The Dr. Hyman Show - Is HRT Safe? 10 Questions Women Ask Most — Answered by a Functional MD
Episode Date: May 25, 2026Hormone replacement therapy is one of the most talked about—and misunderstood—topics in women’s health. For years, women were told HRT was dangerous. Now, the conversation is shifting, but many ...are still left confused about what’s actually safe, when to start, and whether hormones are even right for them. In today’s episode, I’m joined by Dr. Cindy Geyer from my clinic, The UltraWellness Center, to answer the most common questions we received from our audience about hormone replacement therapy, including: What the latest research actually says about the safety of HRT—including breast cancer and cardiovascular risk Why timing matters and the critical “window of opportunity” around perimenopause and menopause The difference between bioidentical hormones, synthetic hormones, compounded options, and patches vs. oral therapy How hormones impact sleep, brain fog, weight distribution, insulin resistance, libido, bone health, and healthy aging Natural strategies that can support hormone balance alongside—or without—HRT, including nutrition, exercise, stress reduction, and targeted supplements How functional medicine personalizes hormone therapy through testing, estrogen metabolism, gut health, genetics, and lifestyle factors Menopause is not just a hormone issue—it’s a full-body metabolic transition. And hormone therapy isn’t one-size-fits-all. The key is understanding your biology, your symptoms, and your long-term health goals so you can make informed decisions that support vitality, resilience, and healthy aging. Visit functionhealth.com for 160+ lab tests at just $365 a year. Want more on brain health? Sign up for the Brain Shaping Academy HERE. Have a question you’d love answered on Office Hours? Submit it here As a special thank you for our listeners, we’re offering $300 off a Functional Medicine Consultation Package, the most comprehensive service offering at Dr. Hyman's Functional Medicine Clinic, The UltraWellness Center. To learn more and book your consultation, please schedule a New Patient Discovery Call at the link HERE and reference the Dr. Hyman Show. Disclaimer: Offer expires July 31, 2026. Functional Medicine Consultation Appointments must be booked by July 31,2026 but may take place at a later date. The initial call with a New Patient Engagement Coordinator is required to book the appointment. Offer not valid on other appointment types or existing appointments. Offer valid for bookings with Dr. Boham, Dr. Geyer, Dr. LePine and Dr. Papanicolaou. (0:00) Welcome, introduction, and overview of hormone replacement therapy (1:26) Introduction of Dr. Cindy Geyer and safety of HRT (4:13) Timing, risks, and cancer concerns with HRT (7:06) Functional medicine perspective and factors in starting HRT (12:10) Benefits, timing, and natural alternatives to HRT (16:33) Prescription, bioidentical, and compounded hormones (19:20) Symptoms improved by HRT and libido considerations (22:24) Vaginal estrogen, progesterone, and recognizing need for therapy (24:25) Health markers and types of hormone testing (27:08) Duration, contraindications, and tailored hormone therapy (33:34) Preview: Dr. Sharon Malone on breast cancer risk (42:24) Introduction and details of Brain Shaping Academy
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Hormone replacement therapy is one of the most talked about and most misunderstood topics
in women's health right now.
For some, it's seen as a game changer.
For others, it still feels confusing or even risky.
Questions about safety, cancer risk, when should I start, whether you even need it.
A lot of noise out there and a lot of conflicting information.
So today we're cutting through all that.
We asked what your biggest questions were on social media and we got over 800
responses and today we're answering your most common questions about hormone replacement therapy,
what it is, who it's for, what the risks actually are, how to think about it in the context of
your overall health. And today I'm joined by someone who works really closely with patients
every day on this topic. It's Dr. Cynthia or Cindy Geier from the Ultra Wellness Center.
We've worked together for the better part of a quarter century now. She brings a lot of functional
medicine perspectives to hormone health. She helps patients understand not just if HRT or hormone
replacement therapy is right for them, but how it fits into the bigger picture of aging,
metabolism, long-term health. And because this isn't just about managing symptoms, it's about
understanding what's happening in your body, but how it fits into the bigger picture of aging,
metabolism, and long-term health. Because this isn't just about managing symptoms. It's about
understanding what's happening in your body, and it's about making informed decisions that support
your health over time. So let's get your questions. What are the top 10 questions on hormone
replacement therapy? The first of the biggest one is, is Cindy, is it actually safe long-term?
I love the way you teed it up, Mark, that hormones are a small part of the bigger picture of what's happening for women in this time of life.
So we have to look at it in context of everything else.
So there's a lot going on, not just in terms of hot flashes, nights, sweats, and changes in sex hormones when we're talking hormone therapy, estrogen, and progesterone, there's shifts in insulin signaling and cholesterol regulation and an uptick and bone loss, weight distribution shifts.
We start to move it from our buttocks and thighs to our midsection and hormones play a role,
but it's not the only thing.
