Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0152030 (skin irritation)
2,146 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

166 postmenopausal patients, aged 45-65 years at baseline, with moderate to severe climacteric symptoms were randomly allocated to an open-label, multi-center study which compared the efficacy, safety and acceptance of a transdermal 17 beta-estradiol matrix patch with an oral form of estrogen replacement therapy. In a cyclic sequential regimen, the transdermal system delivered 0.05 mg of estradiol/day. Oral dosages of conjugated equine estrogens were 0.625 mg/day. An oral progestin was also given for 11 days in each cycle for each group. A statistically significant reduction compared to baseline in the primary efficacy parameter, the mean number of hot flashes, occurred with a decrease in each group from 6 per day at baseline to 1 per day at 12 weeks; there was no statistically significant difference between the two groups. The incidence and severity of other postmenopausal symptoms, particularly sweating, difficulty in concentration and palpitations were reduced to a greater extent in the patch group without revealing a significant inter-group difference in the total symptom score. There were also no statistically significant differences in the mean serum estradiol and FSH concentrations between the two treatment groups after 12 weeks of therapy. A similar number of adverse events was observed in both groups. The most frequent adverse events were breast pain and under oral estrogen therapy, gastrointestinal complaints and weight increase. Skin irritation or dermatitis occurred infrequently in the patch group. In summary, the matrix patch represents at least as effective a therapy for postmenopausal symptoms as a standard oral estrogen.
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PMID:[Comparison of transdermal with oral hormone substitution: a multicenter study with a new matrix patch]. 749 35

This article describes a novel transdermal estradiol spray developed for the treatment of menopausal vasomotor instability. The spray delivers estradiol directly into the subcutaneous microcirculation achieving the advantages of estradiol patches, creams and gels but with minimal skin reaction, patient inconvenience or cosmetic shortcomings associated with transdermal methods. In the one published Phase III clinical trial, postmenopausal women (n = 454) with eight or more moderate-to-severe hot flashes per day applied each morning, one, two or three estradiol 90 microl sprays (each containing estradiol 1.53 mg) versus matching placebo sprays. There was a significant decrease in hot flash frequency and intensity at weeks 4 and 12 compared with corresponding placebo groups (p < 0.010). The systemic estradiol delivery rates at week 12 were approximately 0.021, 0.029 and 0.040 mg/day for the 1-, 2- and 3-spray doses, respectively. There were common adverse events similar to those previously reported with transdermal estradiol, except for skin irritation, which was very low. The spray is a well-tolerated, cosmetically attractive and convenient method of delivering low-dose, transdermal estradiol.
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PMID:Low-dose estradiol spray: a novel treatment for vasomotor instability in postmenopausal women. 1910 36