Dr. Corinne Menn: The Truth About Hormone Replacement for BRCA Carriers and Previvers
Release Date: 11/27/2025
Walking the Genetic Line
Episode Summary When Beth Martinetti—Pilates instructor, mother of three, and lifelong student of her own body—discovered multiple genetic mutations at 45, it was the latest chapter in a lifetime shaped by both visible and invisible challenges. Beth shares her journey from adolescent injury and Ehlers-Danlos diagnosis, through complicated pregnancies, to a midlife cascade: mysterious symptoms, pivotal encounters with validating doctors, and ultimately, the discovery that she carries BRCA1, CHEK2, and a variant in BARD1. Still in the thick of surgical recovery, Beth invites us into her...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
Guest: Dr. Corinne Menn Theme: Claiming agency in hereditary cancer risk, surgical menopause, and a new era of HRT care Episode summary When Dr. Corinne Menn—board certified OB/GYN, Menopause Society certified practitioner, 23+ year breast cancer survivor, and BRCA2 carrier—joins us, she brings unparalleled lived and clinical expertise to walking the genetic line. In this conversation, Dr. Corinne Menn shares her deeply personal journey: breast cancer at 28, the loss of her mother to ovarian cancer, and the years navigating her own genetic risk and premature menopause. Together, we...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
Guest: Martha Kaiser Theme: Walking with CDKN2A, Ancestral Discovery, and Agency in Rare Genetic Mutations Episode Summary When Martha Kaiser discovered she carries the rare CDKN2A gene mutation—known for elevating risks of melanoma and pancreatic cancer—her journey shifted from uncertainty, loss, and family trauma to active agency and deep exploration. In this conversation, she shares not only the medical dimensions of living with a lesser-known mutation, but how intergenerational silence, gut intuition, and the drive to protect her children led her to become both a patient advocate and a...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
🧬 Episode Summary In this solo episode, host Sara Champie, LCSW, explores one of the most common phrases in medicine and psychology—evidence-based care—and what it really means when we apply it to lived human experience. Sara walks us through the two definitions that often get conflated: evidence-based research, which measures outcomes in controlled studies, and evidence-based practice, which integrates science, clinical wisdom, and a client’s unique values and culture. She then bridges these frameworks through the lens of hereditary cancer risk, showing how the most profound healing...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
Guest: Katherine Lewandowski Theme: Choosing care, surviving change, and finding a stronger self after prophylactic surgery Episode summary When Katherine learned at 43 that she carried BRCA2—shortly after her father’s metastatic prostate cancer diagnosis—she moved from shock and shame to decisive action. In this conversation, she shares how grief, meticulous research, and a values-aligned care team led her through prophylactic bilateral mastectomy with DIEP flap reconstruction and surgical menopause—and why she now feels more like herself: stronger, clearer, and more alive. We...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
Episode Summary In this deeply moving conversation, we meet Lisa, a 50-year-old woman from the UK navigating her BRCA2 genetic mutation. After undergoing an oophorectomy and preparing for a double mastectomy, Lisa shares candidly about her journey through testing, family reactions, and the intimate decisions around reconstruction, femininity, and sexuality. Together, we explore how genetic testing within the Jewish community intersects with intergenerational trauma, cultural history, and personal agency. Lisa’s story highlights the ripple effects of genetic information across families, the...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
Episode Summary: In this solo episode of Walking the Genetic Line, therapist and host Sara Champie invites listeners to explore a subtle but powerful distinction: the difference between external safety and internal security. Through a trauma-informed lens, Sara reflects on how our nervous systems constantly scan for safety—and how our earliest relationships shape the way we respond to uncertainty and risk throughout life. Drawing from Polyvagal Theory, interpersonal neurobiology, and her own clinical practice, Sara offers an honest look at what it means to live in an unpredictable...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
Episode Summary In this powerful conversation, Dr. LaDeana Jeane—naturopathic doctor and integrative oncology specialist—shares her expertise and personal story. LaDeana blends medical training with lived experience, offering a unique perspective on how hereditary cancer risk intersects with hormonal health, prophylactic surgeries, and long-term survivorship. She opens up about undergoing a bilateral mastectomy at just 19 years old following her mother’s breast cancer diagnosis, the decades-long journey of recovery and reconstruction, and the courage it has taken to bring her story into...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
Episode Summary: In this solo episode, I explore one of the most debated areas of care for BRCA mutation carriers: hormone replacement therapy (HRT). While evidence—including the 2016 North American Menopause Society (NAMS) Practice Pearl—supports the use of systemic HRT for many BRCA carriers after risk-reducing surgery, fear and cultural stigma around hormones continue to shape medical recommendations. I discuss why some doctors may still discourage HRT for BRCA2 carriers, not because of strong scientific evidence, but because of lingering emotional and cultural fears around breast...
