Guest guest Posted July 16, 2005 Report Share Posted July 16, 2005 califpacific Wed Oct 24, 2001 8:13 am hrt - attention women Each year, doctors prescribe hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to millions = of women entering menopause. They tell their patients how HRT offsets a woman's de= creased ovarian hormone production and how it thereby relieves the distress of hot flashe= s, sweats, disturbed sleep and vaginal dryness, while preventing cardio-vascular disease and osteoporosi= s. According to a recent survey, health care providers have reached ¾ of the postmenopausal female= population with their counseling on supplementation with exogenous hormones (1). As physicians, the drug industry and the media continue to convin= ce women that the benefits of ingesting hormones outweigh any potential risk, the use of HRT st= eadily rises. During the period from 1982 to 1992, the use of hormone therapy in the U.S. more than do= ubled (2) and today about a third of women aged 45 to 65 rely on it (3,4). Such widespread promoti= on of this treatment implies that credible science has proven it safe and effective, but unfortunat= ely this is not so. As early as 1994, a study in the British Medical Journal revealed= that 3 meta-analyses showing a reduced risk of cardiovascular diseases in HRT users were flawed = because their results were due to the selection of healthy sample populations, rather than to a pro= tective effect of HRT.(5) The authors concluded that routine prescription of HRT for the preven= tion of cardiovascular disease was not warranted. Unfortunately they were ignored, as were research= ers who, 25 years earlier, had reported increased heart attacks and death in men given high dose= s of estrogens, compared to the control group.(6) In 1997, the British Medical Journal again published a study that= debunked the theory that HRT protects the cardiovascular system. This time, analysis of the re= sults of 22 trials involving more than 4,000 post-menopausal women showed that women given exogenous hor= mones had a 40% greater incidence of cardiovascular events other than pulmonary embolism = and deep venous thrombosis, and a 64% increased incidence of cardiovascular events including veno= us thrombembolism, compared to those not taking hormones.(7) Current reports confirm that, not only does HRT not avert cardiov= ascular disease, but it may play a causative role in a wide range of adverse effects, including hear= t attacks. A study in the February 2000 issue of The Lancet, for instance, examined the results of t= rials submitted to the Finnish Drug Agency by drug companies seeking licensing approval of HRT drugs.= They judged the quality of the trials and their reporting of adverse events to be inadequate, bu= t analysis of the 6 that met the criteria to be included in the study, revealed that users of HRT had a two= -fold increased incidence of cardiovascular and thromboembolic events, compared to nonusers.(8= ) In 1998, the Journal of the American Medical Association publishe= d the results of the double-blind, placebo-controlled HERS trial which examined the effect of HRT on= over 2700 post- menopausal women with coronary heart disease. Women on HRT had a 50% increa= sed risk of coronary heart disease events in the first year of treatment, and fewer events i= n the 4th and 5th year, compared to women on placebo. In addition, women on HRT had an almost 3-fold = increased incidence of deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, compared to those takin= g placebos, and a 40% increased rate of gallbladder disease. The two groups had similar= rates of fractures (9) Recently, the preliminary results of a trial by the NIH's Nationa= l Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute showed that women on hormone therapy had experienced more heart a= ttacks, strokes, deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, compared to those on a placebo= ..(10) This ongoing trial, which will last up to 11 years, is being conducted on 27,000 women aged= 50-79, who had been randomly assigned to receive estrogen, estrogen plus a progestin, or a pla= cebo. Even in the face of extensive research documenting the downside o= f HRT, the scientific community is reluctant to change its practices. As of August 2000, the Nati= onal Women's Health Information Center still stated that: " most scientists think that for most wo= men, the benefits of hormone replacement therapy (for example, a reduction in the risk of oste= oporosis and possibly of cardiovascular disease) clearly outweigh the possible cancer risk= s " (11) In fact, the AMA's " Complete Guide to Women's Health " (available online) recommends = that to reduce their risk of heart disease women should " consider hormone replacement therapy (HRT).