Long-term cognitive effects of menopausal hormone therapy: Findings from the KEEPS Continuation Study.

IF 15.8 1区 医学 Q1 Medicine
PLoS Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-21 eCollection Date: 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1004435
Carey E Gleason, N Maritza Dowling, Firat Kara, Taryn T James, Hector Salazar, Carola A Ferrer Simo, Sherman M Harman, JoAnn E Manson, Dustin B Hammers, Frederick N Naftolin, Lubna Pal, Virginia M Miller, Marcelle I Cedars, Rogerio A Lobo, Michael Malek-Ahmadi, Kejal Kantarci
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Findings from Kronos Early Estrogen Prevention Study (KEEPS)-Cog trial suggested no cognitive benefit or harm after 48 months of menopausal hormone therapy (mHT) initiated within 3 years of final menstrual period. To clarify the long-term effects of mHT initiated in early postmenopause, the observational KEEPS Continuation Study reevaluated cognition, mood, and neuroimaging effects in participants enrolled in the KEEPS-Cog and its parent study the KEEPS approximately 10 years after trial completion. We hypothesized that women randomized to transdermal estradiol (tE2) during early postmenopause would show cognitive benefits, while oral conjugated equine estrogens (oCEE) would show no effect, compared to placebo over the 10 years following randomization in the KEEPS trial.

Methods and findings: The KEEPS-Cog (2005-2008) was an ancillary study to the KEEPS (NCT00154180), in which participants were randomized into 3 groups: oCEE (Premarin, 0.45 mg/d), tE2 (Climara, 50 μg/d) both with micronized progesterone (Prometrium, 200 mg/d for 12 d/mo) or placebo pills and patch for 48 months. KEEPS Continuation (2017-2022), an observational, longitudinal cohort study of KEEPS clinical trial, involved recontacting KEEPS participants approximately 10 years after the completion of the 4-year clinical trial to attend in-person research visits. Seven of the original 9 sites participated in the KEEPS Continuation, resulting in 622 women of original 727 being invited to return for a visit, with 299 enrolling across the 7 sites. KEEPS Continuation participants repeated the original KEEPS-Cog test battery which was analyzed using 4 cognitive factor scores and a global cognitive score. Cognitive data from both KEEPS and KEEPS Continuation were available for 275 participants. Latent growth models (LGMs) assessed whether baseline cognition and cognitive changes during KEEPS predicted cognitive performance at follow-up, and whether mHT randomization modified these relationships, adjusting for covariates. Similar health characteristics were observed at KEEPS randomization for KEEPS Continuation participants and nonparticipants (i.e., women not returning for the KEEPS Continuation). The LGM revealed significant associations between intercepts and slopes for cognitive performance across almost all domains, indicating that cognitive factor scores changed over time. Tests assessing the effects of mHT allocation on cognitive slopes during the KEEPS and across all years of follow-up including the KEEPS Continuation visit were all statistically nonsignificant. The KEEPS Continuation study found no long-term cognitive effects of mHT, with baseline cognition and changes during KEEPS being the strongest predictors of later performance. Cross-sectional comparisons confirmed that participants assigned to mHT in KEEPS (oCEE and tE2 groups) performed similarly on cognitive measures to those randomized to placebo, approximately 10 years after completion of the randomized treatments. These findings suggest that mHT poses no long-term cognitive harm; conversely, it provides no cognitive benefit or protective effects against cognitive decline.

Conclusions: In these KEEPS Continuation analyses, there were no long-term cognitive effects of short-term exposure to mHT started in early menopause versus placebo. These data provide reassurance about the long-term neurocognitive safety of mHT for symptom management in healthy, recently postmenopausal women, while also suggesting that mHT does not improve or preserve cognitive function in this population.

