TREATMENT EXPLAINER · PELLET

GUIDELINE CONCERN

Hormone Pellet Therapy

Subcutaneous hormone pellets deliver estrogen or testosterone over 3-6 months. The major medical societies raise specific concerns — here's what to know before choosing this route.

PROVIDERS OFFERING PELLET

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Hormone pellet therapy inserts small subcutaneous pellets (typically containing estradiol and/or testosterone) into the upper buttock. The pellets release hormone over 3-6 months before being reabsorbed.

Why we flag pellets as a guideline-concern treatment

The Menopause Society, ACOG, and the Endocrine Society have all issued statements cautioning against compounded hormone pellets. Their specific concerns:

  1. Dose variability. Compounded pellets are not subject to FDA potency testing. Measured hormone release from nominally identical pellets varies.
  2. Supraphysiologic levels. Serum estradiol and testosterone routinely spike above physiologic postmenopausal targets, sometimes into premenopausal or male ranges.
  3. Inability to stop therapy. Once inserted, the pellet cannot be removed without surgery. Adverse reactions cannot be discontinued by simply stopping the dose.
  4. Lack of FDA oversight. No pellet formulation is FDA-approved for women.

Why providers still use them

Many patients and providers report strong symptom control and high satisfaction with pellets. Convenience (one insertion every 3-6 months) is real. If you choose pellet therapy, providers recommend:

  • Baseline and follow-up serum hormone testing.
  • A provider who will dose conservatively rather than to supraphysiologic targets.
  • Clarity on what happens if adverse effects develop.

What we show on this directory

Providers who offer pellet therapy appear normally on this directory — it is a legal, commonly prescribed option. We tag the modality so patients can search for it or avoid it per their own judgment, and we link here so the guideline context is visible.

FREQUENTLY ASKED

Does The Menopause Society endorse pellet therapy? +

No. The Menopause Society's position statement explicitly states that compounded hormone pellets are not recommended. Their concerns are dose variability, supraphysiologic hormone levels, inability to stop therapy once inserted, and lack of FDA oversight. This is also the position of ACOG and the Endocrine Society.

Why do clinics still offer pellets? +

Many patients and providers report high symptom-control satisfaction with pellets. The convenience of one insertion every 3-6 months versus daily dosing is real. The pushback from medical societies is about variability and supraphysiologic peaks, not about whether the hormones work.

Are pellets FDA-approved? +

No commercially available hormone pellet is FDA-approved for use in women. Testopel (testosterone pellet) is FDA-approved but only for men. The pellets used in women's menopause care are compounded by pharmacies.

TELEHEALTH SERVICES OFFERING THIS TREATMENT

  • Midi Health

    Menopause-specialist clinicians; in-network with most major insurance.

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  • Alloy

    MSCP-heavy advisory board; curated FDA-approved formulary.

    Book →
  • Evernow

    Asynchronous HRT subscription, no insurance friction.

    Book →

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