= " (12) The American Academy of Family Physicians' brochure " Menopause: What to Expect= When Your Body is Changing, " reassures women that HRT " reduces the risk of osteopor= osis (a problem with the bones) and heart disease (such as heart attacks) " (13) The US Food and D= rug Administration also reports in its online document, " Help for Menopause, " that " besides protecti= ng against osteoporosis, researchers think that estrogen also lowers the risk of heart disease. " (14) We are struck by the number of so-called experts who choose to ig= nore the mounting evidence of heart attack risk associated with HRT. Why do they release state= ments to the media calling results " inconclusive " and warning women against making decisions about i= nterrupting treatment? How can they ignore studies like the one in the May 2000 Annals of Intern= al Medicine that showed that women on HRT experienced a three-fold higher rate of deep venous = thrombosis and pulmonary embolism compared to those on placebos (15), as well as numerous = other studies (16-19) that reach similar conclusions? We wonder whether they are ignorant of thes= e findings or is it that they are swept up by vested personal and industry interests? As if the evidence of increased cardiovascular risk were not dam= ning enough, there are also credible studies that link synthetic hormones with breast cancer, showing = increased risk with duration and dosage. In 2000, J.A.M.A. published a study conducted on more tha= n 46,000 women that showed that estrogen replacement therapy increased breast cancer risk by= 20% and even more when a progestin was added. Women who took an estrogen-progestin combin= ation in the previous 4 years were found to have a 40% increased risk of breast cancer, compare= d to nonusers. The authors concluded that each year of use of combination therapy increased = the risk of breast cancer by 8%.(20) Another article, in the February 2000 issue of the Journal of the= National Cancer Institute, confirmed that HRT with estrogen and progestin increases the risk of breast= cancer more than HRT with estrogen alone. For every five years of treatment, the study demo= nstrated a 6% increased incidence of breast cancer in women using estrogen only, and a 24% increase= in those using an estrogen-progestin combination, compared to nonusers.(21) In fac= t, 3 years earlier, researchers had reported that women using HRT for more than 10 years had a twofol= d increased incidence of breast cancer, compared to nonusers. The incidence was significantly hig= her in women who used an estrogen-progestin combination (2.4-fold increase) compared to un= opposed estrogen (30% increase).(22) It is noteworthy that the above studies conclude that the estroge= n-progestin combination is more dangerous than estrogen alone. Ironically progestins had been in= troduced because unopposed estrogens had increased the incidence of uterine cancer. The solu= tion, merely substituted problems, as HRT has been conservatively estimated to cause an excess of 2,= 6, and 12 breast cancers for every 1,000 women who use it for 5, 10, and 15 years, respectivel= y.(23) Considering that a third of U.S. women aged 45 to 65 years use some form of HRT, the implicat= ions of its breast cancer promoting effect on the population (some 16 million women) are en= ormous. Unfortunately, the dangers of HRT reach beyond the cardiovascular= system and the breast. Use of HRT has also been associated with a 30% to 2-fold increased risk = of ovarian cancer(24-27) and, for users of unopposed estrogens, with a 3- to 5-fold increased risk = of uterine cancer.(28-31) Additionally, women who use HRT have a two-fold increased risk of= undergoing gallbladder removal(32-33) and of developing systemic lupus erythematosus.