Well, not really....
Firstly, you have to come off the combined pill at 50 due to clot/stroke risk. So even if you love it, you're only going to be able to use it for a few years till you're 50 and then will have another transition to make onto HRT. So may as well find a HRT that works for you now.
Second, almost all pills use a different estrogen to what our body makes. It's a synthetic estrogen. Which isn't as effective in terms of bone protection and other health benefits as a body identical estrogen. And the clot risk is higher because of that.
Third, most combined pills don't give you enough estrogen because they are designed for younger women whose ovaries are also producing estrogen. And you can't add in more estrogen without more progesterone as it wouldn't be safe/enough protection.
Fourth, the progesterone in all pills is synthetic too. And really the lowest risk (if you can use it okay) is micronised progesterone/utrogestan - which is body identical progesterone. Synthetic progesterones can be estrogenic or androgenic or have slightly increased risk of breast cancer.
Whilst some women do use the combined pill in peri with no problems, it's probably best to go onto HRT - unless you are already on a combined pill, in which case just continuing it until 50 might be best unless you have symptoms. Or unless you also need contraception. (Although you can take the mini pill along with HRT if you need contraception.) Or maybe also if you have endo and need to shut your ovaries down somewhat(!).
Is there a reason you specifically want an oral tablet rather than transdermal? Some women don't get on with transdermal but it's probably the safest/best thing to try in the first instance. That would be either a gel or patch along with utrogestan. If you're still having periods and are peri, you would take the utrogestan 2 weeks of the month and still have a bleed.