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Risks Of Hormone Replacement
Not Surprising: Report
The risks of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) have made headlines
only in recent years, but there had long been warning signs that
supplemental estrogen might be more hazardous than healthful,
a new report contends.
In 2002, a large US clinical trial called the Women's Health
Initiative (WHI) was stopped when early findings showed that HRT
after menopause slightly raised a woman's risk of breast cancer,
heart attack, stroke and blood clots.
Given the long-standing belief that HRT helped protect older
women from cardiovascular disease, the findings were widely received
with disappointment and surprise.
But no one should have been caught off guard, a group of researchers
and women's health advocates argues in a perspective piece published
in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.
Not only had the potential cancer risks of estrogen replacement
been known for decades, the presumed heart benefits were being
questioned as early as the mid-1970s, according to the authors,
led by Professor Nancy Krieger of the Harvard School of Public
Health in Boston.
"There were good grounds to have concerns before" the
recent findings, Krieger told Reuters Health.
The potential for estrogen replacement to promote cancer has
been recognized since the 1930s, when synthetic estrogens first
became available.
Still, long-term HRT was for years prescribed as a way to battle
the diseases of aging, including osteoporosis and cardiovascular
disease. For many women, it was thought, the slightly increased
risk of breast cancer might be offset by a lower risk of heart
disease and stroke -- far bigger killers than breast cancer.
But there was always uncertainty about the cardiovascular benefits
of HRT, Krieger and her colleagues note.
Krieger pointed to one study, started in the late 1960s, that
found that giving men estrogen raised their risk of cardiovascular
disease rather than lowering it, as expected.
And when it came to women, the research evidence was often conflicting
and indirect - for example, coming from observational studies
in which women on hormone replacement were found to have lower
rates of heart disease.
The problem with such evidence, as many researchers have noted,
is that other differences between HRT users and non-users may
have explained the lower heart risk; women on HRT, for example,
tended to more affluent and in better overall health.
But such cautions, as well as negative study findings, Krieger
and her colleagues contend, "were dwarfed by the proliferation
of studies favorable to HRT."
In their view, an aggressive pharmaceutical industry, the regulatory
framework and a general perception of menopause as a "disease"
were all central to the issue.
Once a drug is approved for a specific use, doctors are free
to prescribe that medication for other conditions as well. This
fact, coupled with industry influence, the report authors contend,
were key to the growth of HRT.
There was reason to believe HRT could have offered heart benefits,
Krieger acknowledged, noting, for instance, that it was "biologically
plausible" and had support from animal research.
But, she argued, given the known cancer risks of estrogen, the
evidence for HRT should not have been enough.
Among the recommendations Krieger and her colleagues make is
that the "precautionary principle" be applied to any
drug being studied for preventive medicine. That is, Krieger said,
"You don't prescribe healthy people potentially dangerous
drugs."
SOURCE: Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, September
2005.
Reference
Source 89
August
15, 2005
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