That's not fun.
for aging parents. So to just think about do we take estrogen and progesterone or not,
is it safe without looking at the big picture? I think it's a missed opportunity to really work
with women to optimize their health. So one of the big shifts in official guidelines is related
to hormone safety. It used to be only take hormones in the lowest dose for the shortest period
of time for symptom management. But in November of 2025, the FDA removed the black box warning for
hormones. So guidelines now from the American College of OBGYNs and from the menopause society say for
most women, the benefits probably outweigh the risks for hormone therapy, especially if it started
within the five to 10 year window around your last menstrual period. So that's a sea change, Mark,
that's a sea change. That's big, yeah. And I think it's, I'm really glad that we're focusing more on
the potential benefit of hormone therapy for managing symptoms and potentially organ system benefits.
but at the same time, I don't want women coming away from this thinking, if I can't take hormones
or I don't want to take them, I'm somehow missing out and can't age well.
One of the things, Cindy, that I kind of see as a big shift is this conversation, and you
mentioned it briefly, you started right at menopause or within five to ten years.
What is the danger starting later if women's later on wants to get support from hormone health?
Like, is there a reason it's five to ten years or within five to ten years?
So one of the reasons why the benefits may outweigh the risks in that five to 10 year window is a woman probably hasn't had a lot of chance to build up plaque in her arteries and older studies that use primarily hormones by mouth.
If women already had plaque, there was a higher risk for clotting and higher risk for heart attack and stroke.
Newer evidence suggests if you're using hormones through the skin, it's probably not going to impact negatively cardiovascular risk and may have some benefits.
There's also this concept that when we're newly in that menopause transition, our tissues and our
organs are better able to respond to estrogen because there hasn't been a change in receptors.
So even the response may be less as the further out we get from that last menstrual period.
People are concerned about other things like risk, right?
So I think the biggest concern really is what about breast cancer and uterine cancer also,
but particularly women worry about breast cancer?
Can you talk about the different forms of therapy, the different, you know, estrogen?
only with progestions or with progesterone or the natural or bi-identical and synthetic versions
and how that all plays a role in trying to figure out what to do?
That is probably the biggest concern is what is the long-term risk with hormone therapy
and breast cancer.
And if we look at women's natural history without hormone therapy, starting your periods
earlier, ending them late, there's a statistical slight increased prevalence of breast cancer
and women with that longer tissue exposure to estrogen.
The date about hormone replacement therapy, slight increased risk, the longer you stay on it,
and the higher the dose.
But the formulation really, really matters.
Even in the women's health initiative, for women who had a hysterectomy and only took estrogen,
there was actually a reduction in breast cancer risk.
So something about...
That's fascinating.
Yeah, and something about adding in the progestin, which was not a bioidentical progesterone,
was the combination that was associated with increased breast cancer risk.
Yeah, so basically they were using this like Provera, which is a synthetic progesterone,
instead of a micronized progesterone, which is a prescription you can get as well,
but it's a mixture of body's natural progesterone.
It seems to be better.
The more recent research shows that the bioidentical progesterone, the micronized progesterone,
at least up to five years, does not seem to increase breast cancer risk.
So that's very, very reassuring.
And the uterine cancer you need, you need you have to worry about
urinary cancer with estrogen only if you're not taking the progestone.
Correct.
If you still have your uterus and you're thinking of estrogen or progesterone replacement therapy,
you have to take the progesterone to prevent the overthickening of the lining and potential risk
for uterine cancer. Using the two together, there's no increased risk.
And there's one of the bit to this question I want to ask is really a functional medicine perspective
because, you know, typically when you get on hormones, your doctor just prescribes the hormones
and that's it. Maybe they'll check your levels, maybe not go by symptoms. But what we look at
in functional medicine is not just the blood levels of estrogen or progesterone or testosterone. We look at the
the urine metabolites of what happens when you process these hormones and how you're processing
them. And that depends on our genetics, our environment, our microbiome and so many things.
So can you talk a little bit about that, how it's used, why it's important, and what we should
make sense of, how we should make sense of it?
I think that's great, Mark, because all of this data is coming from population data.
Individuals are highly different in terms of the genes they come into the world with, their type
of diet, how healthy their gut microbiome is, what's happening with other hormones like insulin.
And we know that whatever estrogen you make or take can get shifted down different pathways
that is influenced both by your genetics, also by your exposures to potential endocrine
disrupting chemicals.
Your diet is you're meeting your needs for B vitamins and magnesium, how much cruciferous
vegetables you're eating.
So we want to personalize the information because all of that can influence for a given
woman, is that estrogen going to be more likely or less likely to contribute to breast cancer risk?
So it's not just about putting people on hormones. It's looking at their genetics. It's looking at
those urine estrogen metabolites that tell us, are they shifting it down those pathways that are
less risky? And if not, how can we support them by optimizing gut health, supporting them nutritionally,
avoiding exposures to those endocrine disrupting chemicals? Yeah. And I think that's really the
The cancer risk framework is important because we really need to be able to look at how do we decide who's at risk, who's not at risk, how do you manage it?
