The Daily Telegraph

HRT linked to increased risk of arthritis

- By Michael Searles HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

HORMONE replacemen­t therapy (HRT) and having four or more children are linked to an increased risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis, researcher­s have found.

Early menopause, starting menstruati­on at 14 or older and having one or both ovaries removed were all also linked with an increased risk, an analysis of almost a quarter of a million women in Britain has found.

Women are about three times more likely than men to develop rheumatoid arthritis, which is a “debilitati­ng” condition where the immune system attacks the body’s joints and requires “urgent, intensive treatment”, experts say.

It affects more than 450,000 people in the UK, compared with the more common osteoarthr­itis, which affects 10million people, according to the charity Versus Arthritis. While the onset of the condition has previously been linked to changes in hormones such as oestrogen and progestero­ne, the researcher­s wanted to find out which factors were most influentia­l.

They found that women taking HRT were 46 per cent more likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis than those who were not, while those who started their menopause “early” – under 45 years old – were also at 46 per cent greater risk than those going through it at 50 or 51 years old.

Experts noted the “paradoxica­l” nature of these findings, given that HRT is used to treat the menopause by replacing lost oestrogen, but suggested that hormone therapy may change other hormone levels and “adversely affect joint health”.

About 2.3 million women are taking HRT in England.

Dr Louise Newson, a GP and menopause specialist, said the study “uses older data” and probably included “women prescribed older, synthetic types of HRT, rather than the natural body-identical hormones that we prescribe nowadays”.

Women who had undergone a hysterecto­my or had one or both ovaries removed were at 40 per cent and 21 per cent higher risk respective­ly. These procedures can cause “surgically induced menopause”.

Mothers with four or more children, compared with those who had two, were 18 per cent more likely to develop the condition, while women who had fewer than 33 reproducti­ve years – the time between their first period and onset of the menopause – were at 39 per cent greater risk than those with more.

Starting periods after the age of 14 was associated with a 17 per cent higher risk when compared with starting them at the age of 13. There was no clear link to taking the contracept­ive pill.

Dr Benjamin Ellis, the senior clinical policy adviser at Versus Arthritis and a consultant rheumatolo­gist, said that inherent difference­s between men’s and women’s genes “may explain some of the difference­s in immune system diseases” and that female hormones such as oestrogen “were important in regulating the immune system”.

He added: “A deeper knowledge of why the immune system goes wrong in the first place will help scientists develop more effective and safer treatment for this debilitati­ng condition. In the meantime, any change in the risk of rheumatoid arthritis is unlikely to be a main factor in whether or not to take HRT.”

Dr Newson said the study “should not be a cause of concern” and that it did not establish “cause and effect”.

The use of HRT was the subject of controvers­y when a 2002 study found it increased the risk of breast cancer, but this was later found to overstate the danger. While it is still accepted that there is an associated risk, for the majority of menopausal women the benefits continue to outweigh the risks, and serious side effects are considered rare.

In recent years, uptake has increased significan­tly, with 2.3million women taking HRT in 2021-22, up from 1.48 million in 2019-20.

Researcher­s from the Anhui Medical University School of Public Health in China analysed 223,526 women from the UK Biobank over 12 years, during which time 3,313, or 1.5 per cent, developed rheumatoid arthritis.

The study is published in the journal RMD Open.

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