|
Hormone Therapy May Contribute to Breast Cancer
It is estimated that cancer ends a human life every minute
in the United States, and
that more than three million others currently suffer from some
form of the disease.
Among women, breast cancer is the second most common cancer and
the leading cause of
cancer deaths.
After menopause, many women use hormone replacement therapy
(HRT) to compensate for
the body's natural decline in hormone production. However, as
a study in the Journal
of the American Medical Association suggests, the risks associated
with HRT use may
end up outweighing the benefits.
As part of a nationwide breast cancer screening program called
the Breast Cancer Detection
Demonstration Project, 46,355 postmenopausal women were evaluated
for duration and
type of hormone use and monitored for the incidence of breast
cancer. Of particular
interest was the influence of estrogen, progestin, or a combination
of the two hormones
on the risk of developing the disease.
During the 15-year study, 2,082 cases of breast cancer were
identified. Women taking
the progestin-estrogen combination were at higher risk for the
disease than women taking
estrogen alone, and this risk increased more rapidly in the combination
therapy group
vs. the estrogen group per year of use.
The authors note that their data suggest that "the estrogen-progestin
regimen increases
breast cancer risk beyond that associated with estrogen alone."
Talk to your doctor
about the risks and benefits associated with hormone replacement
therapy.
Schairer C, Lubin J, Troisi R, et al. Menopausal estrogen
and estrogen-progestin replacement
therapy and breast cancer risk. Journal of the American Medical
Association, Jan. 26,
2000: Vol. 283, No. 4, pp485-91.
|