Affiliation:
1. Holland Hospital, Holland, MI
2. Astellas Pharma, Inc., Northbrook, IL
3. Analysis Group, Inc., Boston, MA.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Objective
To assess treatment satisfaction, unmet treatment needs, and new vasomotor symptom (VMS) treatment expectations among women with moderate to severe VMS and physicians treating women with VMS.
Methods
This noninterventional, nonrandomized survey included qualitative interviews and quantitative surveys of women and physicians in the US. Participating women had moderate to severe VMS in the past year and received ≥1 hormone therapy (HT), non-HT, or over-the-counter (OTC) treatment for VMS in the past 3 months. Participating physicians were obstetrician-gynecologists (OB-GYNs) and primary care physicians (PCPs) who treated ≥15 women with VMS in the past 3 months. Two online survey questionnaires were developed using insights from literature, qualitative interviews, and clinical experts. Menopause Symptoms Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (MS-TSQ) measured treatment satisfaction. Results were summarized descriptively.
Results
Questionnaires were completed by 401 women with VMS and 207 physicians treating VMS. Among women, mean total MS-TSQ score ranges were 62.8-67.3 for HT, 59.8-69.7 for non-HT, and 58.0-64.9 for OTC treatments. Among physicians, mean total MS-TSQ scores were considerably higher for HT than for non-HT and OTC treatments (HT: 73.4-75.6; non-HT: 55.6-62.1; OTC: 49.2-54.7). Women reported “lack of effectiveness” (41.2%), and physicians reported “long-term safety concerns” (56.5%) as main features that do not meet their current treatment expectations. The majority of women and physicians would consider trying a new non-HT treatment for VMS (75.8 and 75.9%, respectively).
Conclusions
Treatment satisfaction and new treatment expectations were similar but with some differences between women and physicians; the need for additional treatments for VMS was identified.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference34 articles.
1. A review of hormone and non-hormonal therapy options for the treatment of menopause;Int J Womens Health,2023
2. Relationships between intensity, duration, cumulative dose, and timing of smoking with age at menopause: a pooled analysis of individual data from 17 observational studies;PLoS Med,2018
3. The timing of the age at which natural menopause occurs;Obstet Gynecol Clin North Am,2011
4. The menopause transition: signs, symptoms, and management options;J Clin Endocrinol Metab,2021
5. Executive summary of the Stages of Reproductive Aging Workshop +10: addressing the unfinished agenda of staging reproductive aging;Menopause,2012