|
SYNOPSIS
Women whose
breasts become tender while on hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
have a much greater risk of developing breast cancer.
UCLA researchers
studied more than 16,000 women who took estrogen-plus-progestin
– usually either Premarin or Prempro.
Those who took
HRT had triple the risk of developing breast tenderness – and
those who had breast tenderness after taking the pills were at
48 percent higher risk of invasive breast cancer.
Experts advise
women who develop tenderness while taking HRT to ask their
doctors about continuing with the therapy.
Details
of the study:
Women who
developed new-onset breast tenderness after starting estrogen
plus progestin hormone replacement therapy were at significantly
higher risk for developing breast cancer than women on the
combination therapy who didn't experience such tenderness,
according to a new UCLA study.
The research,
published in the Oct. 12, 2009 issue of the Archives of Internal
Medicine, is based on data from more than 16,000 participants in
the Women's Health Initiative estrogen-plus- progestin clinical
trial. This trial was abruptly halted in July 2002 when
researchers found that healthy menopausal women on the
combination therapy had an elevated risk for invasive breast
cancer.
Researchers do
not know why breast tenderness indicates increased cancer risk
among women on the combination therapy, said the new study's
lead researcher, Dr. Carolyn J. Crandall, a clinical professor
of general internal medicine and health services research at the
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
"Is it because
the hormone therapy is causing breast-tissue cells to multiply
more rapidly, which causes breast tenderness and at the same
time indicates increased cancer risk? We need to figure out what
makes certain women more susceptible to developing breast
tenderness during hormone therapy than other women,"
Crandall said.
This study
compared the daily use of oral conjugated equine estrogens
(0.625 mg) plus medroxyprogesterone acetate (2.5 mg), or CEE+MPA,
with the daily use of a placebo pill.
Of the
participants in the trial, 8,506 took estrogen plus progestin
and 8,102 were given placebos. Participants underwent
mammography and clinical breast exams at the start of the trial
and annually thereafter. Self-reported breast tenderness was
assessed at the beginning of the trial and one year later, and
invasive breast cancer over the next 5.6 years was confirmed by
medical record review.
Women on the
combination therapy who did not have breast tenderness at the
trial's inception were found to have a threefold greater risk of
developing tenderness at the one-year mark, compared with
participants who were assigned placebos (36.1 percent vs. 11.8
percent). Among the women who did report breast tenderness at
the beginning, the risk at one-year was about 1.26 times that of
their counterparts on placebos.
Of the women who
reported new-onset breast tenderness, 76.3 percent had been on
the combination therapy.
Women in the
combination therapy group who did not have breast tenderness at
the outset but experienced new-onset tenderness at the first
annual follow-up had a 48 percent higher risk of invasive breast
cancer than their counterparts on combination therapy who did
not have breast tenderness at the first-year follow-up.
"To our
knowledge, no prior published studies have addressed whether
there is an association between CEE+MPA–induced new-onset breast
tenderness and breast cancer risk," Crandall said.
The study does
have limitations. The data the researchers used assessed breast
tenderness only annually and thus could have underestimated it.
Also, the rates of women discontinuing the combination therapy
and switching from placebos to active therapy were relatively
high, though the researchers believe this could have decreased,
rather than increased, the observed association between
new-onset tenderness and cancer risk. And the results don't
apply to other types of estrogen or progestin therapy.
Study co-authors
were Rowan Chlebowski of UCLA; Aaron K. Aragaki, Anne McTiernan
and Garnet Anderson of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center in Seattle; Susan L. Hendrix of Wayne State University–Hutzel
Women's Hospital in Detroit; Barbara B. Cochrane of the
University of Washington; and Lewis H. Kuller and Jane A. Cauley
of the University of Pittsburgh.
Grants from the
National Institute on Aging and the Tarlow-Eisner-Moss Research
Endowment of the Iris Cantor–UCLA Women's Health Center funded
Crandall's research. Funding for the Women's Health Initiative
comes through the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of
the National Institutes of Health.
October 12, 2009
|