Fewer Breast
Cancers Linked to Less Hormone Therapy
Thur Dec 14,2006
A sharp decline in new breast cancer cases in 2003
in the United States have come because millions of
older women ceased hormone replacement therapy the
previous year, researchers said on Thursday.
But they stressed that because their analysis is based
on population statistics, the reasons are not completely
certain.
"The investigators report that there was an overall
7 percent relative decline in breast cancer incidence
between 2002 and 2003," the University of Texas M.
D. Anderson Cancer Center said in a statement.
"The steepest decline -- 12 percent -- occurred in
women between ages 50-69 diagnosed with estrogen receptor
positive (ER-positive) breast cancer," it said. These
types of tumors are fueled by the hormone estrogen.
The study was presented at the 29th annual San Antonio
Breast Cancer Symposium.
Researchers said that as many as 14,000 fewer women
were diagnosed with the disease in 2003 than in 2002,
a year in which there were an estimated 203,500 new
U.S. cases.
"It is the largest single drop in breast cancer incidence
within a single year I am aware of," said Dr. Peter
Ravdin, a research professor in the Department of Biostatistics
at M. D. Anderson.
"Something went right in 2003, and it seems that it
was the decrease in the use of hormone therapy, but
from the data we used we can only indirectly infer
that is the case," he said in a statement.
HRT provides the hormone estrogen and sometimes also
progestin to women after menopause.
But a big study in 2002 suggested that the combination
of estrogen and progestin raised the risk of breast
cancer. This brought a premature halt to a Women's
Health Initiative study of more than 16,600 women between
50 and 79 who were using HRT, and caused widespread
confusion
More analysis of the Women's Health Initiative also
showed that HRT could raise the risk of heart disease
and especially strokes, and HRT was abandoned except
as a way to relieve the most debilitating and stressful
symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes and insomnia.
Ravdin said about 30 percent of American women over
the age of 50 had been taking HRT in the early years
of this decade but about half of the women stopped
in the later part of 2002 after the results of this
link were made public.
"Research has shown that ER-positive tumors will stop
growing if they are deprived of the hormones, so it
is possible that a significant decrease in breast cancer
can be seen if so many women stopped using HRT," he
said.
"It takes breast cancer a long time to develop, but
here we are primarily talking about existing cancers
that are fueled by hormones and that slow or stop their
growing when a source of fuel is cut," added Donald
Berry, an M.D. Anderson professor who helped lead the
study.
"Incidence of breast cancer had been increasing in
the 20 or so years prior to July 2002, and this increase
was over and above the known role of screening mammography.
HRT had been proposed as a possible factor, although
the magnitude of any HRT effect was not known."
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