
Hormone Replacement Therapy for Women in Perimenopause and Menopause: What You Need to Know
Hormone Replacement Therapy for Women in Perimenopause and Menopause: What You Need to Know

Perimenopause and menopause are natural stages of life—but for many women, the symptoms can feel anything but “normal.” Hot flashes that disrupt sleep, mood changes that affect relationships, brain fog that interferes with work, and vaginal discomfort that impacts intimacy are all common experiences during this transition.
The good news? Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)—also known as Menopausal Hormone Therapy (MHT)—remains the most effective, evidence-based treatment for many of these symptoms when used appropriately and under the guidance of a qualified specialist.
Important note: This article is for education only and does not replace personalized medical care. The right plan depends on your symptoms, medical history, and risk factors.
Understanding Perimenopause and Menopause
What’s the difference?
Perimenopause is the transition phase leading up to menopause. It can last several years and is often marked by irregular periods, hormonal fluctuations, and the onset of symptoms like hot flashes and sleep disturbances.
Menopause is officially diagnosed after 12 consecutive months without a menstrual period, not explained by other medical conditions.
When does it happen?
Most women experience menopause between ages 45 and 55, with the median age around 51 years in the United States. Because many women will live 30 years or more after menopause, managing symptoms and long-term health becomes critically important—not just for comfort, but for overall quality of life.
How Common—and Serious—Are Menopause Symptoms?
Menopause symptoms are not rare or trivial:
Around 80% of women experience symptoms related to menopause;
About 30% report severe symptoms that significantly disrupt daily life;
Up to 80% experience hot flashes or night sweats at some point;
Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause (GSM)—including vaginal dryness, painful sex, and urinary symptoms—affects 27% to 84% of postmenopausal women.
These symptoms don’t just affect comfort—they affect productivity, mental health, relationships, and confidence. In the U.S. alone, menopause-related symptoms are associated with billions of dollars in lost productivity each year.
What Is Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)?
HRT involves replacing hormones—primarily estrogen, and sometimes progesterone—that decline during perimenopause and menopause.
The two main categories
Systemic hormone therapy
Treats whole-body symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disruption, and bone loss;
Delivered via pellets, pills, patches, gels, sprays, or injections.
Local (vaginal) therapy
Targets vaginal and urinary symptoms;
Minimal absorption into the bloodstream;
Comes as creams, tablets, or rings.
This distinction is crucial because not all symptoms require systemic hormones, and treatment should always be tailored to your specific concerns.
Why Progesterone Matters
If you still have a uterus and are using systemic estrogen, you generally must also use progesterone (or an approved alternative).
Why? Because unopposed estrogen increases the risk of endometrial (uterine) cancer. Adding progesterone protects the uterine lining and makes therapy significantly safer.
Women who have had a hysterectomy may be candidates for estrogen-only therapy.
Forms and Routes of Hormone Therapy
HRT is not “one-size-fits-all.” Options include:
Pellets
Oral tablets
Transdermal patches
Gels or sprays
Vaginal estrogen
Selective estrogen complexes
Injectable estrogen (specialist-directed)
Why route matters
Transdermal estrogen (patches, gels) avoids first-pass liver metabolism and has been associated in observational studies with lower blood clot risk compared to oral estrogen—an important consideration for many women.
Benefits of Hormone Therapy: What the Evidence Shows
Symptom relief
Hormone therapy reduces hot flashes by about 75% and significantly decreases symptom severity. No other treatment has demonstrated comparable effectiveness for vasomotor symptoms.
Bone health
HRT helps prevent bone loss and reduces fracture risk in appropriately selected women, especially when started earlier in the menopausal transition.
Quality of life
Better sleep, improved mood, enhanced sexual comfort, and improved daily functioning are consistently reported benefits when therapy is well matched to the patient.
Understanding the Risks—Without Fear
Modern menopause care focuses on individualized risk assessment, not blanket avoidance.
Breast cancer
Certain combined estrogen-progestin regimens are associated with a small increase in breast cancer risk;
Estrogen-only therapy (in women without a uterus) showed lower breast cancer incidence in long-term follow-up;
The absolute increased risk for common combined regimens is less than 1 additional case per 1,000 women per year.
Blood clots and stroke
Risk depends on age, timing, dose, and route;
Women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause generally have low absolute risk;
Transdermal estrogen may offer a safer profile for some women.
Who Should Not Use Systemic HRT?
Systemic hormone therapy is usually avoided in women with:
Unexplained vaginal bleeding;
Active or prior estrogen-sensitive cancers;
History of blood clots, stroke, or heart attack;
Severe liver disease.
This is where specialist evaluation is essential.
Why Seeing a Hormone Specialist Matters
Menopause symptoms can overlap with thyroid disease, mood disorders, sleep apnea, anemia, and cardiometabolic changes. Unfortunately, many women are dismissed or told symptoms are “just aging.”
The World Health Organization and major menopause societies emphasize the need for trained clinicians who understand hormone therapy, risk stratification, and long-term monitoring .
A menopause-focused provider will:
Individualize dose and route;
Explain absolute vs relative risk clearly;
Monitor symptoms and side effects;
Adjust treatment as your body changes.
At Climax Aesthetic Surgery, women seeking hormone care benefit from a thoughtful, evidence-based approach under the guidance of Dr. Mary Ojo-Carons, with a strong emphasis on safety, education, and long-term wellness.
Final Thoughts
Perimenopause and menopause are not conditions to “power through.” If symptoms are affecting your sleep, mood, relationships, or sense of self, you deserve informed, compassionate care.
Hormone replacement therapy—when properly prescribed and monitored—can be life-changing. The key is working with a specialist who understands both the science and the individual woman behind the symptoms.
If you’re ready to explore your options, consider scheduling a consultation with a provider experienced in menopause and hormone therapy to discuss what approach is right for you.