How do you even look at ongoing risk based on their estrogen metabolism?
I think that's a really important piece that gets overlooked that needs to be done.
And we do that at the Alzheimer's Center.
We look pretty routinely as part of our care for people who are getting hormone replacement therapy.
Okay, so when should you start it?
We talked a little bit about it, but what's the right age, the timing?
It should be perimenopausal.
It should be only when you stop your period for a year, you know, should be based on symptoms,
based on prevention, should be based on like a risk of bone health.
What are the things you take into consideration about deciding when to start?
Yeah, so that is also an evolving story.
It used to be that doctors would wait until women have been a full year without their period
and they're missing the window when the symptoms are the most intense.
So hot flashes, night sweats, changes in cycles, disrupted sleep.
That may start a decade before that last menstrual period.
So if it's premenopause, I often use symptoms and then test to kind of look and see where
somebody is.
So if somebody comes to me and they're 45 years old and they're starting to have more
trouble with their sleep, especially before their period, they're starting to have some hot
flashes and night sweats, but they haven't started to change their periods yet.
We might do estrogen and progesterone levels, but that might be a time where, depending
on where they are, we start with progesterone only or cycling progesterone. So even how we treat
somebody may differ, whether they're in the early perimenopause or they're starting to skip periods.
The emerging research is suggesting that the increased turnover of bone may start well before
women start skipping periods. So if there's osteoprocess in your family, if you're at risk for
osteoporosis, there is increasing evidence that's starting full hormone therapy, estrogen and
progesterone earlier in the perimenopause might sort of set you off on a good path to maintain
that bone density. Did you know that heart disease is the leading cause of death in women,
not breast cancer or ovarian cancer? And this is a statistic that makes me sit up straight.
And yet the average woman is still being evaluated with the same cholesterol panel we've used
for 50 years or more. Here's what most women are never told. LDL cholesterol is not the only
predictor of your cardiovascular risk. Apobb is way more precise, way more predictive. It counts the
actual particles that wedge into your arteries. And LP.A is a genetic marker, but it's almost
never checked. Or take HSCRP, it measures the inflammatory environment that makes those particles
dangerous. A woman can have normal cholesterol, quote normal, but still be at risk. And I've seen it
far too many times. The least we can do is measure the data that matters. It's time to stop guessing.
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So basically, you for symptoms and don't wait until you're already a year out from when you'll have your last period.
It's great for helping prevent bone turnover and prevention of osteoporosis.
It may help prevent plaque even on the heart if you start early.
It helps blood sugar, insulin signaling, mitochondria,
So there's so many benefits that, you know, I think it's coming kind of more into the swing
that because I remember when we were practicing Canyon Ranch, that's when the Women's Health
Initiative came out.
And it was like everybody was on hormones, then the next day they were off hormones.
And it was kind of a nightmare.
And we've kind of been trying to for the last almost kind of 25 years trying to re-correct
that story.
And meanwhile, a lot of women have suffered unnecessarily.
So I think, you know, that's really important to people take this seriously and both for their
symptoms.
And there's no reason not to manage your symptoms.
Even sexual health is a big one for women.
And we didn't talk about that, but that's a big one.
What about natural alternatives?
Like if you don't want to take hormones or if you're concerned about them,
are there ways to regulate hormonal balance without having to take hormones?
So the first thing I would say is by far in a way,
estrogen and progesterone therapy is the most effective for troublesome hot flashes and night sweats.
There are other things that can help.
And I think this window of opportunity to really think about
the bigger picture brings us back to lifestyle. So think for a lot of women, when we think about
what drives hot flashes and night sweats, interestingly enough, there's recent research that
it may be a marker for somebody who's at higher risk for heart disease. So we want to be thinking
about what's going on with blood sugar regulation and cholesterol. A fluctuating blood sugar
is a potent trigger for hot flashes. Other potent triggers for hot flashes. Caffeine, alcohol,
some people's spicy foods.
So just taking a nutrition forward approach
and eating a whole foods diet with lots of fiber,
not a lot of starchy carbs and refined carbohydrates,
eating in a way to regulate your blood sugar
may actually help hot flashes and night sweats.
So sugar, alcohol and caffeine, right?
That's all the fun stuff, right?
But it makes a difference.
It does make a difference.
I mean, excess caffeine, I mean, even cigarettes
when talking about that, alcohol, blood sugar issues,
these are all things that you have a lot of control over and actually work.
And then you mentioned foods, but there's some really cool foods.
We should talk about what are the other lifestyle factors that you can do?
And then what are the kind of supplements, foods, things that we should be thinking about specifically that are therapy?
So the foods that show the best benefit in terms of helping hot flashes and night sweats are soy foods.
Whole soy foods, ideally organic, non-GMO soy.
So thinking at amame, tofu, tempe, those have been shown to be effective in reducing hot flashes and night sweats.
Stress is a huge contributor as well.
