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Will New Patch Boost Women's Sex Drives?
By Frances Cerra Whittelsey, Women's eNews Posted on September 11, 2007, Printed on September 12, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/62163/
The arrival on the European market of a female-targeted testosterone
patch to treat low sex desire caused by menopause is raising new
questions in the United States about why there is no equivalent product
on pharmacy shelves. Opponents say that there is good reason why, and
the patch is not ready for U.S. approval. The
European Medicines Agency -- the European Union's equivalent of the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration -- approved sales of Procter and
Gamble's Intrinsa testosterone patch last year, and it went on sale
this spring. The patch is intended for women distressed by low sexual
desire after surgical removal of their ovaries and uterus. Three
years ago, the FDA turned down Procter and Gamble's application for
U.S. approval of Intrinsa because of inadequate safety data while also
concluding that it was effective. Instead U.S. women who want
testosterone rely on products for men or creams specially mixed by
pharmacists. Cincinnati-based Procter and Gamble estimates that
15 to 20 percent of prescriptions written for men's testosterone
products are used by women. About 621,000 U.S. women a year
undergo hysterectomies, more than any other country, most often to
remove uterine fibroids (benign tumors) or because of endometriosis,
which causes tissue to grow outside the uterine lining. Of U.S. women
alive today, 22 million have undergone a hysterectomy and about 75
percent lost their ovaries along with their wombs. Removal of the
ovaries means plunging immediately into menopause. These women, plus
those in natural menopause, represent a potential testosterone market
of billions of dollars. By age 60, 1 in 3 U.S. women will have had a
hysterectomy. Testosterone in women, as in men, stimulates sexual
desire and affects the level of sexual pleasure besides contributing to
muscle and bone mass and general good health. Half a woman's
testosterone is lost if her ovaries are removed (the other half is
produced by the adrenal glands); natural menopause gradually decreases
testosterone levels by one-third. Estrogen supplements suppress the
effects of the remaining testosterone, a side effect that has long been
downplayed. 'Medicalization of Menopause' The testosterone patch is now for sale in England, Germany, France and Italy, but Leonore
Tiefer, a critic of what she calls the "medicalization of sexual desire
and menopause" opposes the product. She and other critics believe that
the six-month clinical trials conducted by Procter and Gamble are
"inadequate to assess the risks of extended" treatment. A sex
therapist and clinical associate professor of psychiatry at New York
University, Tiefer relies on education and counseling to help women
improve their sexual desire and experiences. A member of FDA advisory
committees that recommend approval or rejection of new drugs, Tiefer
described the European approval process as less stringent than the
FDA's. Because there are no long-term safety studies, the
European drug agency has required Procter and Gamble to label Intrinsa
with a special warning to that effect, and is monitoring use of the
hormone. Testosterone supplements for women are controversial not
only because of safety questions but also because sexual desire in
women results from a complex mix of physical, social and emotional
factors. Barbara Bartlik, a psychiatrist and sex therapist at
Weill-Cornell Medical Center in New York, said she is eager to see the
patch approved for the United States. "When patients who are low in
testosterone get supplemented, there's a world of difference. They have
a spark of interest back." That, she said, can encourage women to work
on other problems, such as relationship difficulties, that might be
interfering with their sex lives. Testosterone also makes arousal
and orgasm easier to achieve and more satisfying, Bartlik said. She
prescribes a trial of testosterone cream that is compounded to order by
pharmacists. Not the 'Pink Viagra' Some media
reports have called the patch the new "pink Viagra," but the company's
studies have shown that to be a misnomer. In contrast to Viagra, which
can take effect in minutes, testosterone patch users take weeks before
experiencing an uptick in sexual interest. Two clinical trials
conducted by Procter and Gamble involving about 1,000 women over six
months also found that Intrinsa's libido effect was fairly subtle, with
users reporting one more sexual experience per week than before
enrolling in the trial. Of great interest to critics like Tiefer
is the limited quantitative sexual benefit for patch users, who
reported just one additional satisfying sexual experience a month than
those who received a placebo patch. Both groups were also helped by
discussing their sexual problems with physicians and often their
partners. Concerns over the safety of Intrinsa linger, especially
in light of the negative findings of the U.S. government's Women's
Health Initiative in regard to estrogen supplements. The women in the
testosterone trials were also receiving estrogen. Dr. Johna
Lucas, medical director for women's health at Procter and Gamble, said
the safety data submitted in the approved application to the European
Medicines Agency did not differ "materially" from the information
provided to the FDA. A spokesperson for the company declined to say whether the company has renewed its FDA application for approval. Women's health advocates are adamant that longer-term studies are needed before another hormone is approved for use. "We'd
be delighted if they (Procter and Gamble) would come back with
information about the testosterone patch that defined the risks," said
Cindy Pearson, executive director of the National Women's Health
Network, a nonprofit in Washington, D.C. "Define the risks, that's all
we're asking for." Hysterectomies Supply Drug Market Nora
Coffey, is founder of the Philadelphia-based Hysterectomy Educational
Resources and Services Foundation, which provides public education
about the surgery. She would like to limit the testosterone market by
eliminating almost all hysterectomies because removal of the uterus and
ovaries is the equivalent of male castration. She believes
hysterectomies should be performed only on women with life-threatening
problems and not for symptoms like excessive menstrual bleeding. Seventy-five
percent of 930 hysterectomized women who completed a questionnaire for
the foundation reported "diminished or absent sexual desire" and nearly
60 percent reported "diminished or absent orgasm." "So what if
you could take something (testosterone) that made you desire sex," said
Coffey, "but then what? You will not experience the uterus and pelvis
filling with blood and the uterine contractions that occur during
orgasm." In July, the Journal of Sexual Medicine published an
"add-on study" to Procter and Gamble's original clinical trials of
Intrinsa. According to the study's lead author Sheryl Kingsberg,
slightly more than half the women said the increase in sexual activity
of one experience per week was meaningful and beneficial. Eighty
percent said they would like to continue treatment. Not every patch
user responded to the treatment, and those who did not said they would
not want to continue. The study was financed by Procter and Gamble. Kingsberg
believes the FDA should approve the patch. "We seem to have a different
standard for tolerating risk-benefit for women than men, and
risk-benefit for anything related to women's sexuality," she said.
"Women's sexuality is considered almost a life-style choice rather than
a health issue. Certainly the women thrown into menopause very young
and even women who go into menopause in their 50s, they are not so
ready to give up on their sexual lives."
Author and journalist Frances Cerra Whittelsey writes about
consumer and women's issues and the environment from her home in
Huntington Bay, Long Island. She has previously written about
testosterone deficiency in the context of women's cancer treatment.
© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/62163/
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