A controlled trial recently showed that oral micronized progesterone (Progesterone, 300 mg at h.s. daily) was effective for vasomotor symptoms (VMS) in 133 healthy early postmenopausal women. Here, we present subgroup data in women with severe VMS (50 VMS of moderate-severe intensity/wk) and also 1-mo withdrawal study outcomes. Women with severe VMS (n = 46) resembled the full cohort but experienced 10 VMS/d of 3 of 4 intensity. On therapy, the progesterone VMS number (#) decreased significantly more than placebo # to 5.5/day (d) versus 8/d (ANCOVA -2.0 95% CI: -3.5 to -0.4). Just after trial mid-point, a withdrawal substudy (D/C) was added--56 women were invited and 34 (61%) took part (progesterone 17; placebo 17). Those in the D/C cohort resembled the whole cohort. On stopping, VMS gradually increased--at D/C week 4, on progesterone, VMS daily # reached 78% and significantly less than baseline (-3.0 to -0.8) but placebo VMS # did not differ from run-in. In summary, progesterone is effective for severe VMS and does not cause a rebound increase in VMS when stopped. That progesterone may be used alone for severe VMS and unlike estrogen does not appear to cause a withdrawal rebound increases VMS treatment options.
oral micronized progesterone hot flashes, bioidentical progesterone vasomotor symptoms, progesterone night sweats treatment, severe hot flash management, progesterone withdrawal rebound, non-estrogen menopause treatment, postmenopausal progesterone therapy, vasomotor symptom randomized trial, progesterone 300mg bedtime, natural hormone hot flash relief, progesterone vs estrogen menopause
Cite this article
Prior, J. C., & Hitchcock, C. L. (2012). Progesterone for hot flush and night sweat treatment--effectiveness for severe vasomotor symptoms and lack of withdrawal rebound. *Gynecological endocrinology : the official journal of the International Society of Gynecological Endocrinology*, *28 Suppl 2*(sup2), 7-11. https://doi.org/10.3109/09513590.2012.705390
Prior JC, Hitchcock CL. Progesterone for hot flush and night sweat treatment--effectiveness for severe vasomotor symptoms and lack of withdrawal rebound. Gynecol Endocrinol. 2012;28 Suppl 2(sup2):7-11. doi:10.3109/09513590.2012.705390
Prior, J. C., and C. L. Hitchcock. "Progesterone for hot flush and night sweat treatment--effectiveness for severe vasomotor symptoms and lack of withdrawal rebound." *Gynecological endocrinology : the official journal of the International Society of Gynecological Endocrinology*, vol. 28 Suppl 2, no. sup2, 2012, pp. 7-11.
Hitchcock CL et al., 2012Menopause (New York, N.Y.)
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Methods:...
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Open Access
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