted and may not be copied without the written permission of
International Antiaging Systems, Les Autelets Suite A, Sark
GY9 0SF, Channel Islands, UK.
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