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Menopausal hormone therapy and breast cancer risk: Emerging evidence from randomised trials

15 Mar 2012
Menopausal hormone therapy and breast cancer risk: Emerging evidence from randomised trials

In the past decade, results from large prospective cohort studies and the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) randomised placebo-controlled hormone therapy trials have substantially changed thoughts about how oestrogen alone and oestrogen plus progestin influence the risk of breast cancer, according to a review published in the Journal of The National Cancer Institute.

Although hormone therapy is currently used by millions of women for menopausal symptoms, there is still concern about hormone therapy–induced breast cancer risk. In addition, the effects of oestrogen plus progestin vs oestrogen alone on breast cancer are not completely understood.

To compare the effects of oestrogen alone vs those of oestrogen plus progestin on breast cancer risk, Rowan T. Chlebowski, M.D., Ph.D., of the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center and Garnet Anderson, Ph.D., at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center at, looked at data from two randomised, placebo-controlled full scale clinical trials conducted in the WHI.

One trial evaluated oestrogen plus progestin in postmenopausal women with an intact uterus, and the other evaluated oestrogen alone in postmenopausal women with prior hysterectomy. Oestrogen plus progestin statistically significantly increased the risk of breast cancer. In contrast, oestrogen alone use in postmenopausal women with a previous hysterectomy, statistically significantly decreased the risk of breast cancer.

The randomised clinical trial findings differ from the predominance of observational studies, which suggested that both oestrogen alone and oestrogen plus progestin increase breast cancer incidence. The authors propose that “an imbalance in the use of mammography with greater screening for hormone users could explain some of the increase in breast cancer incidence with oestrogen alone seen in cohort studies because screened populations have more cancers detected than unscreened populations”.

While the mechanisms underlying the different effects of oestrogen alone and oestrogen plus progestin are not completely understood, the authors state that preclinical and other clinical evidence suggests “the findings in the clinic, taken together with preclinical evidence, indicate that many breast cancers in post-menopausal women can survive only a limited range of oestrogen exposures.”

 

Source: JNCI