Bioidentical vs. Synthetic Hormones: An Evidence-Based Comparison

Written by:Hailey KeanHailey Kean
Medically Reviewed by:Saranne PermanDr. Saranne Perman, MD
Last Updated: June 26, 2026 Approx. 6 Min Read |Published on: September 09, 2024

Article Content

Defining the Terms: What are bioidentical and synthetic hormones?
A Side-by-Side Comparison: Bioidentical vs. Synthetic HT
What the Evidence Says About Safety and Efficacy

The Bottom Line:

  • “Bioidentical” and “synthetic” refer to a hormone’s molecular structure, not whether it’s natural; all hormone therapies are manufactured.

  • Bioidentical hormones match the structure of human hormones, while non-bioidentical options differ, which can influence receptor interactions, metabolism, and risk profiles.

  • A common misconception is that all bioidentical hormones are unregulated or that all synthetic hormones carry identical risks. In reality, bioidentical products meet the same regulatory standards as other prescription therapies.

  • Clinically, major organizations support individualized risk assessment, preference for FDA-approved ingredients, and ongoing monitoring, with hormone choice guided by medical history, timing of initiation, and route of delivery.

Hormone therapy — also referred to as hormone replacement therapy (HRT) — plays a central role in modern menopause care and offers a range of effective treatment options. For many women, it can significantly reduce symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, sleep disruption, vaginal dryness, and bone loss — and improve overall quality of life.(1)

However, not all hormone therapies are the same. Many women encounter confusing and sometimes conflicting information about “bioidentical” versus “synthetic” hormones. Some are told that bioidentical hormones are safer, while others are warned that they’re unregulated. Others believe synthetic hormones are the only scientifically supported option.

This article is to help clarify the science, define the terms accurately, and explain what the evidence shows. It also outlines how leading medical organizations — including the FDA and The Menopause Society — and findings from the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study inform today’s clinical approach to hormone therapy.

Defining the Terms: What are bioidentical and synthetic hormones?

All hormones used in menopause treatment must be manufactured in laboratories. None are taken directly from the human body. The key difference between bioidentical and synthetic lies in molecular structure — not whether a hormone is “natural.”(2)(3)

What are bioidentical hormones?

Bioidentical hormones are hormones that are chemically identical to the ones naturally produced by the body. This means their molecular structure matches human estrogen or progesterone precisely.(2)(3)

Common examples include the following:

  • Estradiol: This is the primary form of estrogen made by the ovaries before menopause. (Estrogen alone is typically prescribed only after hysterectomy.)

  • Micronized Progesterone: This progesterone is structurally identical to the body’s natural progesterone. (Progesterone is required when the uterus is present to protect the endometrium.)

Bioidentical hormones can be FDA approved or compounded:(3)

  • FDA-Approved: This refers to bioidentical hormones available in standardized doses in the form of pills, capsules, patches, gels, or creams.

  • Compounded: This refers to bioidentical hormones custom-mixed by compounding pharmacies in personalized doses.

It’s important to distinguish between these two. The terms “compounded hormones” and “bioidentical hormones” are often used interchangeably but have very distinct meanings:

  • Bioidentical Hormones: These are chemically identical to the hormones produced by the body. They can be either compounded or commercially manufactured.

  • Compounded Hormones: These refer specifically to customized formulations prepared by a specialized compounding pharmacy.

Winona uses FDA-approved bioidentical hormones in all treatments. FDA-approved bioidentical hormones meet strict standards for safety, quality, purity, and effectiveness.(3) 

When compounding is used, the hormones themselves are FDA approved, but the custom-mixed formulations are not regulated by the FDA because they cannot individually evaluate each prescription. However, Winona’s pharmacies are 503A pharmacies and follow United States Pharmacopeial Convention (USP) compounding standards, which govern quality, purity, and safety.

What are synthetic (non-bioidentical) hormones?

Synthetic hormones — more accurately called non-bioidentical hormones — are designed to mimic the effects of natural hormones but have a different molecular structure.(1)

Two key examples include the following:(2)(4)(5)

  • Conjugated Equine Estrogens (CEE): These are derived from horse urine and composed of multiple estrogen molecules not found in the human body.

  • Medroxyprogesterone Acetate (MPA): This is a synthetic progestin that’s not structurally identical to progesterone.

These hormones were widely used in earlier forms of HRT and were the primary therapies studied in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) trial.(3)(6)

Bioidentical vs. Synthetic Hormones

A Side-by-Side Comparison: Bioidentical vs. Synthetic HT

Feature

Bioidentical Hormones

Synthetic (Non-Bioidentical) Hormones

Molecular Structure

Identical to human hormones

Different from human hormones

Source

Typically plant-derived and chemically converted

Animal-derived (e.g., CEE) or fully synthetic

FDA Approval Status

Available as FDA-approved and compounded forms

FDA-approved

Dosing Flexibility

Standardized FDA doses; compounded options allow customization

Standardized doses only

Key Clinical Studies

Studied thoroughly in modern menopause care; newer outcome data

Major data from the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI)

(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7)

What the Evidence Says About Safety and Efficacy

The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI)

The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), launched in the 1990s, was a landmark study evaluating the long-term effects of hormone therapy in postmenopausal women. The trial primarily studied the following:(3)(6)

  • Conjugated equine estrogens (CEE)

  • Medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA)

The results showed increased risks of breast cancer, blood clots, stroke, and cardiovascular disease — along with other potential side effects — in certain populations, especially older women and those who were many years past menopause when they started therapy.(1)(3)(6)

These findings led to widespread fear and a dramatic decline in hormone therapy use — even among women who might have benefited.(3)(6)

How Modern Understanding Has Evolved

Subsequent analyses and newer research clarified the following:(1)

  • Age and timing matter. Women who start HT closer to menopause generally have a different risk profile than those who start later.

