Hormone
therapy increases frequency of abnormal
Mammograms, Breast Biopsies
Newswise — Combined hormone therapy appears
to increase the risk that women will have
abnormal mammograms and breast biopsies and
may decrease the effectiveness of both
methods for detecting breast cancer,
according to a report in the February 25
issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one
of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Hormone therapy use remains common among
women beginning menopause, according to
background information in the article.
“For women with a uterus considering
combined estrogen plus progestin use,
identified breast cancer issues represent a
concern,” the authors write.
Rowan T. Chlebowski, M.D., Ph.D., of the Los
Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at
Harbor–UCLA Medical Center, and colleagues
studied 16,608 post-menopausal women who
participated in the Women’s Health
Initiative (WHI) clinical trial, beginning
in 1993 through 1998.
A total of 8,506 women were randomly
assigned to receive a combination of
estrogen (0.625 milligrams of conjugated
equine estrogens per day) plus progesterone
(2.5 milligrams of medroxyprogesterone
acetate per day), while 8,102 took a
placebo.
Each woman received a mammogram and breast
examination yearly, with biopsies performed
based on physicians’ clinical judgment.
During the 5.6 years of the study, 199 women
in the combined hormone group and 150 women
in the placebo group developed breast
cancer.
Mammograms with abnormal results were more
common among women taking hormones than
among women taking placebo (35 percent vs.
23 percent); women taking hormones had a 4
percent greater risk of having a mammogram
with abnormalities after one year and an 11
percent greater risk after five years.
Breast biopsies also were more common among
women taking hormones than among those
assigned to placebo (10 percent vs. 6.1
percent).
“Although breast cancers were significantly
increased and were diagnosed at higher
stages in the combined hormone group,
biopsies in that group less frequently
diagnosed cancer (14.8 percent vs. 19.6
percent),” the authors write.
“After discontinuation of combined hormone
therapy, its adverse effect on mammograms
modulated but remained significantly
different from that of placebo for at least
12 months,” they continue.
Use of combined hormones increases breast
density, which increases the risk of breast
cancer and may also delay diagnosis, the
authors note. However, breast density was
not measured in the current study.
“Use of conjugated equine estrogens plus
medroxyprogesterone acetate for
approximately five years resulted in more
than one in 10 and one in 25 women having
otherwise avoidable mammogram abnormalities
and breast biopsies, respectively, and
compromised the diagnostic performance of
both,” the authors conclude.
“This adverse effect on breast cancer
detection should be incorporated into
risk-benefit discussions with women
considering even short-term combined hormone
therapy.”