Abstract
Cardiovascular disease remains the major cause of death for postmenopausal women in Western societies. The majority of epidemiological studies indicate that postmenopausal oestrogen replacement therapy is associated with a 50% reduction in the risk of cardiovascular disease, with much of the reduction being mediated by changes in the plasma concentration of cholesterol within high and low density lipoproteins. In addition to favourably influencing the plasma concentration of lipoproteins, oestrogens also influence the complex metabolism of lipoproteins in the arterial wall, helping to impede the formation of the atherosclerotic plaque. Whilst oestrogens alter endothelial function, vascular reactivity and fibrinolysis, these changes are also seen with reduction of LDL cholesterol and may partly reflect the altered concentration of plasma lipoproteins induced by oestrogens. Oral oestrogens have substantially greater favourable effects on LDL and HDL cholesterol than their transdermal counterparts but also result in greater hypertriglyceridaemia. Most progestogens antagonize the beneficial effects of oestrogens on lipoproteins in a dose-dependent manner; however, cyclical use of low doses of progestogens with an oral oestrogen generally retains a net beneficial effect. Lipoprotein levels fluctuate during cyclical therapy, the most adverse changes being noted at the end of the progestogen phase. Lipoprotein concentrations are constant during continuous combined regimens which have the potential for more prolonged exposure to an adverse progestational effect. Despite adverse effects on the lipoprotein profile, animal studies suggest that progestogens do not substantially reverse the beneficial effects of oestrogens on the development of atherosclerosis. Finally, oestrogen therapy may be useful in the management of postmenopausal women with hyperlipidaemia, and also in the secondary prevention of clinical sequelae in women with established atherosclerosis.
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