Hogervorst E, Yaffe K, Richards M, Huppert F
Pharmacology, University of Oxford, Oxford Project To Investigate Memory and Ageing, Radcliffe Infirmary, Woodstock Road, Oxford, UK, OX2 6HE.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2002(3):CD003122. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003122.
As estrogens have been found in animal models to be associated with the maintenance and protection of brain structures, it is biologically plausible that maintaining high levels of estrogens in postmenopausal women by medication could be protective against cognitive decline.
To investigate the effect of ERT (estrogens only) or HRT (estrogens combined with a progestagen) in comparison with placebo in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on cognitive function in postmenopausal women.
The CDCIG Specialized Register was searched using the terms ORT, PORT, ERT, HRT, estrogen*, oestrogen*, progesteron* on 16 May 2002. In addition MEDLINE (1966-2002/01); EMBASE (1985-2000/11); PsycINFO (1967-2002/01) and CINAHL (1982-2001/12) were searched as the CDCIG Register does not contain all trials with healthy volunteers.
All double-blind randomized controlled trials of the effect of ERT or HRT on cognitive function over a treatment period of at least two weeks in postmenopausal women.
Abstracts of the references retrieved by the searches were read by two reviewers in order to discard those that were clearly not eligible for inclusion. The two reviewers studied the full text of the remaining references and independently selected studies for inclusion. Any disparity in the resulting lists was resolved by discussion with all reviewers in order to arrive at the final list of included studies. The selection criteria ensured that the blinding and randomization of the included studies was adequate. Two reviewers (EH and KY) assessed the quality of other aspects including design and assessment of outcomes. One reviewer (EH) extracted the data from the studies.
In total, 15 trials involving 566 postmenopausal women were included, but 6 studies did not have adequate data for analysis. Meta-analyses showed a positive effect of 10 mg of estradiol (E2) bolus injections intramuscularly monthly in relatively young surgically menopausal women on the Paired Associate learning test immediate recall (z=2.40, p<0.05, chi-square test=1.12, p=0.29, SMD=1.02, 95% C.I.=0.19-1.85), on a test of abstract reasoning (z=10.45, p<0.0001, WMD=6.80, 95% C.I.=5.52-8.08) and a test of speed and accuracy (z=9.16, p<0.0001 WMD=6.00, 95% C.I.=4.72-7.28). However, most studies showed no evidence of an effect on verbal or visuospatial memory, mental rotations, speed or accuracy measures. There was little evidence that Premarin, the most widely prescribed estrogen for postmenopausal use, had positive effects on cognitive function. The one effect of 9 months of treatment with Premarin (and a progestagen) on a measure of complex speed of information processing (the TMT-B) was probably explained by baseline differences, as it was not reported by the authors.
REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS: There was little evidence regarding the effect HRT or ERT on overall cognitive function in healthy postmenopausal women. There was an effect on some verbal memory functions (immediate recall), on a test of abstract reasoning and a test of speed and accuracy in relatively young (47 years of age) surgically menopausal women who had been given a bolus intramuscular injection of 10 mg E2 every month for 3 months. These effects were from small studies from a single research group. It remains to be determined whether factors such as an older age (> 69 years of age), type of menopause (surgical or natural) and type of treatment (E2 with or without a progestagen), mode of delivery (transdermal, oral or intramuscular), dosage and duration (> 3 months) could alter the effect on memory functions to a clinically relevant level. In addition, whether the absence or presence of menopausal symptoms can modify treatment effects should be investigated in more detail. Longitudinal RCTs currently underway in the U.S.A., U.K. and Canada will be able to test these hypotheses by the year 2010.
在动物模型中已发现雌激素与脑结构的维持和保护相关,因此从生物学角度来看,通过药物使绝经后女性维持高水平雌激素可能对预防认知能力下降具有保护作用。
在随机对照试验(RCT)中,比较雌激素替代疗法(ERT,仅使用雌激素)或激素替代疗法(HRT,雌激素与孕激素联合使用)与安慰剂对绝经后女性认知功能的影响。
2002年5月16日,使用术语ORT、PORT、ERT、HRT、雌激素*、雌二醇*、孕酮*检索了CDCIG专业注册库。此外,由于CDCIG注册库未包含所有涉及健康志愿者的试验,因此还检索了MEDLINE(1966 - 2002/01)、EMBASE(1985 - 2000/11)、PsycINFO(1967 - 2002/01)和CINAHL(1982 - 2001/12)。
所有关于ERT或HRT对绝经后女性认知功能影响的双盲随机对照试验,治疗期至少为两周。
两名评审员阅读检索到的参考文献摘要,以剔除明显不符合纳入标准的文献。两名评审员研究其余参考文献的全文,并独立选择纳入研究。结果列表中的任何差异通过与所有评审员讨论来解决,以得出最终的纳入研究列表。入选标准确保了纳入研究的盲法和随机化是充分的。两名评审员(EH和KY)评估包括设计和结果评估等其他方面的质量。一名评审员(EH)从研究中提取数据。
总共纳入了15项涉及566名绝经后女性的试验,但6项研究没有足够的数据进行分析。荟萃分析显示,对于相对年轻的手术绝经女性,每月肌肉注射10毫克雌二醇(E2)推注对配对联想学习测试即时回忆有积极影响(z = 2.40,p < 0.05,卡方检验 = 1.12,p = 0.29,标准化均数差 = 1.02,95%可信区间 = 0.19 - 1.85),对抽象推理测试有积极影响(z = 10.45,p < 0.0001,加权均数差 = 6.80,95%可信区间 = 5.52 - 8.08),对速度和准确性测试有积极影响(z = 9.16,p < 0.0001,加权均数差 = 6.00,95%可信区间 = 4.72 - 7.28)。然而,大多数研究没有证据表明对言语或视觉空间记忆、心理旋转、速度或准确性测量有影响。几乎没有证据表明绝经后使用最广泛的雌激素普瑞马林对认知功能有积极影响。普瑞马林(与一种孕激素联合使用)治疗9个月对信息处理复杂速度测量(TMT - B)的唯一影响可能是由基线差异解释的,因为作者未报告这一点。
几乎没有证据表明HRT或ERT对健康绝经后女性的整体认知功能有影响。对于相对年轻(47岁)的手术绝经女性,每月肌肉注射10毫克E2共3个月,对某些言语记忆功能(即时回忆)、抽象推理测试以及速度和准确性测试有影响。这些影响来自单个研究小组的小型研究。年龄较大(> 69岁)、绝经类型(手术或自然绝经)、治疗类型(有或无孕激素的E2)、给药方式(经皮、口服或肌肉注射)、剂量和疗程(> 3个月)等因素是否会将对记忆功能的影响改变到临床相关水平,仍有待确定。此外,绝经症状的有无是否会改变治疗效果,应进行更详细的研究。美国、英国和加拿大目前正在进行的纵向RCT到2010年将能够检验这些假设。