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Breast Cancer Risk
WOMEN
who take estroge n-only
pills for at least 15 years run a markedly higher risk of developing breast
cancer, according to a study of nearly 29,000 nurses. But no increased
danger was found among those who took the hormone for less than 10 years.
Researchers said the findings should be reassuring for women who want to use
estrogen for a short time to relieve menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes
and vaginal dryness.
Hormone supplements were once thought to help postmenopausal women postpone
age-related ills.
But the government's Women's Health Initiative study in 2002 contradicted
those beliefs for estrogen-progestin supplements, finding an increased risk
of breast cancer, strokes and heart attacks. That led millions of American
women to stop taking supplements.
Later, a WHI study of estrogen alone — an option only for women who have had
a hysterectomy — linked the supplements to strokes and memory problems. But
it found that using estrogen alone for seven years does not raise the risk
of breast cancer.
The new findings came from the less-rigorous but longer-running Nurses'
Health Study, overseen by Harvard-affiliated researchers.
It found no increased risk of breast cancer in women who had taken estrogen
for less than 10 years. But for women who had been on estrogen for at least
15 years, the risk of hormonally driven breast cancer (the most common type
in the United States) climbed 48 percent. At the 20-year mark, the risk of
any type of breast cancer rose 42 percent.
"This says at least for the shorter-term users, you don't need to panic"
about breast cancer, said lead author Dr. Wendy Chen, an oncologist and
epidemiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute in Boston. "But for the longer-term users, you need to think about
why am I still taking estrogen for this long of time, and are there are
alternatives I could take instead?"
The risk of breast cancer also appeared to rise between 10 and 15 years of
use, but the increase was not statistically significant, the researchers
said.
The study, published in Monday's Archives of Internal Medicine, involved
28,835 women who were postmenopausal, had had a hysterectomy and reported
their estrogen use every two years. Just 3.2 percent of the women, or 934,
developed breast cancer during the study.
The researchers said it is unclear how many American women are taking
estrogen for 15 or 20 years, especially in light of the WHI findings and
doctors' recommendation since then that women who want to use the pills take
them for the shortest possible duration.
Dr. Carolyn D. Runowicz, president of the American Cancer Society, said a
few women in her practice have chosen to remain on estrogen for a long time
because they feel the improvement in their quality of life outweighs the
risks.
Runowicz called the study reassuring for short-term estrogen use but also
said it underscores the need for patients to regularly "justify every
medication" they take with their doctors.
"Is it estrogen forever? That's what we thought in the 1970s," said Runowicz,
director of the Cancer Center at the University of Connecticut Health
Center, "but we've completely reversed our thinking on that."
Estrogen-alone supplements are given only to women who have had their
uteruses removed, because the hormone can spur uterine cancer. Other women
get estrogen plus progestin, to counteract the risk of uterine cancer.
The Women's Health Initiative was a clinical trial in which women were
randomly assigned estrogen pills or placebos. Scientists consider that
approach the gold standard. The new study relied on nurses who reported on
their own health every two years.
Runowicz said nurses could differ somewhat from women in the general
population — perhaps they are healthier, for instance — but she said she had
no reason to doubt the validity of the data, especially because its
conclusions regarding short-term estrogen use are backed up the WHI
findings.
Wyeth, which produces the estrogen pill Premarin, considers the Nurse's
Health Study a well-respected study and the most recent research a "fairly
reasonable trial," said Dr. James Pickar, assistant vice president for
clinical research and development.
Pickar said he sees the results as good news for women because they back up
the WHI findings that found no increased breast cancer risk for short-term
estrogen users.
"I think it's very important for women to talk to their physician and review
on a regular basis whether they need to continue therapy," Pickar said.
"Each patient has an individual risk profile that only they and their
physician can evaluate."●
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