Lapeer · Rochester Hills · Telehealth

Nonhormonal
Menopause
Options
Effective Treatments for Menopause Symptoms Without Hormone Therapy

For women who cannot use hormone therapy or who prefer to avoid it, a meaningful range of non-hormonal options exists for managing menopause symptoms. These are not placebo-level interventions — several are FDA-approved specifically for vasomotor symptoms and provide clinically meaningful improvement that changes quality of life. Understanding what is available is the starting point for finding the right approach.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG provides individualized non-hormonal menopause management at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices, with a clear-eyed assessment of what the evidence shows for each option.

Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted
Serving Lapeer County & Oakland County

Menopause Management Without Hormone Therapy — What Is Actually Available

Hormone therapy is the most effective treatment for most menopausal symptoms, but it is not the only effective treatment — and it is not appropriate for every woman. Women with a history of hormone-sensitive breast cancer, recent cardiovascular events, active blood clots, or other contraindications to systemic estrogen require a management approach that achieves meaningful symptom relief without hormone use. Women who have effective options available but prefer to avoid hormones for personal reasons also deserve a comprehensive, evidence-based discussion of what non-hormonal management can achieve.

The non-hormonal treatment landscape for menopause has expanded meaningfully in recent years. The approval of fezolinetant (Veozah) in 2023 introduced the first specifically developed non-hormonal agent targeting the neurokinin B pathway that drives hot flashes — a mechanism distinct from the earlier repurposed options. A range of other prescription agents provides vasomotor relief through different mechanisms. Local non-hormonal options address genitourinary symptoms. And evidence-based behavioral approaches contribute meaningfully when integrated with pharmacologic treatment.

This page provides a clear, honest overview of what non-hormonal management can and cannot achieve — so that women who need or prefer this approach can make informed decisions about the options available to them.

Prescription Non-Hormonal Options for Vasomotor Symptoms

The following prescription agents provide clinically meaningful reduction in hot flash frequency and severity without hormonal mechanisms. They are appropriate for women who are not candidates for hormone therapy or who prefer non-hormonal management.

Fezolinetant (Veozah) — The Newest and Most Specifically Targeted Option

Fezolinetant is a neurokinin 3 (NK3) receptor antagonist approved by the FDA in 2023 specifically for moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms of menopause. It targets the KNDy neurons in the hypothalamus that are the primary driver of vasomotor symptoms, reducing hot flash frequency and severity through a mechanism that is entirely distinct from hormonal approaches. Clinical trials demonstrated reduction in hot flash frequency of approximately 50 to 60 percent over placebo. Fezolinetant is taken daily and is generally well-tolerated. It is the most specifically developed non-hormonal option for vasomotor symptoms and represents a meaningful advance in this therapeutic area.

Paroxetine (Brisdelle) — The Only FDA-Approved SSRI for Vasomotor Symptoms

Paroxetine at low dose (7.5 mg, marketed as Brisdelle) is the only SSRI with FDA approval specifically for vasomotor symptoms of menopause. It reduces hot flash frequency by approximately 35 to 50 percent versus placebo. It also provides mood and anxiety benefit, making it particularly useful for women with concurrent perimenopausal mood symptoms alongside vasomotor complaints. Standard antidepressant doses of paroxetine also provide vasomotor benefit but with more side effect burden. Paroxetine should not be used by women taking tamoxifen for breast cancer because of drug interaction that reduces tamoxifen efficacy.

Venlafaxine (Effexor) — Off-Label but Well-Evidenced

Venlafaxine, an SNRI antidepressant, is one of the most commonly used non-hormonal agents for vasomotor symptoms despite not carrying FDA approval specifically for this indication. Its dual serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibition provides vasomotor benefit alongside mood and anxiety effects. It is particularly useful for women with concurrent anxiety or depression alongside vasomotor symptoms, and it is the SNRI of choice for breast cancer patients on tamoxifen because it does not significantly inhibit the CYP2D6 enzyme that tamoxifen requires for activation.

Gabapentin — Particularly Effective for Nocturnal Symptoms

Gabapentin, originally developed as an anticonvulsant, reduces hot flash frequency and severity through central nervous system mechanisms distinct from serotonergic pathways. It is particularly effective for nocturnal hot flashes and night sweats — making it a useful option for women whose primary symptom burden is sleep disruption from night sweats rather than daytime vasomotor symptoms. Sedation is a common side effect that can be leveraged as a sleep benefit when gabapentin is dosed primarily at bedtime.

Oxybutynin — A Newer Non-Hormonal Vasomotor Option

Oxybutynin, an anticholinergic agent used for overactive bladder, has demonstrated vasomotor symptom benefit in clinical trials and is increasingly used off-label for hot flashes. It provides meaningful reduction in hot flash frequency and severity with a different side effect profile than serotonergic agents. Anticholinergic side effects — including dry mouth and constipation — are considerations, particularly in older women where anticholinergic burden accumulation is a clinical concern.

