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Evidence summaries

Non-Hormonal Interventions for Hot Flushes in Women with a History of Breast Cancer

Antidepressive agents (SSRIs, SNRIs) and gabapentin appear to reduce the number and severity of hot flushes in women with a history of breast cancer. Level of evidence: "B"

Comment:The quality of evidence is downgraded by inconsistency (heterogeneity in interventions and outcomes) and by imprecise results (limited study size for each comparison) and upgraded by dose-response relationship.

Clinical comment: It should be noted that paroxetine and fluoxetine may interfere with the metabolism of tamoxifen and are not recommended for women taking this drug for their breast cancer.

Non-hormonal therapy with antidepressive agents or gabapentin is suggested for women with severe hot flushes and a history of breast cancer.

The recommendation is weak because the balance of benefits and harms is unclear for many patients. Patients with severe symptoms are likely to benefit because hot flushes may deteriorate sleep and working ability and strongly decrease quality of life.

A Cochrane review [Abstract] 1 included 16 RCTs, 10 with pharmacological and 6 with non-pharmacological intervention. A pooled analysis was precluded due to differences in reporting.

Frequency of hot flushes was significantly reduced at all dose levels of venlafaxine (37.5 mg: 30% reduction, 95% CI 0.22 to 0.53; 75 mg: 46% reduction, 95% CI 0.36 to 0.63; and 150 mg: 58% reduction, 95% CI 0.04 to 0.75; 1 trial; n=191) compared to placebo. The severity score was more reduced in the active arms at all dose levels (37.5 mg: 37% reduction, 95% CI 0.26 to 0.54; 75 mg: 61% reduction, 95% CI 0.50 to 0.68; 150 mg: 61% reduction, 95% CI 0.48 to 0.75). Two other studies on venlafaxine at 37.5 mg and 75 mg doses reported significantly superior reduction both in frequency and severity of hot flushes (P<0.001, respectively at 37.5 mg and P=0.013 and 0.001 at 75 mg) versus placebo.

One study evaluating fluoxetine at a dose of 20 mg daily in 68 patients showed a reduction in the number of flushes (19%; P=0.01) and severity score (24%; P=0.02) compared to placebo.Paroxetine reduced the frequency and severity score of hot flushes significantly compared to placebo (40.6 %; P=0.0006 and 45.6 %; P=0.0008 in the 10 mg dose arms and 51.7%; P=0.002 and 56.1%; P<0.001 in the 20 mg arms, respectively; 1 study; n =107).

Gabapentin reduced the frequency of hot flushes with the 900 mg/day dose (mean change -2.1; 95% CI -2.95 to -1.23) but not significantly with 300 mg/day (mean change -0.8; 95% CI -1.7 to 0.1; 1 study; n = 347). The same effects were observed on severity scores (low dose mean change -1.79; 95% CI -4.38 to 0.80 and high dose mean change -4.88; 95% CI -7.23 to -2.53).

Clonidine was tested in transdermal formulation in one study (n=89) and in oral formulation in one (n=163) compared to placebo. A superior reduction in both number and severity of hot flushes was achieved with both formulations (44%; P=0.04 and 56%; p=0.04 for transdermal and 38%; P=0.006 and 45%; P=0.006 for oral formulations, respectively).

Relaxation therapy (n=150) showed an effect in 1 of 2 trials (median difference 7 hot flushes per week; 95% CI 4 to 7, median difference of severity 0.54; 95% CI 0.11 to 1.01), but the significance was lost during the follow-up. Homeopathy, acupuncture and use of a magnetic device did not show any effect.

A review assessed 2 non-hormonal strategies for managing menopausal symptoms. Among SSRIs, paroxetine, sertraline, fluoxetine and escitalopram have been studied for hot flushes, with most of the studies reporting positive results (table T1). As regards SNRIs, duloxetine, venlafaxine and its active metabolite O-desmethylvenlafaxinealso showed a benefit (table T1). Gabapentin at a dose of 900mg reduced hot flush frequency 44-57% and severity 46-67% (2 RCTs, n=535).

SSRIs and SNRIs for hot flushes (HF)

SSRIs for hot flushesEffectivenessSNRIs for hot flushesEffectiveness
Paroxetine 10-25 mg/dayUp to 64% HFs score reduction, improvement also of sleepDuloxetine 30-120 mg/day56% HFs frequency and 62% HFs score reduction
Fluoxetine 10-30 mg/day24% HFs score and 19% HFs frequency reductionVenlafaxine 37.5-150 mg/dayImmediate effect and strong HFs reduction, up to 30%-58% reduction in HFs frequency and 37%-61% in the HFs score
Sertraline 25-100 mg/dayModest effect on HFsDesvenlafaxine 100-150 mg/day60%-66% HFs frequency and 24%-29% HFs severity reduction
Citalopram 10-20 mg/dayUp to 49%-55% HFs score reduction
Escitalopram 10-20 mg/day47% HFs frequency and 24% reduction

Comment:The quality of evidence is downgraded by inconsistency (heterogeneity in interventions and outcomes) and by imprecise results (limited study size for each comparison) and upgraded by dose-response relationship.

Clinical comment: It should be noted that paroxetine and fluoxetine may interfere with the metabolism of tamoxifen and are not recommended for women taking this drug for their breast cancer.

References

  • Rada G, Capurro D, Pantoja T, Corbalán J, Moreno G, Letelier LM, Vera C. Non-hormonal interventions for hot flushes in women with a history of breast cancer. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2010 Sep 8;(9):CD004923. [PubMed]
  • Biglia N, Bounous VE, De Seta F et al. Non-hormonal strategies for managing menopausal symptoms in cancer survivors: an update. Ecancermedicalscience 2019;13():909. [PubMed]

Primary/Secondary Keywords