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The Women's Health Initiative Study August 2002
Background on the WHI Study Results
The Women's Health Initiative is a long-term study sponsored by the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) that is looking at ways to prevent heart disease,
breast cancer, and osteoporosis.
One part of the study followed 16.608 healthy women with a uterus, who were
ages 50 to 79 when they entered the study, and who took either oestrogen and
progestin therapy (combined hormone replacement therapy, or HRT) or a
placebo. The goal of this trial was to study the relationship between HRT
and its possible benefits for heart disease and hip fracture, as well as its
possible risks for breast cancer, endmetrial cancer, and blood clots. The
trial was not intended to study the effect of HRT on menopausal symptoms or
other conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.
On July 9, 2002, the NIH halted this trial after 5.2 years, concluding
that the risks for the study group on combined HRT outweighed the benefits.
The published report is in the July 17, 2002 issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association. Additional information on the WHI can be found
at the website www,whi.org Risks included small but significant increased
risks of breast cancer, coronary heart disease, stroke, and blood clots for
the group of women on HRT. Benefits of HRT use included lower risks for hip
fractures and colon cancer. There was no difference between the two group
death rates. A separate WHI trial on the use of oestrogen alone (ET) in
women who have had a hysterectomy is continuing, because study officials
have apparently not seen comparable risks in those women. The data and
safety monitoring board of the WHI will continue to review data from this
trial every six months.
Conclusions:
Oestrogen plus progestin does not confer cardiac protection and may increase
the risk heard disease among generally healthy postmenopausal women,
especially during the first year after the initiation of hormone use. This
treatment should not be prescribed for the prevention of cardiovascular
disease.
Ends.
The Million Women Study. August 2003
Around 2 years ago, a million British women signed up to take part in a
study to settle once and for all the argument over the risks and benefits of
HRT. Experts such as Dr John Lee had always expressed deep concerns over the
strong link between breast cancer and the use of HRT.
HRT and breast cancer: results of the Million Women Study Release date: 8
August 2003
Some kinds of (HRT) have a much greater effect on a woman's health than
others, according to landmark research published in the Lancet this Saturday
(August 9).
The Million Women Study, funded by Cancer Research UK, the NHS Breast
Screening Programme and the Medical Research Council, confirms that current
and recent use of HRT increases a woman's chance of developing breast cancer
and that the risk goes up with duration of use.
Current users of all types of HRT, including oestrogen-only, combined
oestrogen-progestagen and tibolone, are at increased risk of breast cancer
compared with women who have never used HRT. But the risk is substantially
greater for users of combined preparations of HRT than for women on the
other types.
Scientists at the Cancer Research UK Epidemiology Unit in Oxford analysed
data from over one million women between the ages of 50 and 64. Women joined
the study between 1996 and 2001 and half were using HRT or had done so in
the past. The study included 9,364 cases of invasive breast cancer and 637
breast cancer deaths, registered over 2.6 and 4.1 years of follow-up
respectively.
Researchers found that post-menopausal women using combination HRT were
twice as likely to develop breast cancer as non users (a 100 per cent
increase), while risk increased by 45 per cent among users of tibolone and
by 30 per cent among users of oestrogen-only HRT. These effects were shown
to wear off within a few years of ceasing use.
In developed countries, among 1,000 postmenopausal women who do not use HRT,
there will be about 20 breast cancer cases between the ages of 50 and 60.
For every thousand postmenopausal women who begin 10 years of HRT use at age
50, there will be five extra cases of breast cancer among users of
oestrogen-only HRT and 19 among users of oestrogen-progestagen combinations.
So combined HRT causes four times as many extra breast cancers as
oestrogen-only.
The study also found that current users have a 22 per cent increased risk of
death from breast cancer compared with women who have never used HRT,
although the result was of borderline statistical significance. It is too
early to estimate the number of extra deaths associated with HRT use.
Lead author Professor Valerie Beral, Director of the Cancer Research UK
Epidemiology Unit, says: "We estimate that over the past decade use of HRT
by UK women aged 50-64 has resulted in an extra 20,000 breast cancers,
oestrogen-progestagen therapy accounting for 15,000 of these.
"Combined oestrogen-progestagen HRT is usually prescribed for women who
still have a uterus, to avoid the increased risk of cancer of the uterus
caused by oestrogen-only therapy.
"Since our results show a substantially greater increase in breast cancer
with combined HRT, women need to weigh the increased risk of breast cancer
caused by the addition of progestagen against the lowered risk of uterine
cancer.
Comparing the risks is by no means simple, and women may well want to
discuss options with their doctor."
Julietta Patnick, Director of the NHS Cancer Screening Programmes, says:
"Women often ask us about the factors that can influence the risk of
developing breast cancer, and we worked with the study team to initiate the
Million Women Study to help find answers to such questions.
"Through NHS Breast Screening Units, over a million women were recruited to
the Million Women Study, making it the largest ever study on the factors
that can influence women's risk of breast cancer.
"I would like to thank the 66 Breast Screening Units and the women who took
part in this study. I hope that the results will help provide women with the
information they need to make an informed choice about use of HRT."
Dr John Toy, Medical Director of Cancer Research UK, says: "Previous reports
have indicated that breast cancer risk increases in women taking HRT and
this vast new study, the largest ever conducted, has allowed accurate
assessment of the size of the effect.
"On a national scale, with so many women taking HRT, the number of extra
cases of breast cancer has been quite large, but the increased risk does
start to fall on stopping treatment.
"It would be sensible for a woman to take HRT for only as long as it is
necessary to deal with her medical problems as advised by her doctor. A
woman wanting to take HRT for a long time would be extremely wise first to
consider carefully the findings of this large study and other relevant
research."
ENDS
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