Abstract | BACKGROUND: METHODS: Women aged 18-54 years with a confirmed diagnosis of heavy menstrual bleeding and no recognizable pathology were recruited across nine European countries (the Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Hungary, The Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, UK, and Ukraine) and Australia. The women were randomized to receive either E(2)V/DNG (n = 149) or placebo (n = 82) for seven treatment cycles (196 days). The outcomes assessed included work productivity (ie, productivity while at work) and activities of daily living, measured on a Likert scale from 0 to 10 (with higher values denoting higher impairment levels) at baseline and at the end of the third and seventh cycles (days 84 and 196). The equivalent monetary value associated with the changes in work productivity and activities of daily living was also calculated. RESULTS: Across all the countries, greater improvements from baseline to the end of treatment were observed with E(2)V/DNG treatment than placebo in work productivity (46.0% versus 15.1%) and activities of daily living (55.6% versus 30.8%). In 2008, savings associated with improvements in work productivity and activities of daily living due to E(2)V/DNG treatment (net of placebo improvement) were estimated to be between US$22-62 and US$18-56 per month (in purchasing power parity of US$), respectively. CONCLUSION:
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Authors | Radoslaw Wasiak, Anna Filonenko, David J Vanness, Kim U Wittrup-Jensen, Donald E Stull, Steven Siak, Ian Fraser |
Journal | International journal of women's health
(Int J Womens Health)
Vol. 4
Pg. 271-8
( 2012)
ISSN: 1179-1411 [Electronic] New Zealand |
PMID | 22927764
(Publication Type: Journal Article)
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