hormonal treatment for endometriosis
A single review-level source asserts that hormonal treatment is vital for managing the painful symptoms of endometriosis, without quantitative data.
Hypothesized mechanism
Endometriosis is an estrogen-dependent condition, so hormonal treatment may reduce pain by suppressing estrogen-driven lesion activity.
This is the model’s proposed mechanism from the sources on file, not a demonstrated causal pathway. How well the published record supports it is reflected in the rigor and plausibility dimensions of the score, and traced to the verbatim sources at the foot of the page.
How the score was reached, for this pair
The composite score is the sum of five dimensions, each scored 0 to 2 by the model from the evidence on file. Below is the sub-score this specific pair received on each, with what that dimension measures. It scored 4 of 10 overall, a emerging reading, from a direct rated emerging in strength.
The model’s overall reasoning for this pair is the summary at the top of the page, and the mechanism it proposed is in the section above.
Scored for women. Evidence generated in women (female population). (band F1, ×1.00).
Corroboration
Only a single source is cited, and the claim is a general assertion rather than a synthesis of independent studies. There is no evidence of multiple corroborating studies or a meta-analysis.
Rigor
The single claim is a broad narrative statement ('is vital in managing painful symptoms') from what appears to be a review/medical management article with no described study design, RCT, or quantitative data. This reads as expert opinion rather than rigorous trial evidence.
Specificity
Both the intervention (hormonal treatment) and the condition (endometriosis) are named directly in the claim and source title ('Medical management of endometriosis'). The link is explicit.
Plausibility
Endometriosis is hormonally driven, so hormonal treatment to manage pain is mechanistically plausible. However, no specific mechanism is articulated or evidenced in the verified claim.
Consistency
Only a single claim from a single source is provided, so consistency across studies cannot be assessed. Per scoring rules, a single source defaults to 1.
Layers not covered for this pair
Not covered for this pair. This layer holds documented sex-specific pharmacokinetics for a limited set of drugs, and this compound is not among them yet. A blank here means the drug is not covered by the layer, not that no sex difference exists.
More on the sex-specific pharmacokinetics layer and its sources →Not covered for this pair. The cycle-phase layer is seeded for the strongest-evidence cases so far (PMDD), and this pair is not among them yet. A blank here means the pair is not covered by the layer, not that the effect was found to be phase-independent.
More on the cycle-phase layer and its sources →Source evidence · what the pipeline ingested
These are the sources the pipeline ingested to detect and score this signal, the published literature the model actually read, each tagged by study type. Where the model combined findings the claim is marked as a synthesis (S), and where the literature disagrees the contradiction is shown (!).
Every source below belongs to this signal’s evidence arm, Direct research. Whel reads each drug-condition pair through four such arms, each held to its own inclusion bar; a signal is surfaced through one of them.
- 1hormonal and nonhormonal treatment, is vital in managing painful symptoms PubMed · PMID 39159261 ↗
These are the verbatim sources the pipeline surfaced and read; they may not be the full published record for a pair, and the score reflects the strength and agreement of the evidence rather than its volume. The strength of these source types is what the rigor dimension of the score reads off. MATRIX, sex-specific pharmacokinetics, and cycle phase are separate layers the pipeline does not ingest, external cross-references reported beside the score, and they link to their own sources in their sections above.
The primary sources and pipelines this evidence is drawn from →