# Medical Treatment for Endometriosis: One Size Does Not Fit All

**Authors:** Paolo Vercellini, Noemi Salmeri, Veronica Bandini, Beatrice Conca, Paola Viganò, Edgardo Somigliana, Michele Vignali

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15062408 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2026-03-21

## TL;DR

Endometriosis treatment should be personalized, with hormonal therapies tailored to individual patient needs and preferences to manage pain and improve quality of life.

## Contribution

This review emphasizes personalized treatment strategies for endometriosis, integrating clinical experience with evidence-based hormonal therapies.

## Key findings

- Hormonal therapies like progestogens and GnRH analogues are effective for managing endometriosis-related pain.
- Transdermal body-identical estradiol is recommended to reduce thrombosis risks and improve tolerability.
- Neuromodulatory drugs show limited effectiveness for endometriosis-related neuropathic pain.

## Abstract

Endometriosis is associated with nociceptive pain, as well as peripheral and central sensitization. Evidence-based treatment suggestions for controlling endometriosis should be based on the convergence of the best scientific evidence, physicians’ clinical expertise, and the values and priorities of individual patients. In this non-systematic, comprehensive narrative review, data from available randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses on hormonal treatment for symptomatic endometriosis are interpreted through the lens of clinical experience. The role of patients in defining therapeutic trade-off balances is also taken into consideration. Most symptomatic patients benefit from hormonal therapy, including first-line (progestogens and estrogen-progestogen combinations) and second-line (GnRH agonists and antagonists) medications, to relieve nociceptive pain. To reduce the risk of venous and arterial thrombosis and avoid stimulating lesions, it is preferable to use combinations containing body-identical estrogens rather than ethinyl-estradiol. The main adverse effect of first-line medications is irregular bleeding, which adversely impacts efficacy, tolerability, and adherence. If progestogens and estrogen-progestogens do not improve health-related quality of life (HRQoL), promptly stepping up to GnRH analogues combined with add-back therapy is indicated. Add-on rather than upfront combination therapy is suggested. Separating the analogues and add-back therapy allows for choosing the compounds that best suit the characteristics of individual patients. Transdermal body-identical estradiol use is proposed in combination with both progestogens and GnRH analogues. Similar satisfactory outcomes are achieved with GnRH agonists and antagonists. Evidence on the use of neuromodulatory drugs to treat neuropathic and nociplastic pain is derived from studies of other chronic pain conditions and shows limited effectiveness. The two mainstays of hormonal therapy are (i) ovariostasis and (ii) amenorrhea. “Medical treatment failure” should not be declared unless a shift from first-line to second-line medications has been undertaken whenever these conditions are not met. For severely symptomatic adolescents and young women, secondary prevention through ovariostasis and amenorrhea should be pursued promptly to improve HRQoL, halt lesion progression, and preserve reproductive potential.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** ethinyl-estradiol (PubChem CID 5991)
- **Diseases:** endometriosis (MONDO:0005133)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** chronic pain conditions (MESH:D059350), Endometriosis (MESH:D004715), neuropathic (MESH:D009437), bleeding (MESH:D006470), venous and arterial thrombosis (MESH:D020246), amenorrhea (MESH:D000568), nociplastic pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Chemicals:** estradiol (MESH:D004958), ethinyl-estradiol (MESH:D004997)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

229 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13026725/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13026725