So there's evidence that breath-based practices, yoga, acupuncture,
those strategies can also help many women manage their symptoms.
Exercise above and beyond just the breath-based practices, exercise.
And that probably becomes one of the single most important things we can do
when we're thinking of not just helping symptoms,
but setting us up for healthy aging for the second half.
because it is probably, you know this, Mark, you talk about this all the time.
One of those powerful tools we have for keeping our bones healthy, our muscles resilient
and strong, are protecting our heart, protecting our brain.
If we could bottle it up, we'd be incredibly rich.
Billionaires, the richest people on earth.
But I just want to look back to something you said about soy foods, because people think,
oh, soy foods, you know, and I've heard so many oncologists tell their patients,
not to eat tofu if they have breast cancer, which is just insane because it's a, it's their estrogen
modulator. It doesn't actually cause breast cancer and may protect against it, except, and there's a big
accept here, and this is data from the NIH, that when they fed animals highly processed soy extract,
like basically the soy protein powders that are hydrolyzed soy protein, it seems to actually cause
cancer. So whole soy foods, tofu, tempe, miso, natto, all those things fine. They had an amami, whatever you
want, that's fine, but it shouldn't be an industrial soy food. And what about herbs and stuff?
Are there herbs that work also for menopause? Yes, mixed data about herbs, but some of the best
exist for a black cohosh, pyknogenol, which is a pine bark extract. There's some evidence
that that might help with basimotor symptoms. It's also a great antioxidant. There are a few others
as well. The research is somewhat mixed, but I think if they're safe, it's worth a try,
because some women find them very helpful. Next question we got is, is what about this whole
issue of prescription hormones, bi-identical, compounded versus, you know, pharmaceutical-grade
bio-identical.
There's all these different kind of conversations.
And, you know, the problem, as I saw, when the hormones were starting to be used, they were
only the prescription versions, which were either horse urine or for estrogen, perimen,
or a synthetic progestone, which is kind of highly problematic with the side effects it has.
So I think there's other better versions, and we've been using those for a long time.
time. And maybe you can kind of walk through how to think about it, how to do them. What is sort of an
approach that makes sense for proper dosing, delivery, and form of the nutrients? Sure. I think that's
a great question. And a lot of the confusion about the risks of estrogen was exactly related to those
synthetic forms. And that doesn't seem to be borne out with what we call bioidentical. From my
perspective, bioidentical doesn't mean it's necessarily compounded versus pharmaceutical grade. It means
that your body doesn't tell the difference. It is the exact same form of the hormones that you would
have made before menopause. So there are pharmaceutical-grade bioidentical options. A good example is an
estradiol patch. That's probably one of the most common ways that we'll use estrogen replacement.
I like it because it's convenient. There are multiple doses that allow you to personalize it to
the person's symptoms and to their blood levels and everything else that's going on. You change it
twice a week. Pretty simple. There are also gels that are
are prescription pharmaceutical and you can also get insurance coverage, which for some women
makes a big difference.
There, a lot of women prefer using the compounded estrogens.
In my experience, sometimes it's more difficult to get a good blood level if that's what
we're trying to do, although it's possible.
Sometimes depending on the quality of your compounding pharmacy, it may vary batch-to-batch.
So I tend to use the pharmaceutical grade by identical estrogens and progesterone.
The other big piece is the route of administration matters.
So when we use estrogen by mouth, even bioidentical estrogen by mouth, there's a first pass
effect in the liver.
And in the liver, we make clotting factors and we make triglycerides.
So even bioidentical estrogen by mouth and raise clotting factors in triglycerides.
So I tend to use the transdermal because I think it's better tolerated.
It's easier to titrate the dose and you're not going to have those same risks for clotting
and triglycerides.
Yeah, one of the things I noticed, you know, some of these oral hormone versions,
estrogen tend to increase inflammation.
So they increase CRP.
Yes, thank you.
And the pill does that too.
So that's an important consideration because, you know,
inflammation is the driver of all chronic illness and disease.
So you don't want to be spiking inflammation with hormones if you don't have to.
And the best way to do that is avoid the liver, like you said.
So Cindy, what about the next question we got, which is what are the symptoms,
the main symptoms that taking hormone replacement therapy will really help with?
Is it like brain fog, weight gain, sleep, sex drive?
So estrogen and progesterine, as I mentioned before, the most effective for the hot flashes
and the night sweats.
So that's really where they shine.
However, there's also benefits with sleep quality, and there's some suggestion that
estrogen progesterone may prevent or slow down the emergence of sleep disorder breathing
that starts to emerge in the metapause transition because our connective tissue gets more lax.
So when we improve sleep quality, that improves mood.
It improves brain fog.
It may even improve insulin signaling.
So I think there's whether the benefit on brain fog is directly related to the hormones,
I think it could be, but it also could be secondary to better quality sleep.
I think what's really interesting is that estrogen and progesterone, not from a symptom standpoint,
but it helps with insulin signaling.
