Study finds menopause therapy can be ineffective or
dangerous
Sunday, July 13, 2003
By Karen Hoffmann, Post-Gazette Staff Writer
Millions of menopausal women wary of the risks of hormone
replacement therapy take botanical supplements instead. But new
studies reveal that one such supplement is ineffective and another
could be dangerous to certain women.
Women with breast cancer, or who may have undiagnosed breast
tumors, should not take the supplement black cohosh for their
symptoms, a Duquesne University researcher said yesterday at the
American Association for Cancer Research meeting in Washington, D.C.
The lead researcher on the study, Vicki Davis, assistant
professor of pharmacology at Duquesne, found that in mice with
breast tumors, black cohosh increased the risk that the cancer would
spread to the lungs. The tumors also appeared to be more aggressive,
she said.
The herb doesn't cause breast cancer but increases the chances
that breast cancers will spread beyond the breast, which makes them
extremely difficult to treat.
Davis used mice that had an activated gene that causes them to
spontaneously develop mammary tumors, and fed them black cohosh in
amounts comparable to those normally taken by women.
"The mouse model I used is one that is very similar to human
breast cancer," Davis said. "A lot of the mechanisms for metastatic
cancer are very similar between the animal and the human."
Davis said they did not yet know how the extract causes more
aggressive cancers.
"Black cohosh is a mixture of compounds," she said. "We don't
know if the ones that are helping the symptoms are different from
the ones that are affecting the cancer."
Another widely used botanical supplement, red clover, was found
ineffective in a study published Wednesday in the Journal of the
American Medical Association. Dr. Jeffrey Tice of the University of
California, San Francisco, found that red clover supplements were no
more effective at treating hot flashes and other menopausal symptoms
than a placebo.
Davis warned against the widespread misconception that such
compounds as black cohosh and red clover are safer than synthetic
drugs because they are "natural."
"We shouldn't assume all natural products are safe," she said.
With therapies being discredited, women are left with few options
for treating menopausal symptoms and new ones must be developed,
Davis said. "Hot flashes and menopausal symptoms are not minor
problems."
(Karen Hoffmann can be reached at
khoffmann@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1994.)
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