Menopause: How the timing of hormone therapy affects aging

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Research has found anti-aging benefits to hormone replacement therapy. Fiordaliso/Getty Images
  • Hormone therapy taken during perimenopausal years slows down aging during menopause without increasing mortality risks, according to a new study.
  • The reduction in aging was found to be most dramatic in women of lower socioeconomic status, leveling out their mortality risk with women in higher-income demographic categories.
  • While hormone replacement therapy received well into menopause may deliver benefits, it also carries an increased risk of stroke, cancer, and dementia.

A new study finds that postmenopausal women who received hormone therapy during perimenopause age more slowly than women who did not.

According to the study, the positive effects of hormone therapy largely erase the negative impact on aging of low socioeconomic status for postmenopausal women.

The authors of the study analyzed data for a cohort of 117,763 postmenopausal women registered in the UK Biobank. Of these, 47,461 women (40.3%) had used hormone therapy (HT) at some point in their lives. The data revealed that they exhibited fewer indications of aging than women who had not ever used it.

The strongest ‘anti-aging’ effect was found in women who used HT starting at age 48.4 years and for four to eight years.

The women who benefitted most profoundly from HT were those of lower socioeconomic status (SES), while the effect was less dramatic in women of higher incomes, who typically aged more slowly whether they used HT or not.

The study is published in JAMA Network Open.

“According to our study, historical hormone therapy use and a decreased aging discrepancy were more strongly associated in women with a disadvantaged socioeconomic status (SES),” Liu pointed out.

Liu said that this indicated that “hormone therapy might help them to offset all-cause and cause-specific mortality associated with phenotypic aging.”

“Causations should be interpreted with caution. The findings also could be interpreted as an advantaged position regarding various health aspects in individuals with a high SES, so this population might not benefit from using HT,” Liu noted.

How menopause affects bone health

“Within six months of the ovaries not producing estrogen, a woman starts to lose calcium from her bones at a more rapid rate than it enters. This ultimately leads to osteopenia and osteoporosis.”
— G. Thomas Ruiz, MD

    “In your seventies and eighties [there] may be hip fractures, compression of the spine — kyphosis —humpback, and rib fractures. If an 80-year-old breaks a hip, the hip fracture may not kill her, but the recovery from the surgery and the consequences of surgery may,” said Ruiz.

    Hormone therapy after menopause is termed hormone replacement therapy, which Ruiz cautioned should be accompanied by lipid testing for heart issues, which are more likely, and by mammograms for the increased risk of breast cancer. Lower doses of hormones are also indicated.

    “I think the article was quite clear,” he said, “about the multi-organ system benefits that estrogen provides a woman.”

    Experts agree that physical activity is a less potentially dangerous way to promote bone, heart, and cognitive health than medications of any kind.

    Ruiz said bone health in menopausal women may be supported by hormone replacement therapy: “You have calcium continuing to enter the bone at a sufficient rate so that they don’t develop thinning of the bones — which is osteopenia or osteoporosis, or brittle bones.”

    “The skin is filled with estrogen receptors — collagen— so the skin continues looking better,” he also noted. “The vaginal mucosa tends to maintain its normal appearance with a thick tissue.”

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