So insulin resistance becomes more prevalent in the metapause transition.
and estrogen and progesterone seems to mitigate that to a great degree.
That's fantastic.
So does that mean that means like it helps you not put the weight on your stomach
but more on your butt?
Yes, that was going to be the next thing that I was going to say.
What we see about it is it, I wouldn't think about it as helping weight loss, but it
helps the weight distribution.
So it helps prevent that shift that we talked about earlier that goes from the buttocks
and thighs to the belly.
and that increase in belly fat, as you have talked about many times, is a lot of what's driving
the worsening insulin signaling, the higher rates of inflammation, and the higher rates of
cardiovascular disease that start to emerge. So there does seem to be a protective benefit there.
In terms of libido, some women find that we'll talk about testosterone in a minute,
but just estrogen and progesterone alone improve sex drive libido.
Libido is very complicated because it's not purely hormonal. It's also related to being
sleep deprived, feeling overstretched if there's a lot going on, how you feel about your partner.
I mean, those are important factors that also negatively impact libido.
Even using a patch of estrogen, it may not be enough for some women to help with the vaginal
dryness, thinning and pain. So there can be an additional role for vaginal estrogen,
which has also been shown to improve libido or vaginal DHA, which has been shown to improve
libido above and beyond just improving the healthy of the tissues. Lastly, there can be a role for
some women to use testosterone, low-dose testosterone, which can move the needle if those other things
have not helped. The good thing with the, but even if you had breast cancer, you can use
vaginal estrogen safely. I think that's really important to point out because it doesn't tend
to get systemically absorbed, and that's also been a shift in the last several years, even women with
estrogen-positive breast cancer. If they're having an informed conversation with their oncologist,
it seems to be pretty safe and it can really make a difference in symptoms.
And the last thing is you touched on a little bit, but sleep has definitely helped by just
reducing hot flashes with estrogen.
But progesterone has a particularly unique effect around sedation, sleep.
So maybe you can chat about that.
And even you can use that even before you use any estrogens in the paramedopausal period effectively.
So that's in a way of helping manage a lot of the symptoms of heavy bleeding, clotting,
sleep issues, PMS, it all sort of accelerate in the late perimenopause.
Progesterone has a calming sedating effect.
And in the early perimenopause transition, where there's bigger oscillations in estrogen,
for women who are prone to migraines, they can really flare.
For women who have more histamine-related symptoms, those can also flare.
And interestingly enough, giving progesterone by itself can kind of re-regulate those
wider swings and help with those symptoms.
So that might be an instance where we're focusing on high-dose progesterone initially
in the menopause transition.
All right.
So people are sitting there wondering,
how do I know if I need it? How do I know if I start? What are the signs I should consider it?
Is it testing? Is there my symptoms? Like what what's the way to approach this? Again, this is a great
opportunity to kind of check in with what's going on in your life. How do you feel? Are you starting
to notice hot flashes, night sweats? Is your sleep changing? Are you having worsening premenstrual
symptoms with mood swings? That would be a good time to start talking to your doctor about what's
going on and whether hormones make sense then. Testing is tricky in perimenopause,
because it's going to change day to day and week to week and month to month.
So you can do a snapshot in the moment and it's not going to tell you the whole picture,
but it can provide some clues.
We treat the person not the level in the perimenopause.
I think it's also a great time to get a baseline.
What's happening with your insulin?
What is your A1C?
What is your cholesterol?
If you can get a baseline bone density, that would be fantastic.
If you can't, you can start looking at these markers of bone turnover.
Are you just looking like your bones are starting to turn over more rapidly, which is a predictor of future decline, current and future decline?
I mean, don't you think women should ask for kind of a mandatory access scan for bone density body comp?
And they're at least by their mid-40s.
I can just just, it's just a non-starter almost.
I know, but right now insurance, unless you're high risk typically doesn't cover it until you're 60.
They're not that expensive.
Like I went to this place in Austin.
I think it was 80 bucks for both.
It was like super affordable.
It's much easier to get it.
And I'm glad you brought up the bone density because your weight doesn't tell you the whole story.
Women might, especially if they haven't been physically active, might actually have low muscle mass
and identifying it early.
We can take steps to add in more resistance training.
Make sure you're getting enough good quality proteins, supporting digestion, absorption at a gut level to help you with your body composition.
And the good news about the dexcanids can do both, the bone density and the body composition.
Okay, well, Siney, let's talk about testing because I think people are confused to reject blood tests.
What about urine tests?
What about saliva tests?
Like, there's so many options.
So how do you think about diagnostics when it comes to hormone therapy?
Obviously, you're going to be looking at all the standard stuff like cortisol, thyroid, vitamin D, and so forth.
But what about like hormones themselves?
You know, Mark, I just have to say, it's interesting that you said the obvious stuff like thyroid and cortisol and vitamin D and insulin, but it's actually not obvious to everybody.
think about how many people come in and they're just looking at estrogen and progesterone,
so I'm really glad you called that out.
