Understanding Variants of Uncertain Significance in Hormonal Therapy
When facing a variant of uncertain significance (VUS) on genetic testing while considering hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for PCOS or other hormonal imbalances, the first step is clarity. A VUS means the genetic change is noted but its impact on health or treatment response remains unclear. In my work detailed in The CFP Weight Loss Method, I emphasize that women aged 45-54 dealing with perimenopause, insulin resistance, and stubborn weight often see overlapping PCOS-like symptoms. This overlap makes personalized decisions essential, especially since insurance rarely covers advanced genetic counseling.
Key Considerations Before Starting HRT with PCOS
Joint pain, fluctuating blood sugar, and high blood pressure commonly accompany hormonal shifts, making exercise feel impossible. HRT can help stabilize estrogen and progesterone levels that drop during this decade, but a VUS—often in genes like BRCA, MTHFR, or those affecting estrogen metabolism—requires extra monitoring. Start with comprehensive hormone panels including estradiol, testosterone, SHBG, fasting insulin, and A1C. In The CFP Weight Loss Method, we recommend retesting the VUS in 12-24 months as databases evolve; many VUS are later reclassified as benign. Avoid rushing into bioidentical HRT without baseline imaging and bloodwork, particularly if diabetes management is in play.
Integrating Safe Weight Loss Strategies
Traditional diets have failed most women in this group because they ignore hormonal drivers. My approach uses a 4-phase protocol: Reset (anti-inflammatory 14-day plan), Rebalance (carb-cycling matched to cycle or HRT phase), Restore (strength training 3x weekly with joint-friendly moves like seated resistance bands), and Renew (mindset and sleep optimization). For those with VUS on HRT, we adjust the Rebalance phase to 75-100g complex carbs daily from sources like quinoa and sweet potatoes to support stable blood glucose. This reduces inflammation that worsens joint pain and supports gradual 1-2 lb weekly loss without crash dieting. Track symptoms in a journal—hot flashes, mood, and weight—to share with your provider.
Monitoring, Support, and Next Steps
Work with a functional medicine practitioner experienced in both genetics and women’s midlife health. Request pharmacogenomic testing to see how your body may metabolize HRT. Lifestyle remains the foundation: 7-9 hours sleep, 30 minutes daily walking despite joint concerns (start in water if needed), and stress reduction via 10-minute breathwork. Many women in our community lose 25-40 lbs in six months following this while on monitored HRT. If embarrassment around obesity or conflicting nutrition advice has held you back, know you’re not alone. Begin with one change—schedule that follow-up genetic consult—and build from there. Sustainable results come from understanding your unique hormonal blueprint rather than another restrictive plan.