  • The type of hormone matters. The WHI studied non-bioidentical hormones, not the bioidentical estradiol and micronized progesterone widely used today.

  • The route of delivery matters. Transdermal estrogen (patches, gels, and sprays) may carry lower risks of blood clots than oral estrogen.

Bioidentical Hormones and Safety

Growing evidence suggests that FDA-approved bioidentical hormones — particularly estradiol and micronized progesterone — have the following:(3)(4)(5)

  • A favorable cardiovascular profile

  • A lower impact on blood clot risk when delivered transdermally

  • A potentially lower breast cancer risk compared to certain synthetic progestins

These differences are thought to stem from molecular structure. Bioidentical hormones more closely match the body’s natural hormones, which allows them to interact more predictably with hormone receptors. Structure also influences how hormones are metabolized and how they act in different tissues.

The FDA’s Official Position

The FDA’s official stance on bioidentical hormones emphasizes the following:(7)(8)

  • Some bioidentical hormones are FDA approved and supported by clinical evidence.

  • FDA-approved bioidentical hormone products meet the same safety, quality, and efficacy standards as any other prescription medication.

  • Compounded bioidentical hormones offer personalized dosing for individual needs; however, unlike standardized medications, they cannot undergo the formal FDA approval process for purity and large-scale data.

  • FDA-approved bioidentical hormones remain the clinical benchmark standard for dosing and purity.

The FDA supports the use of hormone therapy when clinically appropriate and prescribed by a qualified healthcare professional.(7)

Guidance from The Menopause Society

The Menopause Society recognizes hormone therapy as the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms (hot flashes and night sweats) and genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). The organization emphasizes the following:(9)

  • Individualized risk assessment

  • Use of the lowest effective dose

  • Preference for FDA-approved bioidentical products

  • Ongoing follow-up and reassessment

bioidentical hormone therapy products

The Role of Personalized Care and Informed Decisions 

No two menopause experiences are identical. Genetics, lifestyle, medical history, symptom burden, and personal preferences all influence treatment decisions. Choosing between bioidentical and synthetic hormones is not simply a matter of preference; it’s a critical medical decision.

Effective hormone therapy requires the following:

  • A thorough medical evaluation

  • Ongoing self and medical monitoring

  • Willingness to adjust therapy as the body changes

This is why clinical guidance — not internet advice or anecdotal claims — is essential when considering hormone therapy. Understanding the treatment allows women to participate meaningfully in their care — asking questions, becoming informed, and making decisions grounded in evidence.

The Evolution of Hormone Therapy in Women's Health

The conversation around hormone therapy has evolved significantly since the early 2000s. Today’s approach is more precise, more personalized, and more evidence-based.

The key takeaway is this: Molecular structure and individualized dosing matter. FDA-approved bioidentical hormones offer a scientifically grounded option to balance hormone levels that aligns closely with the body’s natural physiology.

Choosing the right hormone therapy is an important step toward long-term health and well-being — one that deserves expert guidance, thoughtful discussion, and ongoing support. A personalized medical consultation can help determine the safest and most effective option.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) About Bioidentical vs. Synthetic Hormones

  • The main difference is molecular structure. Bioidentical hormones are chemically identical to the hormones the human body naturally produces, while synthetic (non-bioidentical) hormones have a different structure. Both types are made in laboratories and used in hormone therapy.

  • Bioidentical hormones are not automatically safer for everyone, but evidence suggests they may have a more favorable safety profile for many women. This is especially true for FDA-approved estradiol and micronized progesterone compared with older synthetic options studied in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI). Effectiveness also depends on proper dosing, delivery method, and individual health factors. Safety and benefit must always be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

  • Bioidentical hormones may be a better option for many women because their molecular structure matches the body’s natural hormones. However, “better” depends on the individual’s health history, symptoms, and risk factors. The most appropriate therapy is the one that’s both effective and medically safe for that person.

  • Bioidentical hormones are often described as “natural,” but while they’re typically derived from plant sources, they’re still manufactured in laboratories. What defines them is not their origin, but their molecular match to human hormones. “Natural source” does not automatically mean safer or more effective.

  • Winona uses FDA-approved bioidentical hormones. These hormones are molecularly identical to those made by the human body and meet the FDA standards for safety, quality, and effectiveness. This approach aligns with modern clinical guidance and prioritizes precise dosing and predictable outcomes.

  • “Bioidentical hormones are unregulated.”
    This is not accurate. There are FDA-approved bioidentical hormones. When compounding is used, the hormones themselves are FDA approved, but the personalized formulations are not, because they cannot be individually evaluated by the FDA. However, Winona’s pharmacies are 503A pharmacies and follow United States Pharmacopeial Convention (USP) compounding standards, which govern quality, purity, and safety.

    “Synthetic hormones are safer because they’re studied more.”
    The WHI studied synthetic hormones, but newer research shows that bioidentical options may have different safety profiles. More studies now focus on FDA-approved bioidentical estradiol and micronized progesterone.

    “Hormone therapy is unsafe for most women.”
    For healthy women within 10 years of menopause onset and without contraindications, hormone therapy is considered safe and effective when properly prescribed and monitored.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. The information contained herein is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always talk to your doctor about the risks and benefits of any treatment.