What is vaginal dryness?
Vaginal dryness (genitourinary syndrome of menopause, formerly atrophic vaginitis) is thinning and drying of vaginal tissues due to declining estrogen — most common after menopause but can occur with breastfeeding, certain cancer treatments, or low estrogen states.
It causes itching, burning, painful intercourse, urinary symptoms, and recurrent UTIs. Highly treatable with topical estrogen or other options.
Do I have vaginal dryness? Common signs
If most of these describe what you're experiencing, telehealth may be a good next step:
What causes it
Reduced estrogen levels — postmenopause is most common cause. Also: breastfeeding, certain birth control methods, aromatase inhibitors (breast cancer treatment), premature ovarian failure, certain immune conditions.
Is it contagious?
No.
Local vaginal estrogen is highly effective and very low risk — minimal systemic absorption means it's even sometimes used in women with breast cancer history (case-by-case).
Can it be treated online?
Most cases of vaginal dryness are well-suited to telehealth. Postmenopausal bleeding, severe symptoms not responding to standard treatment, or pelvic pain need in-person gynecology.
How vaginal dryness is treated
Vaginal estrogen — first-line: estradiol cream (Estrace), estradiol tablets (Vagifem, Yuvafem), estradiol ring (Estring). Very low systemic absorption. DHEA suppositories (Intrarosa) alternative. Lubricants (water or silicone-based) for sex; moisturizers (Replens, Hyalo Gyn) for ongoing comfort. Systemic HRT also treats this if used for other reasons.
Self-care while you wait
- Use vaginal moisturizer 2–3x weekly (Replens, Hyalo Gyn)
- Use lubricant during intercourse (water-based or silicone)
- Avoid soaps, douches, perfumed products on vulva
- Cotton underwear
- Regular sexual activity (with lubricant) improves elasticity
- Pelvic floor exercises
- Hydration overall
How long does it last?
Without treatment, progressive. With treatment, sustained improvement.
Frequently asked questions
Is vaginal estrogen safe with breast cancer history?
Often yes — minimal systemic absorption. Discuss with oncologist. Some are now comfortable with low-dose vaginal estrogen in survivors.
Is over-the-counter moisturizer enough?
For mild cases, yes. Moderate-to-severe usually needs prescription vaginal estrogen for substantial relief.
Will it interact with HRT I'm already taking?
Vaginal estrogen on top of systemic HRT is often fine — minimal additional risk.
How long until intimacy improves?
Most women notice meaningful change in 2–4 weeks. Full benefit by 12 weeks.
Do I need to use it forever?
Usually yes — symptoms return when stopped. Frequency may reduce after symptoms resolve.