(34= ,35) In both instances, the risk increases with the duration of hormone intake. In light of the above, we invite readers to carefully review the = following studies which document the effects of HRT on multiple systems. HRT REFERENCES Ref 1. The North American Menopause Society 1998 Menopause Survey= : Part II. Counseling About Hormone Replacement Therapy: Association With Socioeconomic Statu= s and Access to Medical Care. Ettinger B, Fugate Woods N, Barrett-Connor E, Pressman A. M= enopause: The Journal of The North American Menopause Society. Vol. 7, No. 3, pp. 143 - 148. Ref 2. Use of menopausal estrogens and medroxyprogesterone in the= United States, 1982-1992. Wysowski DK, Golden L, Burke L. Obstet Gynecol 1995 Jan;85(1):6-1= 0. Ref 3. Use of hormone replacement therapy by postmenopausal women= in the United States. Keating NL, Cleary PD, Rossi AS, Zaslavsky AM, Ayanian JZ. Ann Intern Med 1999 Apr 6;130(7):545-53. Ref 4. Use of postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy: estimat= es from a nationally representative cohort study. Brett KM, Madans JH. Am J Epidemiol.= 1997 Mar 15;145(6):536-45. Ref 5. Cardioprotective effect of hormone replacement therapy in = postmenopausal women: is the evidence biased? Posthuma WF, Westendorp RG, Vandenbroucke JP. BMJ 1994 May 14;308(6939):1268-9. Ref 6. Early risk of Hormone Therapy in Patients With Coronary He= art Disease. Wenger NK, Knatterud GL, and Canner PL. JAMA, Vol. 284 No. 1, July 5, 2000. = Ref 7. Impact of postmenopausal hormone therapy on cardiovascular= events and cancer: pooled data from clinical trials. Hemminki E, et al. BMJ 1997;315:149-153 (19= July). Ref 8. Value of drug-licensing documents in studying the effect o= f postmenopausal hormone therapy on cardiovascular disease. Hemminki R, McPherson K. Lancet 2000 F= eb 12;355(9203):566-9. Ref 9. Randomized trial of estrogen plus progestin for secondary = prevention of coronary heart disease in postmenopausal women. Heart and Estrogen/progestin Rep= lacement Study (HERS) Research Group. Hulley S, et al. JAMA 1998 Aug 19;280(7):605-13. = Ref 10. Hormone Replacement Therapy Study Fact Sheet and WHI HRT = Update. www.mhlbi.nih.gov/whi/hrt.htm and www.mhlbi.nih.gov/whi/hrt-en.ht= m Ref 11. http://www.4woman.gov/menopaus.htm Ref 12. From the AMA Complete Guide to Women's Health. http://www.ama-assn.org/insight/h_focus/wom_hlth/menopaus/menopau= s.htm Ref 13. Menopause: what to expect when your body is changing " AAF= P Family Health Facts " series. http://www.nlm.nih.gov/cgi/medlineplus/leavemedplus.pl?theURL=htt= p%3A%2F%2Ffamilydoctor%2Eorg%2Fhealthfacts%2F125%2Findex%2Ehtml Ref 14. http://www.fda.gov/opacom/lowlit/menopause.html Ref 15. Postmenopausal hormone therapy increases risk for venous = thromboembolic disease. The Heart and Estrogen/progestin Replacement Study. Grady D, et al. A= nn Intern Med 2000 May 2;132(9):689-96. Ref 16. Hormone replacement therapy and risk of venous thromboemb= olism: population based case-control study. Perez Gutthann S, Garcia Rodriguez LA, Castel= lsague J, Duque Oliart A.BMJ 1997 Mar 15;314(7083):796-800. Ref 17. Risk of hospital admission for idiopathic venous thromboe= mbolism among users of postmenopausal oestrogens. Jick H; Derby LE; Myers MW; Vasilakis = C; Newton KM. Lancet, 348(9033):981-3 1996 Oct 12. Ref 18. HRT and the risk of deep vein thrombosis. Barlow DH. Int = J Gynaecol Obstet, 59 Suppl 1():S29-33 1997 Oct. Ref 19. Prospective study of exogenous hormones and risk of pulmo= nary embolism in women. Grodstein F, et al. Lancet, 348(9033):983-7 1996 Oct 12. Ref 20. Menopausal Estrogen and Estrogen-Progestin Replacement Th= erapy and Breast Cancer Risk. Schairer C, et al. JAMA 2000;283:485-491. Ref 21. Effect of Hormone Replacement Therapy on Breast Cancer Ri= sk: Estrogen Versus Estrogen Plus Progestin. Ross, RK et al. J Natl Cancer Ins= t. 2000 Feb 16;92(4):328-332. Ref 22. Hormone replacement therapy and the risk of breast cancer= .. Nested case-control study in a cohort of Swedish women attending mammography screening. Persson I, Thurfjell E, Bergstrom R, Holmberg L. Int J Cancer 199= 7 Sep 4;72(5):758-61. Ref 23. The adverse effects of hormone replacement therapy. Tavan= i A, La Vecchia C. Drugs Aging 1999 May;14(5):347-57. Ref 24. Hormone replacement therapy and the risk of epithelial ov= arian carcinoma: a meta-analysis. Garg PP, Kerlikowske K, Subak L, Grady D. Obstet Gynecol 1998 Sep= ;92(3):472-9. Ref 25. Hormonal therapy for menopause and ovarian cancer in a co= llaborative re-analysis of European studies. Negri E, et al. Int J Cancer 1999 Mar 15;80(6):= 848-51. Ref 26. Estrogen replacement therapy and risk of epithelial ovari= an cancer. Risch HA.Gynecol Oncol 1996 Nov;63(2):254-7. Ref 27. Hormone replacement therapy and risk of epithelial ovaria= n cancer. Purdie DM, et al. Br J Cancer 