The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor escitalopram rapidly reduces the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women, according to a report in the Jan. 19 issue of JAMA.
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Escitalopram appears to provide a nonhormonal option for the management of menopausal hot flashes.
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In a multicenter, randomized clinical trial comparing 10 or 20 mg per day of escitalopram with placebo, the drug’s benefit "was only modestly less than that reported in a meta-analysis of estrogen therapy," said Ellen W. Freeman, Ph.D., of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and her associates.
"Our findings suggest that among healthy women, 10 to 20 mg/day of escitalopram provides a nonhormonal, off-label option that is effective and well tolerated in the management of menopausal hot flashes," they said.
The double-blind trial involved 205 women who were in the menopausal transition, were postmenopausal, or had undergone hysterectomy with one or both ovaries intact. A total of 95 of the women self-reported as African American, 102 as white, and 8 as other. These subjects recorded at least 28 hot flashes or night sweats per week in a daily diary for 3 weeks before enrollment, or hot flashes or night sweats rated as bothersome or severe 4 or more days per week.
The women were randomly assigned to receive oral escitalopram (10 mg) or a matching placebo for 8 weeks. If they did not show a reduction in hot flash frequency or at least a 50% reduction in hot flash severity at 4 weeks, the dose was escalated to 20 mg of active drug or placebo.
At baseline, the mean frequency of hot flashes was 9.78 per day. After 8 weeks, that decreased by nearly half, to 5.26 per day in women taking escitalopram. This reduction was significantly greater than the 33% decrease to 6.43 hot flashes per day in the placebo group.
A total of 55% of women receiving active drug showed a decline of at least 50% in hot flash frequency, compared with 36% of women receiving placebo. Similarly, 19% of the escitalopram group showed a decline of at least 75% in hot flash frequency, compared with only 9% of the placebo group.
Data from the study subjects’ daily diaries showed that every week for the duration of the study, the frequency of hot flashes was significantly decreased in the escitalopram group, compared with the placebo group, Dr. Freeman and her colleagues said (JAMA 2010;305:267-74).
Escitalopram also diminished the severity of hot flashes by 24%, compared with a decrease of 14% with placebo. A total of 70% of women taking the active drug reported satisfaction with treatment, compared with 43% of those taking placebo.
These benefits were consistent across all subgroups of subjects, regardless of the women’s race, menopausal status, depression scores, or anxiety scores.
Treatment response was rapid, with women in the escitalopram group showing significant improvement in hot flash frequency and severity within 1 week of starting treatment, the investigators noted.
The study subjects were followed up about 3 weeks after discontinuing their study medication. Hot flash frequency had rebounded by a significantly greater amount in the escitalopram group (7.18 hot flashes per day) than in the placebo group (6.65 hot flashes per day), as had the severity of hot flashes.