Prescription bioidentical estradiol applied to the skin. In Phase 3 trials of postmenopausal women, transdermal estradiol cut hot flashes and night sweats in most patients.
3 minutes. Medical history, symptoms, current meds.
licensed physician reviews your file. If estradiol is appropriate, they write the prescription. If it's not, they tell you why.
Apply once daily. Message your care team anytime for dose adjustments.
same molecule your body made before menopause, not a synthetic analog
Lower venous thromboembolism risk vs. oral estrogen: ESTHER case-control study, Circulation 2007 — transdermal estradiol did not increase VTE risk; oral estrogen did. The WHI trial (Rossouw et al., JA
When ovarian output drops, the hypothalamus loses its temperature-regulation signal — that's what triggers hot flashes and night sweats. Applying estradiol to the skin restores blood levels of the hormone. Going through skin instead of the gut skips the first-pass liver effect that raises clotting factors with oral estrogen.
Important information about Estradiol Cream safety and side effects.
WHI tested oral synthetic estrogen plus a synthetic progestin in women a decade past menopause. This is transdermal bioidentical estradiol, a different molecule, a different delivery route, and the current evidence on it looks different. Your physician will go through your personal risk factors before prescribing.
Estrogen alone thickens the uterine lining. If you have a uterus, you'll need progesterone alongside this. Our physicians prescribe both when indicated.
Same active ingredient, different format. The cream lets your physician fine-tune the dose in smaller increments than a patch.
Yes. Your physician orders labs to confirm the dose is in range and to monitor over time.
30-day money-back guarantee on your first month. Cancel anytime after.
Most patients report fewer hot flashes within 2–6 weeks. Your physician rechecks labs and symptoms to confirm the dose is right. Where do I apply it? Inner thigh or inner forearm, once a day, rotating sites. The pump delivers a measured dose — no guessing. Do I need progesterone too? If you still have your uterus, yes. Estrogen alone raises the risk of endometrial thickening. Your physician will prescribe progesterone if you need it. What are the real risks? Breast tenderness, spotting, and bloating are the common ones, usually in the first weeks. Serious risks include blood clots, stroke, and endometrial changes if you have a uterus and aren't on progesterone. Your physician reviews your personal risk before prescribing. Who shouldn't take this? Anyone with a history of breast cancer, estrogen-sensitive cancer, unexplained vaginal bleeding, active liver disease, a recent blood clot, stroke, or heart attack. The intake screens for this. Is this covered by insurance? No, but it's FSA/HSA eligible.
Real reviews from verified ArgoMD patients.
Starting Estradiol Cream through ArgoMD changed everything for me. My energy, mood, and sleep all improved within weeks. The physician monitoring with regular labs is reassuring.
After years of feeling off, Estradiol Cream brought me back to myself. The ArgoMD team took time to understand my symptoms and found the right dose for me.
The convenience of having Estradiol Cream delivered monthly plus physician oversight makes this so much better than my old clinic experience. Highly recommend.
Your health and safety are our top priorities.