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- Title
- Assessment of medical treatments for menorrhagia.
- Author
- Shaw RW
- Address
- Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Wales College of Medicine, Heath
Park, Cardiff, UK.
- Source
- Br J Obstet Gynaecol, 101 Suppl 11():15-8 1994 Jul
- Abstract
- Although usually not life-threatening, dysfunctional uterine bleeding (DUB) can cause
discomfort and disruption to life for many women. It has been poorly researched in the
past, primarily because of difficulties in trying to accurately measure blood loss and
response to treatment. There are several different therapies currently available but, for
many, actual evidence of their efficacy is lacking from scientific data. Progestogens are
the most frequently prescribed drugs for the treatment of DUB. Data support their use in
anovulatory women but a number of comparative trials have shown that an overall reduction
in blood loss of only 20% is achieved in ovulatory women. Their use, therefore, must be
questioned as the first line of treatment. Combined oral contraceptives were at one time
popular but whether the low-dose, current generation pills are equally effective awaits
appropriate trials. Prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors can be useful, with up to a third
of women with menorrhagia benefiting from a reduction of between 25% and 35% in blood
loss. A proportionally greater reduction is seen in women with more excessive bleeding.
Antifibrinolytic drugs have been shown to reduce menstrual blood loss in DUB by 50% and
would be useful in women in whom oestrogens are contraindicated. Gonadotrophin-releasing
hormone analogues are highly effective because of their ability to induce amenorrhoea, but
long-term use is contraindicated because of their hypo-oestrogenic effects. One other
effective therapy for menorrhagia has been danazol.