HRT does not impact life expectancy – health body

Information on the menopause drugs’ benefits and risks have been included in updated guidance.


Getty Images Woman with short brown hair applies a hormone cream to her upper back.Getty Images

Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) does not shorten or lengthen the life expectancy of those taking it to ease menopause symptoms, says the health assessment body NICE in updated guidance.

Its conclusion comes after a detailed analysis of data on links between HRT and conditions such as heart disease, stroke, some cancers and dementia.

The guidance includes a new discussion aid to help GPs give patients the most useful information they can about the drugs and what they do.

And it says talking therapy could be offered alongside HRT, to help women cope with symptoms.

HRT replaces the hormones oestrogen or progestogen, or both, when women’s periods stop – normally between the ages of 45 and 55.

It is administered using gels, creams, pessaries, tablets or sprays.

In updated menopause guidelines, NICE (the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence) says healthcare professionals should take into account a woman’s personal situation, and provide all the information needed to help her make the best choice on treatment.

The guidance highlights that while there are some increased risks linked to taking HRT, it is unlikely to lengthen or shorten overall life expectancy.

Easy-to-read illustrations of the likelihood of developing certain health conditions are featured. These are intended to help GPs have informed conversations with patients.

Dr Marie Anne Ledingham, consultant clinical adviser to NICE, explained that an independent panel assessed available scientific evidence to come up with the information.

She said the risk of coronary heart disease, stroke and ovarian and endometrial cancer was no higher among women aged 45 and over taking combined HRT, compared to those who had never taken it.

And HRT actually reduced the risk of fractures linked to the bone condition osteoporosis, which is more likely to develop after the menopause.

But the risk of breast cancer for women did rise slightly, affecting:

  • 59 in every 1,000 women who never take HRT
  • 79 in every 1,000 taking combined HRT for five years from the age of 50
  • 92 in every 1,000 taking combined HRT for 10 years

The risk of dementia was also slightly higher if women started taking HRT after the age of 65. In younger patients there was no elevated risk of developing dementia.

“The risks are very low in the population, and HRT can provide huge benefits at a very difficult point in many women’s lives,” Dr Ledingham said.

Getty Images Woman sitting in her bed with sweat visible on her vest top. She's holding her hand to her forehead and looks uncomfortable.Getty Images

The guidance is clear that HRT is the go-to treatment option for hot flushes and night sweats caused by the menopause.

Talking therapy known as CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy) is to be offered to women over 40 alongside HRT or, if the patient’s individual circumstances call for it, in place of it.

That is a change from draft guidelines, published in late 2023, which caused controversy by suggesting that talking therapy could replace HRT as a treatment.

The level of feedback received by NICE on that point led to a longer than usual delay in issuing the final guidance.

Prescriptions for HRT have grown considerably in recent years in the UK.

Professor Jonathan Benger, chief medical officer at NICE, said that awareness of the impact menopause symptoms can have on women has grown in recent years.

But he said more could be done to improve support for women from ethnic minority backgrounds and from poorer areas “who are often unaware of or unable to access treatments that could help them”.

“Women need to feel confident that they will be offered advice and options that meet their needs, and that they will be supported to make the choices that are right for them,” said Prof Benger.