Estrogen Linked To Benign Breast Disease
April 9, 2008, 10:13 AM PDT
Add another risk to hormone therapy after
menopause: Benign breast lumps.
One type of hormone therapy - estrogen plus progestin - already
is well-known to increase the risk of breast cancer. But a major
study of women able to use estrogen alone didn't find that link.
Tuesday, researchers reported a new wrinkle: Those estrogen-only
users doubled their chances of getting non-cancerous breast lumps.
That's a concern not only because of the extra biopsies and worry
those lumps cause, but because a particular type - called benign
proliferative breast disease - is suspected of being a first step
toward developing cancer 10 years or so later.
About one in five women undergo a breast biopsy within a decade
of starting annual mammograms, and most are of those abnormalities
turn out to be benign. Yet under a microscope, there are different
types, from simple fluid-filled cysts to what's called
proliferative breast disease because it's made of growing cells.
The latest work, published in the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute, re-examines data from the landmark Women's Health
Initiative that found a variety of health risks from long-term
hormone therapy.
Only women who have undergone hysterectomies are able to use
estrogen-only therapy, and the WHI originally included more than
10,000 of those women, who were given either estrogen or a dummy
drug and tracked for about seven years.
Now, a team led by Dr. Tom Rohan of the Albert Einstein College
of Medicine in New York has reviewed breast biopsies done on those
women - and identified 232 cases of benign proliferative breast
disease. Women given the estrogen-only therapy had twice the risk
of developing these abnormalities compared with women given a
placebo.
WHI participants are still being tracked, allowing scientists to
eventually tell if the benign breast problems were a signal of more
trouble to come, Rohan concluded.
Copyright © 2008, KTLA