Long-Term Hormone Therapy May Provide Dementia Protection

by Rick Nauert Phd for Psych Central:

New research suggests postmenopausal estrogen-based hormone therapy lasting longer than ten years may reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

Investigators from the University of Eastern Finland performed the large study that explored the association between postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy, Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, and cognition.

Researchers performed two nation-wide case-control studies and two longitudinal cohort studies. The largest study comprised approximately 230,000 Finnish women and the follow-up time in different studies was up to 20 years.

“The protective effect of hormone therapy may depend on its timing: it may have cognitive benefits if initiated at the time of menopause when neurons are still healthy and responsive,” says Bushra Imtiaz, M.D., MPH, who presented the results in her doctoral thesis.

While hormone therapy may mitigate the risk of dementia, menopause may explain women’s higher dementia risk.

Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia, and two out of three Alzheimer’s cases are women. One possible explanation for women’s higher dementia risk is the postmenopausal depletion of sex steroid hormones estrogen and progesterone.

Estrogen receptors are present throughout the body including brain areas primarily affected in Alzheimer’s disease. In in vitro and animal studies, estrogen has showed neuroprotective effects.

However, studies on humans have yielded inconsistent results on the association between postmenopausal estrogen-based hormone replacement therapy and dementia risk.

In the present study, long-term use of hormonal replacement therapy was associated with a better performance in certain cognitive domains — global cognition and episodic memory — and a lower risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

Short-term use was not significantly linked to dementia risk, but in one cohort, dementia risk was higher among short-term users who had started hormone therapy in the late postmenopausal period.

The results were adjusted for various lifestyle, socioeconomic, and demographic variables.

“In the light of these findings, hormonal replacement therapy may have a beneficial effect on cognition if started early, around the time of menopause.

The protective effect of hormonal therapy may depend on the health status of neurons at baseline and may be lost if therapy starts years after menopause,” Dr. Imtiaz concludes.

The study also showed that the postmenopausal removal of ovaries, uterus, or both was not significantly linked to the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, irrespective of the indication of surgery or hormone therapy use.

The research data was from the MEDALZ (Medication use and Alzheimer’s disease), OSTPRE (Kuopio Osteoporosis Risk Factor and Prevention Study), and CAIDE (Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Aging and Dementia) studies.

The new research findings appear in the journal Neurology with the earlier results found in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.

Source: PsychCentral (no longer available online) 

Previous
Previous

Staying Socially Active May Help Maintain Mental Fitness

Next
Next

Millennial women face new mental health struggles in the workplace