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Breast cancer and ostmenopausal hormone therapy
"These findings support the hypothesis that the recent reduction in breast cancer incidence in the United States is predominantly correlation to a decrease in combined estrogen plus progestin use," said Rowan T. Chlebowski, M.D., Ph.D., a LA BioMed chief investigator and main author for the study. Breast cancer in the United States began to decline in 2003, after the Women's Health Initiative's initial findings that combined hormone treatment was correlation to higher risk of breast cancer and heart problems. Using data from the Women's Health Initiative's randomized trial and observational study cohort of postmenopausal women on combined hormone treatment, the scientists in the study published recently also observed that continued use of combined estrogen plus progestin after five years about doubles subsequent breast cancer risk each year. "Postmenopausal women and their physicians should consider these findings in weighing the risks and benefits of combined estrogen plus progestin use, particularly if the women plan to take the medicine for more than five years," said Dr. Chlebowski. The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute provided grants to support this study of data from the Women's Health Initiative. The National Institutes of Health established the Women's Health Initiative in 1991 to address the most common causes of death, disability and impaired quality of life in postmenopausal women, including the use of combined hormone treatment. That part of the study was halted in 2002 when scientists saw surprisingly higher rates of heart problems and breast cancer in women taking the hormones. Posted by: Betsy Source |
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