Sunday, April 10, 2016

Endocrine Society issues a position statement against custom compounded Hormone therapy



The Endocrine Society cautious physicians against the use of compounded hormone for treatment of menopausal symptoms, female sexual dysfunction, and thyroid disorders in a scientific statement issued at Endo 16, the Annual Meeting at Boston from April 1-4, 2016.

The Society  supported the use of  FDA approved therapies and asserted that custom compounded Hormone formulations should only be used when the patient is allergic or does not tolerate  the FDA approved drugs and treatment is cardinal to his/her health.

“By no means do I wish to disparage the practice of pharmacists who are measuring hormones and providing them to patients,” Nanette Santoro, MD, professor and chair of reproductive endocrinology and infertility, department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Colorado Denver, said during a press conference discussing the recommendations. “Where we get into scientific trouble ... is as soon as something is being custom compounded, it’s being measured out and added to a variety of agents and diluters that will make it into a pill or a gel. ... How these excipients influence how these hormones get into a person, and what that hormone does, is essentially unknown.”

She also opined that one third to one quarter of all the drugs prescribed for menopausal hormone therapy are custom compounds as observed in a recent survey. She was also appalled at the large amount bioidentical and formulations available in the market that are similar to FDA approved therapies. “It is also a perversion of the intent of the practice of custom compounding,” She added.

This statement is also endorsed by a number of other societies like American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the North American Menopause Society; nonetheless almost 60% of clinicians prescribe so-called bioidentical compounded menopausal hormone therapy, against recommendations from major medical societies, according to a new survey.

Custom compound hormone is a big business, with annual sales of $ 1 billion, and  are largely popular among patients as many clinicians prescribe them telling they are without any side effects. But, the reality is the side effects have never been tested. “What has happened is the absence of evidence of harm is taken as proof of safety,” Santoro said. “This is very illogical, yet it pervades the media and the popular press. You see happy people with anecdotes ... what we don’t know are how much they’re getting and what are the biological endpoints?”

Currently, the only indication for prescribing compounding therapy is in a woman who needs testosterone since there is no good commercially available drug in market added Dr Sklar, who is an assistant professor of medicine and endocrinology at Georgetown University Medical Center and George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.

The endocrine society new document provides detailed review of many FDA approved hormonal products:

  • No randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials demonstrating efficacy of compounded bioidentical drugs in relieving menopausal symptoms exists as also no trials comparing FDA approved therapy vs. compounding formulations  could be found.
  • For Menopausal Hormone therapy, non oral formulations are associated with reduced risk of venous thromboembolism and stroke.
  • Micronized Progesterone is a treatment of choice opted by some physician, and is considered safe biochemically, but evidence is lacking regarding benefit on clinical front.   
  • Transdermal patches, gels, and intramuscular preparations of bioidentical testosterone are available and FDA approved for use in men with hypogonadism, but no FDA approved testosterone preparation for women.
  • There are currently no FDA approved preparations available for dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), no indication for prescribing it except in few patients with low libido. The bioidentical preparations come with all the drawbacks of dosing, absorption and safety as estrogen and progesterone.
  • Vaginal formulation is currently undergoing trial for vaginal atrophy, but no FDA approved preparation is available in the market.
  • Levothyroxine (LT4) is bioidentical, and is a highly effective therapy in patients with hypothyroidism. It is converted to T3 at tissue level and acts on all the target receptors in the body. Some patients may still exhibit symptoms of hypothyroidism; inspite adequate dosing and the clinician should investigate them for other causes. Compounded hormone therapy can be used in such patients with close monitoring of TSH and free T4.
The statement was published online April 1, 2016 in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.


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