Clonidine — Modest Benefit, Primarily for Selected Patients

Clonidine, an alpha-2 agonist, provides modest hot flash reduction and is occasionally used in women who cannot tolerate other options. Its efficacy is less consistent than the agents above and its side effect profile — including hypotension, dry mouth, and sedation — limits its use. It may have a role for women with concurrent hypertension where a dual benefit is possible.

Setting Realistic Expectations for Non-Hormonal Management

Non-hormonal options are genuinely effective but are generally less effective than hormone therapy for vasomotor symptoms. Understanding what each option realistically achieves helps guide the management decision:

  • Hormone therapy reduces hot flashes by 80-90% for most candidates
  • Fezolinetant reduces hot flashes by approximately 50-60% vs. placebo
  • SSRIs/SNRIs reduce hot flashes by approximately 35-50% vs. placebo
  • Non-hormonal options do not address bone density loss or genitourinary symptoms as effectively as estrogen
For women with contraindications to hormone therapy, non-hormonal options provide meaningful and clinically significant relief. For women choosing between hormonal and non-hormonal approaches, the comparison above is part of an informed discussion.
Lapeer: (810) 969-4670  ·  Rochester Hills: (248) 923-3522
Non-Hormonal Options for Genitourinary and Other Menopause Symptoms

Non-hormonal management of genitourinary symptoms, mood changes, and bone health requires different approaches than vasomotor management. The following covers the most clinically relevant non-hormonal options for these domains.

Genitourinary Symptoms — Ospemifene and Non-Estrogen Options

For vaginal dryness and painful intercourse, the non-hormonal prescription options include ospemifene (Osphena) — an oral selective estrogen receptor modulator that is approved for dyspareunia from GSM and has tissue-selective estrogen-like effects on vaginal tissue without systemic estrogen exposure. Prasterone (Intrarosa), a vaginal DHEA product, also addresses GSM without systemic estrogen. Over-the-counter vaginal moisturizers used regularly reduce vaginal pH and maintain moisture with no hormonal activity. These options provide meaningful improvement for genitourinary symptoms in women who cannot or prefer not to use local vaginal estrogen.

Bone Health — Non-Estrogen Pharmacologic Options

For women who cannot take hormone therapy for bone protection, bisphosphonates (alendronate, risedronate, ibandronate, zoledronic acid) are the first-line pharmacologic agents for osteoporosis prevention and treatment. They reduce fracture risk significantly and are appropriate for women with osteoporosis or high-risk osteopenia. Denosumab, raloxifene, and in severe cases anabolic agents are additional options matched to specific clinical circumstances. The foundational non-pharmacologic approach — calcium, vitamin D, and weight-bearing exercise — is recommended for all postmenopausal women.

Behavioral Approaches — What the Evidence Supports

Cognitive-behavioral therapy for menopause (CBT-M) has demonstrated efficacy for both vasomotor symptoms and associated mood changes in clinical trials, with effect sizes that are meaningful when combined with other management approaches. Mindfulness-based stress reduction reduces hot flash-related distress. Weight loss in women with obesity reduces vasomotor symptom severity. Trigger reduction — avoiding caffeine, alcohol, spicy foods, and warm environments — provides adjunctive benefit. These behavioral approaches are most effective as complements to pharmacologic management rather than as sole interventions for moderate to severe symptoms.

Supplements — What the Evidence Shows

Botanical supplements including black cohosh, phytoestrogens (soy isoflavones, red clover), evening primrose oil, and others are widely used by menopausal women. The evidence for most of them is inconsistent — some studies show modest benefit, others show no effect beyond placebo. They are not regulated for safety or efficacy in the way prescription medications are. For women with mild symptoms who prefer a non-prescription approach, the available evidence on specific supplements is part of the counseling conversation. For women with moderate to severe symptoms, supplements are unlikely to provide sufficient relief and are not a substitute for evidence-based pharmacologic options.

What Non-Hormonal Menopause Management Looks Like at Lapeer Women’s Health

Non-hormonal menopause management at Lapeer Women’s Health is led by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG — with individualized selection of the most appropriate agents based on symptom profile, health history, and contraindications.

Symptom Profile and Health History

The specific combination of symptoms driving the management need — hot flashes, sleep disruption, mood changes, vaginal dryness — along with the health history considerations that make hormone therapy unavailable or undesired, guides the selection of non-hormonal agents. Different symptom profiles point toward different first-line options.

First-Line Agent Selection and Titration

Dr. Andrei selects the most appropriate first-line non-hormonal agent based on the clinical picture, discusses what to expect in terms of benefit and side effects, and establishes a follow-up timeline to assess response and adjust if needed. No treatment recommendation is made without a clear explanation of what the option can realistically achieve.

