Estrogen use linked to elevated risk of ovarian cancer
Madison hormone pill maker takes another hit
Wednesday, July 17, 2002
BY KITTA MacPHERSON Star-Ledger Staff
Federal researchers have concluded that taking estrogen over an extended
period of time could increase the risk of ovarian cancer in women, a finding
certain to prolong the controversy over the safety of using hormones to
treat menopause.
The study, to be published in today's issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association, follows the startling announcement last week
that the combined use of estrogen and progestin increased the risk of heart
disease and breast cancer in women who participated in a large study. Until
now, medical treatment had been based on the widely held belief that
estrogen warded off heart disease.
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An editorial in the same edition of the influential medical journal
advises physicians to stop prescribing combined hormone treatments for
long-term use. Physicians and patients had been confused about the practical
impact of last week's study, released early in an electronic version placed
on the journal's Web site.
The findings serve as a nasty one-two punch for Wyeth Pharmaceuticals in
Madison, whose drugs, Prempro, a combined hormone treatment, and Premarin,
an estrogen medication, are best sellers.
"The association between estrogen use and ovarian cancer should be
worrisome enough for clinicians to consider carefully whether to suggest
estrogen-only hormone replacement therapy," writes Kenneth Noller, an
obstetrician-gynecologist at Tufts University in Boston, in an accompanying
editorial.
Study author James Lacey Jr., an epidemiologist, and colleagues from the
National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md., found evidence of the increase
in ovarian cancer after conducting a follow-up study of 44,241 women. The
women in the study had agreed to stay in touch with scientists after
participating in the vast Breast Cancer Detection Demonstration Project, a
mammogram-screening program that ran from 1973 to 1980 and involved more
than 200,000 women.
"Because hormone therapy may influence so many conditions that affect
women after menopause -- cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, breast
cancer, uterine cancer, gallbladder disease, blood clots and now potentially
ovarian cancer -- we should no longer think of a woman basing her decision
to use hormones on the potential risk of just one condition," Lacey said.
"Women should continue to talk to their health care providers about whether
hormones might be right for them."
Estrogen is already known to increase the risk of developing uterine
cancer. The finding of an increased incidence of ovarian cancer, however, is
significant because, though rare, it is a far more deadly form of cancer.
Victoria Kusiak, North American Medical Director for Wyeth, which makes
the hormone pills implicated in the study, said the findings represented
just one more conclusion of a melange of studies on the purported link
between estrogen and ovarian cancer that have been "all over the map."
"This is an evolving story," said Kusiak, a physician. "We just have to
stay tuned as to what comes out." Women now, she said, have "a better
definition of the risks" of hormone therapy, which should help guide
treatment.
The study, she said, is not definitive in that it was an observational
study, based on self-reported facts by participants, rather than a more
rigorous clinical trial.
Lacy, the federal epidemiologist who led the analysis, said that in the
case of his study, a clinical trial would be unethical. Such trials are
supervised medical experiments testing new drugs or procedures. "We don't do
clinical trials to test harmful effects," Lacy said.
Lacy and the other authors concluded that while this study points to an
association between long-term estrogen use and ovarian cancer, more research
is needed to gauge the actual risks of taking estrogen.
All that may be left to medicine in order to perform further analysis, he
said, are more big studies. Since ovarian cancer is so rare, it is necessary
to gather data from very large groups, a factor that makes such studies
expensive and cumbersome.
The federal Women's Health Initiative study, which found last week that
combined hormone therapy did not guard against heart disease and may
contribute to increased breast cancer risk, studied 16,000 women over five
years. The study that forms the basis of the estrogen-ovarian cancer link
included 44,000 women over 20 years.
"For a population three times as big over a time interval four times as
long, we still only saw 329 ovarian cancers," Lacy said. "You need something
large enough and long enough so we can be somewhat confident about the
results."
Women who used estrogen had a 60 percent greater risk of developing
ovarian cancer, according to the study, than women who had never taken
hormones. The risk increased with length of estrogen use. Women who used the
combined treatment did not appear to have a significantly increased risk of
developing ovarian cancer, according to the study.
Between 1979 and 1998, the authors interviewed participants about the
type of hormones used, age at first use of hormones, duration of use, form
of administration and other possible risk factors that could contribute to
the development of the disease.
By the time of the follow-up, the women in the study were all
postmenopausal and were 56 years old on average. Some had hysterectomies.
All had at least one ovary.
They asked participants whether they had been diagnosed with ovarian
cancer, and then reviewed medical records, death certificates and state
cancer registry data to confirm those diagnoses.
Among the 44,241 women who were interviewed in the follow-up, 329
developed ovarian cancer. The risk of ovarian cancer, the study found,
increased with estrogen use among women with and without a hysterectomy, and
the risk increased proportionately with a longer duration of hormone use.
Estrogen is a natural hormone produced primarily by the ovaries. After
menopause, the ovaries produce lower levels of the hormones estrogen and
progesterone. By the time natural menopause is complete -- usually between
ages 45 and 55 -- hormone output decreases significantly.
As early as the 1940s, women began using estrogen in high doses to
counteract some of the short-term discomforts of "the change of life" -- hot
flashes, insomnia, vaginal drying and thinning, and urinary tract
incontinence and infections. After it became clear in the 1970s that women
who took estrogen alone had a six to eight times higher risk of developing
uterine or endometrial cancer, doctors began prescribing progestin along
with much lower doses of estrogen. Progestin is a synthetic form of the
natural hormone progesterone.
Previous studies looking at the effect of postmenopausal hormones on
ovarian cancer risk have been inconsistent. Some reported increased risk
with estrogen use while others reported either no effect or a protective
one.
Most of the earlier studies were small and limited by incomplete data
about ovarian cancer risk factors.
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