Hormone therapy for menopause gets green light from FDA
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Hormone therapy for menopause gets green light from FDA

The FDA is initiating removal of the boxed warnings following a comprehensive review of the scientific literature

  • By IPP Bureau | November 14, 2025

In a historic move poised to reshape women’s health care, the US Department of Health and Human Services announced today that the FDA will remove decades-old “black box” warnings from hormone replacement therapy (HRT) products for menopause.

The action, hailed as a return to evidence-based medicine, comes after years of fear and misinformation surrounding HRT and opens the door for millions of women to access treatments that can significantly improve quality of life during and after menopause.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and FDA Commissioner Marty Makary made the announcement at a press conference at HHS recently, with more than 200 people in attendance, including Second Lady of the United States Usha Vance and Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer.

Women have used HRT products for decades to relieve menopausal symptoms. However, their use plummeted in the early 2000s when the FDA applied boxed warnings following a Women’s Health Initiative study that found a statistically non-significant increase in the risk of breast cancer diagnosis. The average age of women in the study was 63 years — over a decade past the average age of a woman experiencing menopause — and study participants were given a hormone formulation no longer in common use.

The FDA is initiating removal of the boxed warnings following a comprehensive review of the scientific literature, an expert panel in July, and a public comment period. The agency is working with companies to update language in product labeling to remove references to risks of cardiovascular disease, breast cancer, and probable dementia. The FDA is not seeking to remove the boxed warning for endometrial cancer for systemic estrogen-alone products.

“Today, we are standing up for every woman who has symptoms of menopause and is looking to know her options and receive potentially life-changing treatment,” said Secretary Kennedy. “For more than two decades, bad science and bureaucratic inertia have resulted in women and physicians having an incomplete view of HRT. We are returning to evidence-based medicine and giving women control over their health again.”

“Tragically, tens of millions of women have been denied the life-changing and long-term health benefits of hormone replacement therapy because of a medical dogma rooted in a distortion of risk,” said FDA Commissioner Makary. “For too long, issues of women’s health have been underrecognized. Women and their physicians should make decisions based on data, not fear.”

As women go through menopause, the ovaries produce less estrogen and progesterone. FDA-approved HRT containing estrogen and progesterone (or estrogen alone as indicated for postmenopausal women without a uterus) can restore these declining hormones, and relieve symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disturbances, and bone loss.

“Estrogen is a key hormone for women's health. Every single part of a woman's body depends on estrogen to operate at its best—including the brain, bones, heart, and muscles,” said Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health Director Alicia Jackson. “The removal of the black box warning, based on the best science and data, is an incredible step forward to empower millions of women to live longer, healthier lives.”

“Someday, science will help us slow or reverse all the damage of aging,” said Health and Human Services Deputy Secretary Jim O’Neill. "A good safe way to address estrogen depletion already exists, and today Secretary Kennedy and Commissioner Makary are removing a barrier on this treatment. Many more women can reduce their risk of fracture, heart disease, and immune and cognitive decline while extending their vigor.”

 

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