1999 Oct;81(3):559-63. Ref 28. Risk of endometrial cancer following estrogen replacement= with and without progestins.Weiderpass E, et al. J Natl Cancer Inst 1999 Jul 7;91(= 13):1131-7. Ref 29. Risks of breast and endometrial cancer after estrogen and= estrogen-progestin replacement. Persson I, Weiderpass E, Bergkvist L, Bergstrom R, Schairer C. Ca= ncer Causes Control 1999 Aug;10(4):253-60. Ref 30. Menopausal hormone use and endometrial cancer, by tumor g= rade and invasion. Shapiro JA, Weiss NS, Beresford SA, Voigt LF. Epidemiology 1998 Jan;9 (1): 99= -101. Ref 31. Long-term surveillance of mortality and cancer incidence = in women receiving hormone replacement therapy. Hunt K, Vessey M, McPherson K, Coleman M. Br= J Obstet Gynaecol 1987 Jul;94(7):620-35. Ref 32. Postmenopausal hormone use and cholecystectomy in a large= prospective study. Grodstein F, Colditz GA, Stampfer MJ. Obstet Gynecol 1994 Jan;83(1):5-11. Ref 33. Increased risk of cholecystectomy in users of supplementa= l estrogen. Petitti DB, Sidney S, Perlman JA. Gastroenterology 1988 Jan;94(1)= :91-5. Ref 34. Postmenopausal estrogen replacement therapy and the risk = of developing systemic lupus erythematosus or discoid lupus. Meier CR; Sturkenboom MC; Cohen A= S; Jick H. J Rheumatol, 25(:1515-9 1998 Aug. Ref 35. Postmenopausal estrogen therapy and the risk for developi= ng systemic lupus erythematosus. Sanchez-Guerrero J, Liang MH, Karlson EW, Hunter DJ, Colditz GA. = Ann Intern Med 1995 Mar 15;122(6):430-3. HRT & CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE. Hormone Replacement Therapy Study Fact Sheet & WHI HRT Update www.mhlbi.nih.gov/whi/hrt.htm and www.mhlbi.nih.gov/whi/hrt= -en.htm This online document reports on the preliminary results of a tria= l conducted by the NIH' National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, indicating that hormone replace= ment therapy increases the risks of heart attack, stroke and venous thromboembolism in post-menopausa= l women. The trial, designed to last up to 11 years, is being conducted on 27,000 women aged 50-7= 9, who had been randomly assigned to receive estrogen, estrogen plus a progestin, or place= bo. Up to this point, women on hormone therapy experienced more heart attacks, strokes, deep ven= ous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, compared to those on placebo. These findings add to the= results of several recent studies indicating that post-menopausal hormone replacement therapy, rath= er than exerting protective effects, may in fact be associated with an excess risk of fatal and nonfat= al cardiovascular events. Study Throws Doubt On Protective Effects Of HRT For Heart Disease= .. Gottlieb S. BMJ 2000;320:826 ( 25 March). This article reports on the results of the Estrogen Replacement a= nd Atherosclerosis (ERA) Trial, presented at the American College of Cardiology's 49th annual sci= entific meeting held in California, showing that hormone replacement therapy has no beneficial effect= s on the cardiovascular system. The study was conducted on 309 post-menopausal women with coronar= y heart disease who were randomly assigned to receive one of three treatments: estrogen, e= strogen plus progestin, or placebo. Women were followed-up for 3.5 years and disease progression was = assessed through coronary angiography, a test used to detect the blockages caused by harden= ing in the arteries. No differences in disease progression were observed between the three groups, su= ggesting that neither estrogen alone nor estrogen combined with a progestin, offer protection to= women from heart disease. Impact Of Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy On Cardiovascular Events= And Cancer: Pooled Data From Clinical Trials. Elina Hemminki, et al. BMJ 1997;315:149-153 (19 July). This study reviewed the results of 22 trials conducted on 4,124 p= ost-menopausal women comparing the effects of hormone replacement therapy, placebo, no therapy, = or vitamins on the incidence of cardiovascular diseases. The results of the analysis indicated th= at, overall, women who took hormones had a 40% increased risk of cardiovascular events other = than pulmonary embolism and deep vein thrombosis, and a 64% increased risk of cardiovascular = events including venous thrombembolism, compared to women who did not take hormones. Thes= e results are in contrast with the commonly held assumption that hormone replacement therapy pre= vents cardiovascular diseases. Value Of