We look at the big hormone picture.
I tend to use blood levels for quantity.
I think they're probably the best if I'm looking to see where somebody is, also looking at the pituitary hormones, the FSH and LH,
and then if we're monitoring somebody after we're starting treatment.
I rely on the blood levels for quantity of the hormones.
saliva.
To help manage prescriptions or when you order to help manage prescriptions to track somebody,
especially if they're not responding, do we need to change the dose?
The saliva test, I don't use as much for estrogen progesterone, but they're really great
for looking at cortisol levels throughout the day.
They correlate pretty well.
And that gives us a snapshot of adrenal reserve, how stress somebody might be, what things could
be spiking their cortisol or.
not. And then for those estrogen metabolites and testosterone metabolites, the urine levels are what we
look for. So it's a combination of things. So yeah, so you can use saliva for cortisol. You use
blood for hormones. You also use urine for estrogen metabolism. So you kind of need a cocktail
of things to really understand what's going on. And it helps you understand where they're at,
what to do. But the thing is, as you're going through perimenopause, your hormones are all over the place.
So anyone level, any one time doesn't really give you the whole picture.
So it's a combination of like your clinical expertise plus symptoms,
plus the lab testing, all gives you sort of a framework.
It's sort of like multiple ways of navigating.
And so it's important to sort of track that stuff.
And particularly if you're on hormones,
you want to make sure you're not overshooting with estrogen, progesterone, testosterone.
All right, so let's say somebody starts on it and they're like 50 and they get on it
or do they stand until they die or like you take it forever or you take it for a few years
so your symptoms are over?
Like, are there 80-year-olds having hot flashes who haven't gone, who haven't been on hormones?
Probably not.
So the question is like, what is the right amount of time?
And there is no perfect answer there either, Mark, because I think if we just look back at how much the pendulum is shifted, there is still ongoing research.
And every year we get new information that might shift the equation.
So it's also about, okay, if you're thinking about hormones now, making the best decision you can with all the information you have.
But checking in every year, is it still the right option for me?
How do I feel?
What are my goals?
What are my levels?
What am I trying to achieve with hormones?
And I would say there isn't a black and white answer to that.
You know, some women might try it and they don't like how they feel.
Progesterone, some women don't do well with progesterone.
I mean, it just can be, most women do, but some women don't.
So we might need to shift gears there.
Or maybe they go in for a mammogram and they get a new diagnosis and we might have breast
cancer and then we really need to shift gears there. There could be other health changes or priority
changes. So I think it's an evolving conversation. It's about establishing benchmarks and then
having a partner you trust that can continue the conversation every year. And also tracking things,
right? You want to check your mammogram, your pap test, your bone density, your cardiovascular risk factors,
your insulin, all the things that you want to be tracking. And that's what, you know, we do at the
Ultra Wellness Center in Lennox. We do this for a long time. And we have the ability to
really kind of dive in and help people navigate this. And it's, it's like one of the most
satisfying parts of practice for me because it's just, you really can help people not suffer.
And I don't think women should have to suffer. I think one of the other misinterpretations of this,
if you start within five to 10 years, physicians for a long time would say, okay, you've been on
at 10 years, you have to stop your hormones. That's not true either. There are women who continue
to stay on their hormones beyond the 10 years. If they're doing well, they're feeling well,
it's working for them. I don't routinely take people off just because it's metamagic yearmark
based on some population data. Right, exactly. Just like how do you make up those numbers? They just
sort of make them up out of the air. Last question is really about who should not take hormones
and hormone replacement therapy. Yeah, so we talked a lot about breast cancer. Even breast cancer
is not all the same. Women who've had an estrogen positive breast cancer or progesterone
receptor positive breast cancer, it's still really considered relatively contraindicated unless you're
using the vaginal estrogen. There's some newer evidence calling that into question, but that's really
an informed discussion with your oncologist. Triple negative breast cancer, they're starting to look at
maybe there might be a subset of women who could tolerate or have estrogen. But again, I think that is
an informed conversation with your oncologist. So active breast cancer, I would say no. If you have
unexplained vaginal bleeding.
You don't know where it's coming from that could potentially be a sign of uterine cancer.
You need to figure that out first.
Active liver disease would not take hormone therapy.
The research is also shifting if you've had a personal history of blood clots or you have genetics for blood clotting.
There's some emerging evidence that if you're using estrogen through the skin and you've got bothersome symptoms, that could be a possibility.
But again, I would probably defer you to your hematologist for that.
Those are the main contraindications.
And liver disease, palvi too, right?
So breast cancer, clotting, liver disease.
Yeah, yeah.
I would say you have to know yourself if you're somebody who doesn't want to take them,
who is going to every day you take it feel like, oh my gosh, is this not right?
Am I going to cause breast cancer?
It may not be the option.
