Abstract
Background
Following the release of the 2002 report of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) trial of estrogen plus progestin, the use of menopausal hormone therapy in the United States decreased substantially. Subsequently, the incidence of breast cancer also dropped, suggesting a cause-and-effect relation between hormone treatment and breast cancer. However, the cause of this decrease remains controversial.
Background
Following the release of the 2002 report of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) trial of estrogen plus progestin, the use of menopausal hormone therapy in the United States decreased substantially. Subsequently, the incidence of breast cancer also dropped, suggesting a cause-and-effect relation between hormone treatment and breast cancer. However, the cause of this decrease remains controversial.
Methods
We analyzed the results of the WHI randomized cl inical t rial in which one study group received 0.625 mg of conjugated equine estrogens plus 2.5 mg of medroxy progesterone acetate daily and another group received placebo and examined temporal trends in breast cancer diagnoses in the WHI observational study cohort. Risk factors for breast cancer, frequency of mammography, and time specif ic incidence of breast cancer were assessed in relation to combined hormone use.
Results
In the clinical trial, there were fewer breast cancer diagnoses in the group receiving est rogen plus progest in than in the placebo group in the initial 2 years of the study, but the number of diagnoses increased over the course of the 5.6 year intervention period. The elevated risk decreased rapidly after both groups stopped taking the study pills, despite a similar frequency of mammography. In the observational study, the incidence of breast cancer was initially about two times as high in the group receiving menopausal hormones as in the placebo group, but this difference in incidence decreased rapidly in about 2 years, coinciding with year to year reduct ions in combined hormone use. During this period, differences in the frequency of mammography between the two groups were unchanged.
Conclusions
The increased risk of breast cancer associated with the use of estrogen plus progestin declined markedly soon after discontinuation of combined hormone therapy and was unrelated to changes in frequency of mammography.
Journals for full download on the link below
We analyzed the results of the WHI randomized cl inical t rial in which one study group received 0.625 mg of conjugated equine estrogens plus 2.5 mg of medroxy progesterone acetate daily and another group received placebo and examined temporal trends in breast cancer diagnoses in the WHI observational study cohort. Risk factors for breast cancer, frequency of mammography, and time specif ic incidence of breast cancer were assessed in relation to combined hormone use.
Results
In the clinical trial, there were fewer breast cancer diagnoses in the group receiving est rogen plus progest in than in the placebo group in the initial 2 years of the study, but the number of diagnoses increased over the course of the 5.6 year intervention period. The elevated risk decreased rapidly after both groups stopped taking the study pills, despite a similar frequency of mammography. In the observational study, the incidence of breast cancer was initially about two times as high in the group receiving menopausal hormones as in the placebo group, but this difference in incidence decreased rapidly in about 2 years, coinciding with year to year reduct ions in combined hormone use. During this period, differences in the frequency of mammography between the two groups were unchanged.
Conclusions
The increased risk of breast cancer associated with the use of estrogen plus progestin declined markedly soon after discontinuation of combined hormone therapy and was unrelated to changes in frequency of mammography.
Journals for full download on the link below

Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar