Yaffe K, Sawaya G, Lieberburg I, Grady D
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco 94121, USA.
JAMA. 1998 Mar 4;279(9):688-95. doi: 10.1001/jama.279.9.688.
Several studies have suggested that estrogen replacement therapy in postmenopausal women improves cognition, prevents development of dementia, and improves the severity of dementia, while other studies have not found a benefit of estrogen use.
To determine whether postmenopausal estrogen therapy improves cognition, prevents development of dementia, or improves dementia severity.
We performed a literature search of studies published from January 1966 through June 1997, using MEDLINE, manually searched bibliographies of articles identified, and consulted experts.
Studies that evaluated biological mechanisms of estrogen's effect on the central nervous system and studies that addressed the effect of estrogen on cognitive function or on dementia.
We reviewed studies for methods, sources of bias, and outcomes and performed a meta-analysis of the 10 studies of postmenopausal estrogen use and risk of dementia using standard meta-analytic methods.
Biochemical and neurophysiologic studies suggest several mechanisms by which estrogen may affect cognition: promotion of cholinergic and serotonergic activity in specific brain regions, maintenance of neural circuitry, favorable lipoprotein alterations, and prevention of cerebral ischemia. Five observational studies and 8 trials have addressed the effect of estrogen on cognitive function in nondemented postmenopausal women. Cognition seems to improve in perimenopausal women, possibly because menopausal symptoms improve, but there is no clear benefit in asymptomatic women. Ten observational studies have measured the effect of postmenopausal estrogen use on risk of developing dementia. Meta-analysis of these studies suggests a 29% decreased risk of developing dementia among estrogen users, but the findings of the studies are heterogeneous. Four trials of estrogen therapy in women with Alzheimer disease have been conducted and have had primarily positive results, but most have been small, of short duration, non-randomized, and uncontrolled.
There are plausible biological mechanisms by which estrogen might lead to improved cognition, reduced risk for dementia, or improvement in the severity of dementia. Studies conducted in women, however, have substantial methodologic problems and have produced conflicting results. Large placebo-controlled trials are required to address estrogen's role in prevention and treatment of Alzheimer disease and other dementias. Given the known risks of estrogen therapy, we do not recommend estrogen for the prevention or treatment of Alzheimer disease or other dementias until adequate trials have been completed.
多项研究表明,绝经后女性进行雌激素替代疗法可改善认知功能、预防痴呆症的发生并减轻痴呆症的严重程度,而其他研究则未发现使用雌激素有此益处。
确定绝经后雌激素疗法是否能改善认知功能、预防痴呆症的发生或减轻痴呆症的严重程度。
我们使用MEDLINE对1966年1月至1997年6月发表的研究进行了文献检索,人工检索了所识别文章的参考文献,并咨询了专家。
评估雌激素对中枢神经系统影响的生物学机制的研究以及探讨雌激素对认知功能或痴呆症影响的研究。
我们审查了各项研究的方法、偏倚来源和结果,并使用标准的荟萃分析方法对10项关于绝经后使用雌激素与痴呆症风险的研究进行了荟萃分析。
生化和神经生理学研究表明,雌激素可能通过多种机制影响认知:促进特定脑区的胆碱能和5-羟色胺能活性、维持神经回路、改善脂蛋白、预防脑缺血。五项观察性研究和八项试验探讨了雌激素对未患痴呆症的绝经后女性认知功能的影响。围绝经期女性的认知功能似乎有所改善,可能是因为更年期症状得到改善,但无症状女性未明确显示出益处。十项观察性研究测量了绝经后使用雌激素对患痴呆症风险的影响。对这些研究的荟萃分析表明,使用雌激素的女性患痴呆症的风险降低了29%,但研究结果存在异质性。已对患有阿尔茨海默病的女性进行了四项雌激素疗法试验,结果大多为阳性,但大多数试验规模较小、持续时间短、未随机分组且未设对照。
雌激素可能通过合理的生物学机制改善认知、降低患痴呆症的风险或减轻痴呆症的严重程度。然而,在女性中进行的研究存在重大方法学问题,结果相互矛盾。需要进行大规模的安慰剂对照试验,以确定雌激素在预防和治疗阿尔茨海默病及其他痴呆症中的作用。鉴于雌激素疗法已知的风险,在完成充分的试验之前,我们不建议使用雌激素来预防或治疗阿尔茨海默病或其他痴呆症。