Dr. Evan Levine: Treating Menopausal Symptoms For Pennies A Day


 
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By Dr. Evan Levine

I’ve been successfully treating the symptoms of menopause for years and for less than ten cents a day (Walmart: 90 pills/ $10 dollars). So when the FDA foolishly approved a reformulation of a generic drug, Paxil- used for years to treat depression - for the treatment of menopausal symptoms, I was horrified.

The drug, renamed Brisdelle, cost as much as six dollars a pill, and hardly worked better than placebo.

One of if its potential side effects, suicide, seemed a bit worrisome. A few months back, I wrote about Brisdelle and promised to present what I consider a far better alternative.

In 1959 the drug Aldactone (generic name of spironolactone) was approved to be marketed for the treatment of hypertension. It was largely unnoticed until a government sponsored study, forty years later, showed that this simple drug, when given to patients with congestive heart failure, could reduce the risk of death as well as any expensive branded medication or even an implantable defibrillator.

One of the unusual consequences of using spironolactone, is that it has a feminizing effect in some people: as many as 10 percent of men can develop slight breast enlargement.

Women, on the other hand, have noticed a reduction in facial hair and dermatologists have actually used this to treat women with a disorder known as hirsutism.

For me, spironolactone has been a wonderful drug for the treatment of difficult to treat hypertension, patients with low potassium, and, of course, anyone with heart failure. For several years, I've used this to treat middle-aged women with hypertension who not only need their blood pressure cured but also their hot flashes, and I've seen a remarkable response.

Many of my patients return with a lowered blood pressure and the resolution of their menopausal symptoms!

Spironolactone has been used for years in transgenger ( male to female) patients because of its antiandrogen effects as well as its progestrogenic and indirect estrogenic actions. Why no one seems to have considered this drug, especially in women who need to take something for their blood pressure, startles me.

Perhaps because spironolactone is generic, costs less than ten cents a day and is therefore not highly profitable it seems to have been abandoned as a potential breakthrough treatment similar to its obscurity in the treatment of heart failure, before a government funded study showed how many lives it could save.

Brisdelle, on the other hand, costing as much a $6 dollars a day, with such dubious study results that an expert panel hired by the FDA voted not to approve it, is being marketed as a panacea for menopausal symptoms in direct-to-consumer advertisements.

Spironolactone may not be for everyone, especially in patients with renal failure or at risk of high potassium. But in most patients, it may be a far more reasonable treatment than Brisdelle, may be more effective, and could save our healthcare system billions of dollars.

Since industry and our major universities seem to have little interest in a cheap but effective generic drug, I am calling on our government, through this article, to find a study of Spironolactone vs. Placebo in the treatment of menopausal symptoms. Until then, especially if you have hypertension and hot flashes, I suggest you contact your physician.

About the author: Evan S. Levine, MD FACC, is Director of the Cardiovascular Center at Saint Joseph's Hospital and a Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine at Montefiore Medical Center – Albert Einstein College of Medicine. He is also the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Medicine. He lives in Connecticut with his wife and children.


 
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COMMENTS

  • Nemisha Patel

    March 2, 2021 15:30 07

    Hello Dr Evan, hope this message finds you well. Dr Evan I have a benign tumour in my adrenal gland that’s very bulky that only came to my cardiologist’s attention when under the care for hypertension. At the beginning it was stable but as the years have gone on it appears the adernal gland is producing more than normal amounts of alderstrone and its ongoing effects are unfortunately rising blood pressure that’s rising 155/111 and so on. I am on a Calcuim beta blocker twice a day however this is not enough and the hormone needs blocking. I’m nearly 50 transitioning from peri menopause to menopause and my cardiologist has now recommended/encouraging me to start a low dose of spiralactone and build it up gradually as this will block the alderstrone hormone bring my BP down and protect my heart. However my concerns are will the spiralactone make my hormones more erratic as I’m peri menopausal and would I need a little testosterone as a top up if this medication lowers testosterone in women. I would greatly appreciate your advice and guidance as I’m nervous about moving forward with my new treatment plan. My kind regards Nemisha Patel

  • Alisa Ann Goad

    June 14, 2018 14:29 21

    I started taking this medication 3 days ago for prevention of hair loss due to having had to come off my estrogen patches (I had a radical hysterectomy and had my ovaries removed almost 15 years ago). I have noticed an INCREASE in frequency and intensity of my hot flashes.

  • Hello. I see that this is a very old discussion but someone may be looking up hot flash treatments. Anyway, I started taking this drug to control hot flashes maybe 2 years ago? It has been an amazing find for me! Truly amazing. I had POCD & a hysterectomy many years ago. I stopped taking any hormones maybe 20 years ago? About 3 years ago just had so many hot flashes it was miserable. I’m on lisinpril for BP and asked my GP for something to treat the flashes and he said let’s try this. It is truly an inexpensive wonder drug. Other than 99.9% less flashes, I have had no other side effects. It has made such a difference in my quality of life, I tell everyone about it. Good luck to anyone that tries it and encourage anyone looking for help to give it a try! For what it is worth, I’m 53.

  • Teresa Sherman

    April 7, 2015 12:11 51

    I am a 49 year old woman that had a hystroectomy last year and is on lisinopril and a diuretic. My blood pressure still is on the high side and I do have hot flashes!! I would love to be considered if there is a clinical trial. For now I will talk to my physician. Please let me know if there is going to be a clinical trial. Thank you. Best, Teresa

  • Pauline Calabrese

    April 3, 2015 05:18 18

    Can this drug be used by women who have had breast cancer?

  • chandra ramamoorthy

    April 2, 2015 19:15 02

    what dose of aldactone is effective in reducing hot flashes?

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    • Editor-in Chief:
    • Theodore Massey
    • Editor:
    • Robert Sokonow
    • Editorial Staff:
    • Musaba Dekau
      Lin Takahashi
      Thomas Levine
      Cynthia Casteneda Avina
      Ronald Harvinger
      Lisa Andonis

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