info_outlineWalking the Genetic Line
This podcast, Walking the Genetic Line, was made to create a container in which there are no right or wrongs about how to relate with genetic testing results. This space was made to explore how we are impacted hereditary cancer, what influences our experience, what we wrestle with— and FEEL—about this information. Danielle Service brought her raw, unfiltered truth to this interview: how genetic testing felt like an unnecessary burden for the first chapter, how that changed over time, and the questions and concerns she still has about the social and cultural context of the risk management...
info_outlineGuest: Dr. Corinne Menn
Theme: Claiming agency in hereditary cancer risk, surgical menopause, and a new era of HRT care
Episode summary
When Dr. Corinne Menn—board certified OB/GYN, Menopause Society certified practitioner, 23+ year breast cancer survivor, and BRCA2 carrier—joins us, she brings unparalleled lived and clinical expertise to walking the genetic line. In this conversation, Dr. Corinne Menn shares her deeply personal journey: breast cancer at 28, the loss of her mother to ovarian cancer, and the years navigating her own genetic risk and premature menopause. Together, we explore why BRCA (and other mutation) “previvors” often land in a black hole of care, how miscommunication and provider fear still undermine evidence-based treatment, and the hopeful shift as new guidelines and cultural change begin to reshape what’s possible for those living at hereditary risk.
We cover
-
Dr. Corinne Menn
’s origin story: the collision of residency, a breast cancer diagnosis in her 20s, and her mother’s ovarian cancer and loss
-
How outdated genetic testing, medical gaslighting, and trauma shaped her assertiveness as both patient and physician
-
The “CEO of your health” mindset: building self-trust and voice inside overwhelming medical realities
-
The giant gap in menopause and HRT education across the entire medical field (~20 years of misinformation and fear after the WHI study)
-
What most doctors STILL get wrong about HRT for BRCA carriers—and how new FDA changes and Menopause Society guidelines support safer, more nuanced use
-
Proactive care: why pre-surgery counseling and immediate access to HRT matter for quality of life, bone, heart, and brain health
-
“Female castration”—naming the reality and impact of surgical menopause and how it’s minimized systemically
-
How trauma-informed therapy and a more holistic approach are essential for hereditary cancer communities and all patients in medical systems
Highlights & takeaways
-
“All BRCA previvors must demand pre-op counseling and a pre-op management plan on how their doctor is going to manage their abrupt surgical menopause. This is not optional.”
-
The harm of not providing HRT after surgical menopause is severe: double the risk of heart disease, dementia, osteoporosis, mood disorders—especially for those under 45.
-
New FDA changes (Spring 2024): the black box warning on estrogen is being removed/updated, allowing for clearer, less fear-based counseling about HRT’s risks and benefits.
-
For BRCA (and other mutation) carriers, HRT up to natural menopause is standard of care. The fear of HRT, especially after risk-reducing surgeries, is both outdated and damaging.
-
Genitourinary syndrome of menopause deserves more attention and treatment—local vaginal estrogen is safe, effective, and newly destigmatized.
-
“If you wouldn't tell a man at 31 who lost his testicles to just try coconut oil—don't do that to female patients after oophorectomy.”
Content note
Includes discussion of parental death, breast/ovarian cancer, early menopause, medical trauma, sexual health, and systemic gaps in care.
Resources mentioned & organizations
-
NCCN Guidelines on Risk Reduction & HRT: NCCN.org
-
The Menopause Society (formerly NAMS): menopause.org
-
A New Era of Hormone Therapy: FDA Update on Estrogen Labeling: See FDA press releases and The Menopause Society’s statement
-
Risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) in BRCA+: NIH overview
-
Dr. Menn’s Instagram: @drmennobgyn
-
Dr. Menn’s Substack + education for previvors: drmenn.substack.com
-
MyAllo.com — telehealth menopause & cancer survivorship platform with expert providers in all 50 states: myallo.com
-
Support & therapy for hereditary cancer risk: Bright Pink, FORCE - Facing Our Risk of Cancer Empowered
Connect
If this episode resonated, please follow, rate, and share.
Find Sara on IG/TikTok @FaceTheRiskTogether and get free tools, group support, and offerings at the link in bio.
You’re not alone—we can walk this line together.