更年期激素治疗对认知的长期影响:KEEPS 持续研究的结果。
背景:克罗诺斯早期雌激素预防研究(KEEPS)-Cog试验的结果表明,在末次月经后3年内开始绝经激素治疗(mHT)48个月后,对认知没有益处也没有害处。为了明确绝经后早期开始的 mHT 的长期影响,观察性 KEEPS 持续研究在试验完成约 10 年后重新评估了 KEEPS-Cog 及其母研究 KEEPS 参与者的认知、情绪和神经影像学影响。我们假设,与安慰剂相比,在 KEEPS 试验随机分配后的 10 年中,绝经后早期随机接受经皮雌二醇(tE2)治疗的女性将显示出认知方面的益处,而口服结合马雌激素(oCEE)则没有任何效果:KEEPS-Cog(2005-2008年)是KEEPS(NCT00154180)的一项辅助研究,参与者被随机分为3组:oCEE(普瑞玛琳,0.45毫克/天)、tE2(克利玛拉,50微克/天)与微粒化孕酮(普罗米休,200毫克/天,12天/月)或安慰剂药片和贴片,为期48个月。KEEPS Continuation(2017-2022 年)是 KEEPS 临床试验的一项观察性纵向队列研究,包括在 4 年临床试验结束约 10 年后重新联系 KEEPS 参与者,让他们参加面对面的研究访问。最初的 9 个研究点中有 7 个参与了 KEEPS 延续研究,结果最初的 727 名妇女中有 622 名受邀回访,7 个研究点中有 299 名参加了回访。KEEPS 延续项目的参与者重复了最初的 KEEPS-Cog 测试,该测试使用 4 个认知因子得分和一个总体认知得分进行分析。275 名参与者同时获得了 KEEPS 和 KEEPS Continuation 的认知数据。潜增长模型(LGMs)评估了基线认知和 KEEPS 期间的认知变化是否能预测随访时的认知表现,以及 mHT 随机化是否会改变这些关系,并对协变量进行了调整。在 KEEPS 随机化时,KEEPS 继续参与者和非参与者(即未参加 KEEPS 继续项目的女性)的健康特征相似。LGM 显示,几乎所有领域的认知表现的截距和斜率之间都有明显的关联,表明认知因子得分随着时间的推移而变化。在 KEEPS 研究期间以及包括 KEEPS 继续研究在内的所有随访年份中,对 mHT 分配对认知能力斜率影响的评估测试在统计意义上均不显着。KEEPS 持续研究发现,mHT 对认知没有长期影响,基线认知和 KEEPS 期间的变化是日后表现的最强预测因素。横断面比较证实,在完成随机治疗约 10 年后,KEEPS(oCEE 和 tE2 组)中被分配接受 mHT 治疗的参与者在认知能力方面的表现与随机接受安慰剂治疗的参与者相似。这些研究结果表明,mHT 不会对认知能力造成长期伤害;反之,它也不会对认知能力下降产生益处或保护作用:在这些 KEEPS 持续性分析中,与安慰剂相比,更年期早期开始短期服用 mHT 不会对认知能力产生长期影响。这些数据再次保证了 mHT 对健康的绝经后妇女进行症状控制的长期神经认知安全性,同时也表明 mHT 不会改善或保护绝经后妇女的认知功能。
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来源期刊
PLoS Medicine
PLoS Medicine MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
17.60
自引率
0.60%
发文量
227
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: PLOS Medicine is a prominent platform for discussing and researching global health challenges. The journal covers a wide range of topics, including biomedical, environmental, social, and political factors affecting health. It prioritizes articles that contribute to clinical practice, health policy, or a better understanding of pathophysiology, ultimately aiming to improve health outcomes across different settings. The journal is unwavering in its commitment to uphold the highest ethical standards in medical publishing. This includes actively managing and disclosing any conflicts of interest related to reporting, reviewing, and publishing. PLOS Medicine promotes transparency in the entire review and publication process. The journal also encourages data sharing and encourages the reuse of published work. Additionally, authors retain copyright for their work, and the publication is made accessible through Open Access with no restrictions on availability and dissemination. PLOS Medicine takes measures to avoid conflicts of interest associated with advertising drugs and medical devices or engaging in the exclusive sale of reprints.
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