Premarin and Prempro Menopause Treatment Medication
Side Effects.
Specific study findings from the 2002 National
Institutes of Health research are:
A 41 percent increase in strokes
A 29 percent increase in heart attacks .
A doubling of rates of venous thromboembolism (blood clots).
A 22 percent increase in total cardiovascular disease
A 26 percent increase in breast cancer.
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Diosgenin cream ingredients
| Benefits diosgenin cream |
How to use diosgenin cream. |
Return to Eden Diosgenin (nicknamed Progesterone) Cream.
Sorry - Product Discontinued
NEW!! NEW!!! BIG DRUG COMPANIES
USING THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION IN AN ATTEMPT TO DESTROY COMPETITION FROM
NATURAL HORMONE REPLACEMENT THERAPIES!!!
Do you remember our newsletter
last year detailing how Wyeth Pharmaceuticals was attempting to stop
compounding pharmacists from prescribing natural progesterone (diosgenin)
after their profits fell by more than 57% from $2.07 billion in 2003 to
$800 million in 2004 (after the WHI study had to be stopped)?
Well, now they have gone after
centers like ours making complaints to the Federal Trade Commission
(FTC). The FTC's position backed by the big pharmaceutical companies is
that Dr. John Lee, M.D.'s studies were not scientific and did not rise to
the standard of FDA and National Institutes of Health studies, and that
our claims about natural progesterone are false, unfair, deceptive,
misleading advertising in violation of the law..
(Please read
what Dr. Helen Pensanti M.D. has to say about this. Read on to how the study
was conducted.)
This is an attempt to force women into taking
unsafe proven cancer causing synthetic hormones using
your tax dollar to harass natural hormone suppliers. We here at the Women's
Menopause Health Center refuse to take away your choice of a healthy
alternative to Premarin, Prempro and the other dangerous drugs. We are
taking a stand against this heavy handed attempt to destroy competition. We
are going to fight for your choice of a healthy way to get through menopause
comfortably and safely.
(Ed. note: This was from our newsletter last year. The
continued harassment by the FTC has caused us to discontinue our wonderful
product. DO NOT be forced
into taking something that can kill you. You may purchase safe
progesterone cream at your local health food store, or find it a lot less
expensively on line at places like ebay and yahoo stores.
Do not let these heavy handed tactics destroy your health!)
Return to Eden Chemical
Preservative FREE
Natural Progesterone Cream.
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ALL NATURAL INGREDIENTS -
ARTIFICIAL AND CHEMICAL PRESERVATIVE FREE!
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HIGHEST QUALITY NATURAL
INGREDIENTS USP PROGESTERONE CREAM ON MARKET TODAY.
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500 MG/OZ USP PROGESTERONE, 100% PHARMACEUTICAL GRADE.
1-
4oz jar
Return to Eden Progesterone Cream
MSRP $26.99 $19.95
2- 4oz jars
Return to Eden Progesterone Cream
$35.95 |
Following is the complete press release from the National Institutes of
Health:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
Tuesday, July 9, 2002
9:30 a.m. Eastern Time Contact:
NHLBI Communications Office: (301) 496-4236
NCI Press Office: (301) 496-6641
NHLBI Stops Trial of Estrogen Plus Progestin Due to Increased Breast
Cancer Risk, Lack of Overall Benefit.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has stopped early a major
clinical trial of the risks and benefits of combined estrogen and
progestin in healthy menopausal women due to an increased risk of
invasive breast cancer. The large multi-center trial, a component of the
Women's Health Initiative (WHI), also found increases in coronary heart
disease, stroke, and pulmonary embolism in study participants on
estrogen plus progestin compared to women taking placebo pills. There
were noteworthy benefits of estrogen plus progestin, including fewer
cases of hip fractures and colon cancer, but on balance the harm was
greater than the benefit. The study, which was scheduled to run until
2005, was stopped after an average follow-up of 5.2 years.
Participants in this component of WHI, like most women with a uterus who
take hormone therapy, were given progestin in combination with estrogen.
This practice is known to prevent endometrial cancer. A separate WHI
study of estrogen alone in women who had a hysterectomy before joining
the WHI hormone program continues unchanged because, at this point, the
balance of risks and benefits of estrogen alone is still uncertain.
The report from the WHI investigators on the estrogen plus progestin
study findings will be published in the July 17 issue of The Journal of
the American Medical Association (JAMA); because of the importance of
the information, the study is being released early on Tuesday, July 9,
as an expedited article on the JAMA Web site. (Full text version
available to all at jama.com.)
"We have long sought the answer to the question: Does postmenopausal
hormone therapy prevent heart disease and, if it does, what are the
risks? The bottom-line answer from WHI is that this combined form of
hormone therapy is unlikely to benefit the heart. The cardiovascular and
cancer risks of estrogen plus progestin outweigh any benefits--and a 26
percent increase in breast cancer risk is too high a price to pay, even
if there were a heart benefit. Similarly, the risks outweigh the
benefits of fewer hip fractures," said NHLBI Director Claude Lenfant,
M.D.
"Menopausal women who might have been candidates for estrogen plus
progestin should now focus on well-proven treatments to reduce the risk
of cardiovascular disease, including measures to prevent and control
high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, and obesity. This effort
could not be more important: heart disease remains the number one killer
of American women," added Lenfant.
The estrogen plus progestin trial of the WHI involved 16,608 women ages
50 to 79 years with an intact uterus. An important objective of the
trial was to examine the effect of estrogen plus progestin on the
prevention of heart disease and hip fractures, and any associated change
in risk for breast and colon cancer. The study did not address the
short-term risks and benefits of hormones for the treatment of
menopausal symptoms.