I'm not going to force anybody to take hormones who doesn't feel like it's right for them.
I mean, that's important because, you know, people don't have to take them.
They can do well with other ways of managing.
symptoms or these diseases or conditions that they're a risk for. But I think that the current
thinking, and who knows this might change the more data comes in is it's a more nuanced view than we
had. And people are confused or want to learn how to do this or need help and support. You know,
our practice, the Ultramana Center, we have five physicians, lots of physicians, assistants,
nutritionists, nurses that really helps support people on this whole journey. So Citi,
thanks so much for joining us. You have given us a lot to think about and a great explanation of how to
I just get to the nuts and bolts and the meat of the issue, so to speak.
As you can see, everybody, hormone placement therapy isn't like just one size fits all
for everybody.
It's nuanced.
It depends on your symptoms, your medical history, your goals, you're in the bigger picture
of your health, you know, with your osteoporosis or heart disease or other things.
And then, you know, hopefully what this conversation has done is cut through some of the
confusion.
You know, for a long time, the conversations around hormone therapy has been really about fear
and about misinterpreting the data and outdated information.
And what we know now is way more nuanced than that, right?
For the right person, at the right time, hormone replacement therapy can be a powerful tool.
And it's just that, it's a tool.
It's not the only answer and not something to approach without guidance.
So if you're navigating these questions for yourself, the most important step is to work
with a practitioner, ideally a functional medicine practitioner who can help you look
at your full picture, not just your hormones and isolation.
Because this isn't just about managing symptoms, it's about supporting your long-term health,
your metabolism, your brain health, and how you want to feel as you get older.
And that's really the goal.
If you found this helpful, I encourage you to share it with someone who's navigating the same
questions because the chances are, they are.
And if you want to dive deeper to this topic, look out for my upcoming episode with Dr. Sharon Malone,
who's a board certified OBGYN and menopause specialist with decades of clinical and
leadership experience in women's health.
And here's a clip from that conversation.
The thing that maybe we should just unpack is this black box warning that came from the
FDA because it's what got people really scared.
And I remember, because I was practicing really heavily with women that during that time, when that study came out and it stopped the study.
They literally stopped the study because they were concerned about the harmful effects.
So that's a big deal.
And overnight, I think 50 million women stopped hormones, which created a, you know, a catastrophe in the country.
How well I know.
Yeah, right?
And so we kind of had a backlash.
Now we're kind of coming back to a more coherent way of thinking about it.
And I'd like you to unpack, you know, how you think about prescribing hormones and which hormones and for whom and what the benefits are.
Because the women's health initiative did show that increased stroke and it increased heart attack.
And there were some...
Did it, though?
Did it?
I mean, that's what they said, right?
Okay.
And I'm going to tell you it didn't really say that.
Because the effect sizes were small or the...
The effect sizes were small and they were as prescribed.
Remember, the women entering the Women's Health Initiative, the average age was 63.
Yeah.
You could be anywhere from 50 to 79 years of age to be in that study.
Mm-hmm.
They didn't really even say, all right, these are women who've never had hormones before,
and now we're going to give some hormones and some not.
The criteria for entering and being randomized, you just had to not have taken hormones for three months before entry.
the study. Do you see what I'm saying? So the population was really murky. They were too old.
Yeah. That's not how we're prescribing today. We prescribe what we do know is that the earlier you start
treatment, the more long-term benefit you get. And is it risk you're to start it when you're older?
Well, yes, there are some, you get less benefit. And I, and I don't think it takes any leap of faith
to understand that if the purpose of the Women's Health Initiative was to sort of, sort of,
sort of figure out whether or not the hormones really were the secret sauce in reducing the cardiovascular disease.
Because when the nurses study, 50% decrease in the heart disease in the women who took estrogen.
Yeah. Okay. Is it that or is it something else? And to have women come into the study at 79 years old,
I think we can all agree that it doesn't matter what I give you.
that horse is out of the barn by then.
And by having too many women who already had established heart disease,
well, how are you going to prevent something that you already have?
Yes, it's like they didn't do angiograms on everybody and see what their hearts look like.
Exactly.
So when you stratify, even the women's health initiative,
when you looked at the younger women who were in the minority,
but the younger women did not have an increase in the risk of cardiovascular disease.
all of the bad things, the only finding from the women's health initiative that was statistically significant
was there was an increase in the risk of blood clots.
Yeah, blood clots.
But that's a heart attack as a blood clot, right?
No, but yeah, but that's separate.
This is listed as separate in part because it's DVTs or deviant thrombosis or pulmonary embolite.
And that was reported separately.
But estrogen does mechanistically cause an increase in clotting risk.
We know that.
Yes, yes, it does.
However, again, perspective matters.
You need to know to say to someone that it's a 50% increase or 100% increase, well, what's the baseline?
And what we do know is that for women who start estrogen, even oral, earlier, when you're 40s or 50s, when you start,
that increased risk of blood clotting that we don't have it.
We don't see it.