Drug-licensing Documents In Studying The Effect Of Postm= enopausal Hormone Therapy On Cardiovascular Disease. Hemminki R, McPherson K. Lancet 2000 Feb 12;355(9203):566-9. The results of this study indicate that use of hormone replacemen= t therapy (HRT) is associated with a 2-fold increased risk of cardiovascular and thromboembolic dise= ase in postmenopausal women. These findings come from the analysis of the results of trials su= bmitted to the Finnish Drug Agency by drug companies seeking licensing approval of HRT drugs. The qu= ality of the trials and their reporting of adverse events experienced by participants were foun= d to be mostly inadequate. In addition, analysis of the 6 trials that met the criteria to be en= tered in the study revealed that users of HRT had a 2-fold increased incidence of cardiovascular and thromb= oembolic events, compared to nonusers. Randomized Trial Of Estrogen Plus Progestin For Secondary Prevent= ion Of Coronary Heart Disease In Postmenopausal Women Heart and Estrogen/progestin Replacement Study (HERS) Research Gr= oup. Hulley S, et al. JAMA 1998 Aug 19;280(7):605-13. This double-blind placebo controlled trial investigated the effec= ts of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on the prevention of recurrent coronary heart disease. The = study was conducted on 2763 postmenopausal women with a history of coronary artery disease wh= o were randomly assigned to receive either an estrogen-progestin combination, or placebo. Rat= es of myocardial infarction, cardiac arrest, angina, congestive heart failure, stroke, transient ische= mic attack, peripheral artery disease, cardiovascular mortality and overall mortality did not differ bet= ween patients taking HRT or placebo. Women on HRT had a 50% increased risk of coronary heart disease e= vents in the first year of treatment, and fewer events in the 4th and 5th year, compared to = women on placebo. In addition, women on HRT had an almost 3-fold increased incidence of deep ven= ous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism than those taking placebo, and a 40% increased rate of g= allbladder disease. Rates of fractures were similar in the two groups. These data indicate tha= t hormone therapy in postmenopausal women is not protective towards coronary heart dis= ease and is instead associated with an early increase in coronary death and nonfatal myocardial = infarction. Early Risk Of Hormone Therapy In Patients With Coronary Heart Dis= ease. Wenger NK, Knatterud GL, and Canner PL. JAMA, Vol. 284 No. 1, July 5, 2000. This article emphasizes that the early increase in fatal and nonf= atal coronary events documented in the HERS trial (described in the above article) in women with cor= onary heart disease (CHD) taking hormone replacement therapy, has been documented 30 years ago in = a large study conducted on men with CHD randomized to receive different doses of estrogens or pl= acebo. The trial arm that tested the effects of 5.0 mg/d of estrogen was interrupted after a media= n 1.5 years of follow-up, because of an increase in rates of mortality and nonfatal myocardial infarct= ion in men taking estrogens, compared to those taking placebo. The trial harm that tested the = effects of 2.5 mg/d of estrogen was discontinued after a median of almost 5 years of follow-up becaus= e of treatment-related adverse effects such as thromboembolic events and gallbladder disease in = men taking estrogen, and no benefit on overall mortality. The authors conclude that postmenopausal ho= rmone therapy for the prevention of coronary heart disease is not advisable, and is associated wit= h an early increased risk of fatal and nonfatal coronary events. The finding that the same pattern of ad= verse effects and early excess in coronary death and nonfatal myocardial infarction found in women = was also demonstrated 3 decades earlier in men is striking, and points to a precise biological ef= fect of this class of hormones. Cardioprotective Effect Of Hormone Replacement Therapy In Postmen= opausal Women: Is The Evidence Biased? Posthuma WF, Westendorp RG, Vandenbroucke JP. BMJ 1994 May 14;308(6939):1268-9. The results of this study show that data gathered from 3 meta-ana= lysis indicating that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) reduces the risk of cardiovascular dise= ase in postmenopausal women, are due to bias originated from the selection of a relatively hea= lthy sample population, rather than to a protective effect of HRT. The authors conclude that, based on the= available data, routine prescription of HRT for the prevention of cardiovascular disease is not indica= ted. Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy Increases Risk For Venous Thromboe= mbolic Disease The Heart and Estrogen/progestin Replacement Study. Grady D, et al. Ann Intern Med 2000 May 2;132(9):689-96. The results of this study show that hormone replacement therapy s= ignificantly increases the risk of deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in post-menopausal = women. The study was conducted on 2,763 women postmenopausal women who were randomly a= ssigned to receive hormone replacement therapy (1380 women) or placebo (1383 women).= During a 4-year follow-up period, 34 women in the hormone group experienced deep venous thr= ombosis or pulmonary embolism, compared to 13 in the placebo group. These data indicate that use= of synthetic hormones almost triples the risk of venous thromboembolism in post-menopausal wom= en. The authors conclude that the potential risks and benefits of hormone therapy must be weigh= ted before considering initiation of therapy. Hormone replacement therapy and risk of venous thromboembolism: p= opulation based case-control study. Perez Gutthann S, Garcia Rodriguez LA, Castellsague J, Duque Olia= rt A. BMJ 1997 Mar 15;314(7083):796-800. The results of this study, conducted on 347,253 women aged 50 and= older, show that users of hormone replacement therapy have a 2- to 3-fold increased risk of= developing pulmonary embolism or deep venous thrombosis, compared to nonusers. The risk is particu= larly elevated during the first year of use, as indicated by an over 4-fold increased incidence of ven= ous thromboembolism documented during the first six months of treatment. Risk Of Hospital Admission For Idiopathic Venous Thromboembolism = Among Users Of PostmenopausAl Oestrogens. Jick H; Derby LE; Myers MW; Vasilakis C; Newton KM. Lancet, 348(9033):981-3 1996 Oct 12. The results of this study show that post-menopausal women on horm= one replacement therapy have a 3.6-fold increased risk of idiopathic venous thromboembolism (IVT= ), compared to nonusers. The risk increases with increasing daily doses of estrogen intake, and wom= en using 0.325 mg, 0.625 mg, and 1.25 mg or more estrogen per day, were shown to have a 2-, 3.3-, = and 7-fold increased incidence of IVT, compared to nonusers. HRT And The Risk Of Deep Vein Thrombosis. Barlow DH. Int J Gynaecol Obstet, 59 Suppl 1():S29-33 1997 Oct. This article reports on 4 recent epidemiological studies demonstr= ating a three-fold increased incidence of pulmonary embolism and deep venous thrombosis in women using h= ormone replacement therapy, compared to nonusers. Prospective Study Of Exogenous Hormones And Risk Of Pulmonary Emb= olism In Women. Grodstein F, et al. Lancet, 348(9033):983-7 1996 Oct 12. The results of this study show that users of postmenopausal hormo= ne replacement therapy have an over 2-fold increased risk of primary pulmonary embolism secondar= y to deep venous thrombosis, compared to nonusers Thrombosis Of The Straight Sinus Complicating Hormone Replacement= Therapy. Strachan R; Hughes D; Cowie R. Br J Neurosurg, 9(6):805-8 1995. This article reports on the case of a woman who developed venous = thrombosis of the dura mater (the outer of the 3 membranes or meninges that cover the brain and the= spinal cord) while on hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The authors suggest that this life-thr= eatening complication, already documented in women taking oral contraceptives, may also be rarel= y associated with HRT. Cerebral Venous Thrombosis In Association With Hormonal Supplemen= t Therapy. Knox AM; Brophy BP; Sage MR. Clin Radiol, 41(5):355-7 1990 May. This article reports on the case of a woman who developed cerebra= l venous thrombosis while on postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy. HRT & BREAST CANCER Menopausal Estrogen And Estrogen-Progestin Replacement Therapy An= d Breast Cancer Risk. Schairer C, et al. JAMA 2000;283:485-491. The results of this study, conducted on a sample population of 46= ,355 postmenopausal women, show that use of estrogen replacement therapy increases the risk of br= east cancer by 20%. AIM Barleygreen " Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future " http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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