Hormonal management of menopausal symptoms in women with a history of gynecologic malignancy.
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2020-02
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Abstract
Objective
The aim of the study was to review the role of hormone therapy in menopausal patients with breast cancer and gynecologic malignancies.Methods
We searched MEDLINE (via PubMed) using a combination of keywords and database-specific subject headings for the following concepts: menopause, hormone therapy, and cancer. Editorials, letters, case reports, and comments were excluded, as were non-English articles. Additional references were identified by hand-searching bibliographies of included articles. The searches yielded a total of 1,484 citations. All citations were imported into EndNote X9, where they were screened by the authors.Results
In breast cancer survivors, systemic hormone therapy is not recommended, whereas local low-dose estrogen therapy may be considered after discussion with the patient's oncologist. Among endometrial cancer survivors, hormone therapy is considered safe in low-risk cancers but should be avoided in high-risk subtypes. For survivors of epithelial ovarian cancer and cervical cancer, hormone therapy can be considered, but should be avoided in women with estrogen-sensitive histologic subtypes.Conclusions
The risks of hormone therapy should be assessed on an individual basis, with consideration of age, type of hormone therapy, dose, duration of use, regimen, route, and prior exposure. Systemic hormone therapy is not recommended in breast cancer survivors, whereas vaginal low-dose estrogen appears safe. Hormone therapy may be used by endometrial, cervical, and ovarian cancer survivors with low-risk, non-estrogen-receptor-positive subtypes. Video Summary: http://links.lww.com/MENO/A516.Type
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Harris, Benjamin S, Katherine C Bishop, Jeffrey A Kuller, Anne C Ford, Lisa C Muasher, Sarah E Cantrell and Thomas M Price (2020). Hormonal management of menopausal symptoms in women with a history of gynecologic malignancy. Menopause (New York, N.Y.), 27(2). pp. 243–248. 10.1097/gme.0000000000001447 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25031.
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Scholars@Duke

Jeffrey Adam Kuller
Perinatal consultation, fetal ultrasound, genetic counseling, preconception counseling, amniocentesis, chorionic villus sampling.

Anne Cunanan Ford
General obstetrics and gynecology, women's wellness promotion and preventive health, menopause and the peri-menopausal transition, vulvar dermatology

Lisa Coates Muasher

Sarah Cantrell
Sarah Cantrell (she/her/hers) is the Associate Director for Research & Education at the Medical Center Library & Archives, and is responsible for developing, implementing, and evaluating the Library's research and education programs. She is also the liaison to the Graduate Medical Education programs. Sarah is currently on the steering committee of the Evidence-Based Practice for Health Sciences Librarians workshop, and co-director of the Evidence-Based Practice for the Medical Librarian course at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Information and Library Science. Sarah served as a Co-Director of Duke's national Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) workshop for clinicians and librarians from 2019 to 2024. Before joining Duke, she worked at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, MD, where she established a Clinical Librarian Program and joined inpatient care teams for teaching rounds, providing real-time evidence-based decision support and teaching at the point of care. Prior to WRNMMC, she was the Education Services Coordinator and Instruction Librarian at Georgetown University Medical Center's Dahlgren Memorial Library in Washington, DC.
- MLIS, Library & Information Studies, University of Wisconsin Madison
- BA, English Literature, University of Wisconsin Madison

Thomas Michael Price
Dr. Price is involved in both clinical and basic science research. The main focus of the basic science molecular endocrinology laboratory is the study of novel sex steroid receptors. Currently, the work focuses on a novel progesterone receptor that localizes to the mitochondrion. Studies including RNAi in cell models and creation of transgenic mice are ongoing to discover the function of this receptor. The overall hypothesis is that progesterone modulates mitochondrial activity to meet the increased cellular energy demands of pregnancy via this receptor.
Dr. Price also participates in clinical research endeavors. These projects are constantly changing and focus on many aspects of reproductive endocrinology including ovarian preservation during chemotherapy, treatments for menorrhagia, endometriosis, leiomyomata and infertility.
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