|
Strong Link Between Breast Cancer And
Hormone Replacement Therapy Found
An extended analysis of cancer rates reinforces
a strong association between use of hormone replacement therapy
(HRT) and increased breast cancer incidence, according to research
led by scientists at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer
Center and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
In the published study, the investigators say that plummeting use
of HRT in mid-2002, after results of the Women's Health Initiative
study were announced, correlated with a steep decline in new breast
cancer diagnoses that started shortly thereafter and continued through
2003. Incidence in 2004 leveled maintained the same low level of
incidence, the lowest rate seen since about 1987, the researchers
say.
The decline occurred primarily in women age 50-69, the researchers
find, and was predominantly seen in estrogen-receptor(ER)-positive
cancer - the type of tumors is fueled by estrogen, a hormone that
is supplemented in HRT. Such cancers declined 14.7 percent in
this time period, compared to a non-significant decline of 1.7
percent in ER-negative tumors.
"For our new data set, 2004, the drop in breast cancer incidence
leveled off and remained low in that year, "showing that
the decreased rates seen in 2003 were also present in 2004, meaning
that the decline was not a one-year wonder, a short-lived anomaly,"
says Ravdin, the study's lead investigator.
"This kind of study can't prove causality, but the data
present a very compelling link between hormone replacement therapy
and breast cancer," says Berry, the study's senior investigator.
Using data derived from National Cancer Institute (NCI) cancer
registries that report on 9 percent of the U.S. population, they
found that the total decrease in breast cancer incidence was 6.7
percent between 2002 and 2003. They also calculated that by the
end of 2002, about 20 million fewer prescriptions for HRT were
written in the United States- a decrease of 38 percent. Interest
in HRT use dropped after the 16,608-participant federal Women's
Health Initiative study results were announced in July 2002 and
showed that the risks of taking these agents outweighed the benefits
for many post-menopausal women.
Ravdin and Berry strongly stress, however, that their study is
not suggesting that all women stop their use of HRT. "This
study is not saying that an individual woman will reduce her absolute
risk of developing breast cancer by 15 percent by immediately
discontinuing use of HRT," Berry says.
While it may be true that stopping use of HRT may have prevented
as many as 14,000 breast cancers in 2003 compared with 2002, the
percentage of decline is based on an entire population, he explains.
"At best, based on this analysis, an individual woman could
reduce her individual risk of developing breast cancer by one
in 60, or about 1.7 percent, if she stopped using hormones,"
Berry says.
As a physician, Ravdin tells his patients to follow currently
accepted guidelines for HRT use: to use the drug at the lowest
dose and for the shortest time period to control hot flashes and
other debilitating symptoms caused by the onset of menopause.
"The risk of developing breast cancer from use of these
hormones is relatively small and for some women with postmenopausal
symptoms, the benefits of HRT are well worth that risk,"
he says. "This is just another small piece of the puzzle
to help women gauge the risks and benefits of using HRT."
The researchers also say that their study cannot answer three
key questions: whether stopping the use of HRT leads to a permanent
or a temporary decline in breast cancer incidence; if this effect
is seen for stopping all types of HRT; and how much of a contributing
role other factors may have played in the decline.
"There are several possibilities as to what effect stopping
HRT has. Possibly, it slows the growth of tumors that are there
but aren't big enough yet to be detected on a mammogram. Or it
could be removing the hormone fuel stops the growth completely
or even causes tumor regression," Berry says. "We don't
know which is correct."
While Berry, an expert in statistics, adds that he was initially
surprised that stopping HRT use could have such an immediate impact
on breast cancer growth, Ravdin, the clinician, says he was not.
"We know that if you treat ER-positive breast cancer with
anti-hormone treatment, you can see shrinkage within weeks, so
why wouldn't withdrawing hormones have the same kind of effect
on smaller cancers that have not yet been detected?" says
Ravdin. "My thought is that these tumors don't completely
disappear, but they have stopped growing - hopefully, for many
of them, forever."
As to the impact of other factors on breast cancer decline, the
researchers say that one contributing factor could be declining
use of mammography by women who have stopped using HRT. NCI data
has reported a 3.2 percent decline in screening mammography in
2003 for women 50-65 years old, compared to 2000, Berry says,
but adds, "such a change would seem insufficient to explain
the decline in breast cancer incidence." A large drop in
screening would have been seen in breast tumors that are both
ER-positive and ER-negative, and that wasn't the case.
Finally, the researchers say that this study may lead to new
insights into both the etiology of breast cancer and its prevention.
"We will continue modeling incidence rates to try to understand
whether what we are seeing is a slowing or a regressing of tumors,
or a mix between these two things," Berry says.
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|