It happens when you're older.
And so a lot of the findings from the women's health initiative that were negative, even the cardiovascular disease was elevated, but only in the first year and not after that.
Because, again, you're probably giving something to women who already have fairly advanced heart disease.
What about the breast cancer risk?
Ah, the breast cancer.
Because that's what freaks them out.
That is the number one reason why women avoid hormone.
Oh, cardiovascular risk.
I don't care about that.
it's the breast cancer. That was the, that was really the nail in the coffin. Yeah. Because it did show
some increased risk, right? That's what they reported at least. Let me tell you. I mean, that's what the, that's what the public said.
Oh, trust me. I've been in the weeds on this for so long. I'm just, I'm just framing it so people know. It's like I'm not just saying. No, no, no, no. That was what they held the press conference. That was the headline. That was the press conference. Oh, not only does this, you know, they held a press conference to, when they stopped the women's health initiative to say,
say, oh, not only does it not help your heart, it increases your risk of blood clots and heart disease and strokes and it went on and on and on.
Well, that's very scary.
And I would challenge anyone to give me another example of when the NIH, the regulars in NIH held a press conference to announce a study.
I mean, that's how big of a deal they thought that was.
And I'll also mention that Bernadine Healy was not there at that time.
So we're going to give her a pass on that.
Okay.
But here's the breast cancer story.
And I will say this.
The data is the data.
You don't get to change the data because you don't like it.
Okay.
You can change your interpretation of the data, but it is what it is.
But let's take it at face value.
What did the women's health initiative say about women who took estrogen, the
primarin, and the provera?
All right.
They reported there was a 26% increase in the risk of breast cancer in estrogen.
in estrogen and progestion users versus non-users.
26% that sounds terrible.
Who wants that?
That's relative risk.
Right.
But what did that mean in real terms?
That means for women who did not take estrogen and progestin, the natural incidence
is about 30 per 10,000 women per year will be diagnosed with breast cancer, living long
enough to get it.
In the estrogen and progestin user group, it went from 30 per 10,000.
10,000 women per 10,000 per year, with no increase in the risk of dying from your breast cancer,
even if you were diagnosed on hormone therapy. So let's make that sound a little better.
All right. Eight per 10,000 additional cases of breast cancer. And that's 26%. That's 26% with no
increased risk of dying from it and then make it even better. Less than one and a thousand additional
cases of breast cancer in the women who took estrogen and progestin. Now, that doesn't sound
nearly as scary as 26%. Correct. But that was never really put into perspective.
I think Mark Twain said there's lies or damn lies and there's statisticians.
Exactly. And, you know, and there is, and when you put it that way, you say, oh, okay, well,
eight and a thousand, but I'm no more likely to die from it even if I'm taking hormone therapy.
And even that statistic itself, and you and I know in a medical study, if you were going to report a finding, to call it a finding, it has to be statistically significant.
It was not statistically significant.
But that stuck like glue.
It's still with us today because doctors and patients still believe that a family history of breast cancer is a reason not to take hormone therapy.
So that's just that. Worse case scenario, let's, you know, put it on, blame the old bad, Permanent, M. Provera. Even that did not statistically increase your risk of breast cancer. And that is what has taken a long time for people to really understand those numbers. And because I remember the day that came out, it was 1992. And I had been prescribing for 10 years, well, 2002. And I had been prescribing for 10 years before that.
Yeah, me too.
And patients were horrified.
Oh, doctor, I can't believe you're trying to kill me with this stuff.
And when I read the study, I said, wait a minute, it's not as bad as what they said.
Yeah.
And again, remember, applying that data, again, take it as it is, you can't apply that the same data from 79-year-olds and 65-year-olds to 45-year-olds.
They're not the same.
What if brain fog, anxiety, and mood swings aren't simply all in your head?
What if the health of your mind actually starts deeper in your body, in your gut, in your hormones, metabolism, and your immune system?
Well, let me tell you, the connection is real, and it affects how you think and you feel every single day.
And that's why I created Brain Shaping Academy, a six-week program that shows you how healing your body can help you heal your mind.
Brain Shaping Academy relies on the same targeted nutrition and lifestyle strategies that I've used for 30 years to help my patients improve their mental, emotional, and cognitive health.
So if you want to feel calmer, clear, and more in control, and stay sharp and protect your brain as you age,
check out Brain Shaping Academy at Dr.hyman.com for slash brain shaping. That's Dr.heimen.com
for brain shaping. Thanks for office hours. I love diving into these topics with you. Remember,
you are the CEO of your own health. And every choice you make can move you closer to healing and vitality.
I want to keep these episodes as relevant and useful as possible, so tell me, what do you want to explore next?
What questions are you wrestling with? What breakthroughs are you chasing?
Share your ideas in the comments on social media or through the link in the show notes.
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This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center,
my work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health, where I am chief medical officer.
This podcast represents my opinions and my guest's opinions.
Neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guest.
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