Comprehensive Coverage of the Full Symptom Burden

Non-hormonal management at Lapeer Women’s Health addresses the full symptom burden — not just vasomotor symptoms in isolation. Genitourinary symptoms, mood changes, sleep disruption, and bone health considerations are each addressed as part of a comprehensive plan rather than as an afterthought to the primary vasomotor management.

Not Being a Candidate for Hormone Therapy Is Not the Same as Having No Options

For women who have been told they cannot use hormone therapy — because of breast cancer history, cardiovascular concerns, or other contraindications — the expanded non-hormonal treatment landscape of 2026 looks meaningfully different than it did even five years ago. The approval of fezolinetant specifically for vasomotor symptoms, combined with the established options from SSRIs, SNRIs, and gabapentin, means that most women can achieve meaningful symptom reduction without hormones.

The right combination of non-hormonal agents for your specific symptom profile, health history, and preferences is the product of an individualized clinical discussion — not a generic handout. Dr. Ramona D. Andrei and the team at Lapeer Women’s Health are here for that discussion — at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices, without a referral required.

Frequently Asked Questions About
Nonhormonal Menopause Options
Among current options, fezolinetant (Veozah) is the most specifically targeted non-hormonal agent, with FDA approval specifically for vasomotor symptoms and clinical trial data showing approximately 50 to 60 percent reduction in hot flash frequency versus placebo. For women who also have mood or anxiety symptoms, the SSRIs and SNRIs — particularly venlafaxine and paroxetine — provide both vasomotor and mood benefit simultaneously. For women with predominant nocturnal symptoms, gabapentin taken at bedtime is particularly useful. The most effective choice for any individual depends on her specific symptom profile and health history, and is part of the individualized management discussion.
Yes — and non-hormonal management is the primary approach for most women with hormone-sensitive breast cancer. Several agents have been specifically studied in this population. Venlafaxine is the SNRI of choice for breast cancer patients on tamoxifen because it does not significantly inhibit the CYP2D6 enzyme tamoxifen requires. Fezolinetant is non-hormonal and has been studied in women with a history of breast cancer. Gabapentin is also appropriate in this population. Paroxetine should be avoided in women taking tamoxifen. Local vaginal moisturizers and ospemifene are options for genitourinary symptoms, though ospemifene’s use in women with hormone-sensitive breast cancer requires discussion with oncology. The specific management plan is individualized in coordination with the patient’s oncology team.
Not necessarily. SSRIs and SNRIs are one category of non-hormonal option, but they are not the only one. Fezolinetant provides vasomotor symptom management through a completely different mechanism and does not have antidepressant activity. Gabapentin addresses hot flashes through central nervous system modulation that is also distinct from antidepressant mechanisms. The choice of non-hormonal agent depends on your specific symptom picture — if mood and anxiety are also concerns alongside vasomotor symptoms, an SNRI may provide dual benefit. If vasomotor symptoms are the primary concern without significant mood component, fezolinetant or gabapentin may be more appropriate first-line options.
Yes. Ospemifene (Osphena) is an oral option that provides tissue-selective estrogen-like effects on vaginal tissue without systemic estrogen, and is FDA-approved specifically for dyspareunia from GSM. Prasterone (Intrarosa), a vaginal DHEA suppository, is another local non-estrogen option for vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. Over-the-counter vaginal moisturizers used regularly reduce vaginal pH and maintain vaginal moisture. These options are less potent than local vaginal estrogen for tissue restoration but provide meaningful improvement for many women and are appropriate for those who prefer to avoid hormones entirely.
Phytoestrogens — plant compounds with weak estrogen-like activity including soy isoflavones and red clover — are widely used but the clinical evidence for their efficacy is inconsistent. Some randomized trials show modest hot flash reduction, others show effects no greater than placebo. The variation in results may partly reflect differences in gut microbiome composition that determines whether phytoestrogens are converted to more active forms. They are generally safe for most women at typical dietary and supplemental doses, and for women with mild symptoms who prefer non-prescription management, a trial is reasonable. For moderate to severe symptoms, phytoestrogens are not likely to provide sufficient relief and are not a substitute for the more effective prescription options available.
Yes. Non-hormonal menopause management consultations are available at both the Lapeer office (1245 N Main St, Lapeer, MI — (810) 969-4670) and the Rochester Hills office (2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2, Rochester Hills, MI — (248) 923-3522). No referral is required to schedule.
Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted  ·  Convenient locations in Lapeer & Rochester Hills
Not a Candidate for Hormone Therapy? Effective Options Still Exist.

Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health provides individualized non-hormonal menopause management at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices — with a full discussion of what the evidence shows for each option. No referral required.

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The information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Content reviewed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD PhD FACOG.

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Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307

Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.