About 6 million women in the U.S. are taking estrogen plus progestin for
a variety of reasons, including symptom relief, because their doctors
advised it, or for long-term health.
"Women with a uterus who are currently taking estrogen plus progestin
should have a serious talk with their doctor to see if they should
continue it. If they are taking this hormone combination for short-term
relief of symptoms, it may be reasonable to continue since the benefits
are likely to outweigh the risks. Longer term use or use for disease
prevention must be re-evaluated given the multiple adverse effects noted
in WHI," said Jacques Rossouw, M.D., acting director of the WHI.
According to Rossouw, the adverse effects of estrogen plus progestin
applied to all women, irrespective of age, ethnicity, or prior disease
status.
"When the estrogen-only trial is completed, a comparison of the results
of these two trials may provide a better idea of the roles of estrogen,
compared to estrogen plus progestin, in health and disease," said Marcia
Stefanick, Ph.D., chair of the WHI Steering Committee and Associate
Professor of Medicine, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
Women enrolled in the estrogen plus progestin study were randomly
assigned to a daily dose of estrogen plus progestin (0.625 mg of
conjugated equine estrogens plus 2.5 mg of medroxyprogesterone acetate)
or to a placebo. Participants were enrolled in the study between 1993
and 1998 at over 40 clinical sites across the country.
In 2000 and again in 2001, WHI investigators complied with a
recommendation from the study's Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB)
to inform participants of a small increase in heart attacks, strokes,
and blood clots in women taking hormones. The DSMB, an independent
advisory committee charged with reviewing results and ensuring
participant safety, found that the actual number of women having any one
of these events was small and it did not cross the statistical boundary
established to ensure participant safety. Therefore, the group
recommended continuing the trial due to the still uncertain balance of
risks and benefits.
Then, at the DSMB's regularly scheduled meeting on May 31, 2002, the
data review revealed for the first time that the number of cases of
invasive breast cancer in the estrogen plus progestin group had crossed
the boundary established as a signal of increased risk.
"In designing the trial and following the results, the safety of the
patients was of the utmost importance," said Garnet Anderson, Ph.D., a
biostatistician who led the analysis at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center, Seattle, Washington. "Because breast cancer is so
serious an event, we set the bar lower to monitor for it. We
pre-specified that the change in cancer rates did not have to be that
large to warrant stopping the trial. And the trial was stopped at the
first clear indication of increased risk," she added. She also noted
that, at that point, there was no indication of increased risk for
breast cancer in the estrogen-only group.
The DSMB's May 31 recommendation to stop the trial was based on the
finding of increased breast cancer risk, supported by the evidence of
overall health risks exceeding any benefits. Following the NHLBI's
decision to stop the study, the Institute and the investigators have
worked intensively to develop information materials for participants. On
July 8, participants started receiving letters informing them about the
results and telling them that they should stop study medications.
Participants will be contacted by their clinical centers for further
counseling and will continue to have clinic visits so that their health
outcomes can be followed.
All WHI participants, including those in the other study components, are
also receiving a newsletter with a summary of the findings and an
explanation of risks and benefits.
Dr. Rossouw stressed the importance of understanding how the risk to an
individual woman can be low, but the risk to the population at large can
be great.
"The WHI results tell us that during 1 year, among 10,000 postmenopausal
women with a uterus who are taking estrogen plus progestin, 8 more will
have invasive breast cancer, 7 more will have a heart attack, 8 more
will have a stroke, and 18 more will have blood clots, including 8 with
blood clots in the lungs, than will a similar group of 10,000 women not
taking these hormones. This is a relatively small annual increase in
risk for an individual woman. Individual women who have participated in
the trial and women in the population who have been on estrogen and
progestin should not be unduly alarmed. However, even small individual
risks over time, and on a population-wide basis, add up to tens of
thousands of these serious adverse health events," explained Rossouw.
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) re-emphasized the recommendation
that all women in their forties and older get screened for breast cancer
with mammography every 1 to 2 years.
"Women in the WHI, women taking hormones for any reason, and any woman
over 40 should remain committed to their regular program of breast
cancer screening to allow the earliest possible detection of breast
cancer," said Leslie Ford, M.D., associate director for clinical
research in NCI's Division of Cancer Prevention.
"The reduction in colorectal cancer risk in the WHI is intriguing, but
the balance of harm versus benefit does not justify any woman beginning
or continuing to take estrogen plus progestin for this purpose. NCI has
a number of clinical trials under way investigating new methods to
detect and prevent both colorectal cancer and breast cancer that will
provide critical information to help women make important health
decisions," added Ford.
Specific study findings for the estrogen plus progestin group compared
to placebo include:
A 41 percent increase in strokes
A 29 percent increase in heart attacks
A doubling of rates of venous thromboembolism (blood clots)
A 22 percent increase in total cardiovascular disease
A 26 percent increase in breast cancer
A 37 percent reduction in cases of colorectal cancer
A one-third reduction in hip fracture rates
A 24 percent reduction in total fractures
No difference in total mortality (of all causes)
The WHI involves over 161,000 women who are participating in a set of
clinical trials or an observational study. The clinical trials are
designed to test promising but unproven preventive measures for heart
disease, breast and colorectal cancer, and osteoporosis. In addition to
the trials of estrogen alone and estrogen plus progestin, other trials
are studying a low-fat eating pattern and calcium/Vitamin D
supplementation. WHI is sponsored by NHLBI in collaboration with four
other components of the NIH-- the National Cancer Institute, the
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases,
the National Institute on Aging, and the Office of Research on Women's
Health. Note: Wyeth-Ayerst Research provided the medication (active
hormones and placebo) for the estrogen plus progestin study.