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Breast cancer: Menopausal hormone therapy risks 'bigger than thought'

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The increased risk of breast cancer from menopausal hormone therapy lasts more than a decade after treatment stops, a major report suggests.

The researcher­s at the University of Oxford say the results mean the risk of breast cancer is double what women are currently being told.

They estimate a million cases of breast cancer may have been caused by the therapy in the West since the 1990s.

Charities said the drugs should be used for the shortest time necessary.

What is menopausal hormone therapy?

The menopause is when women's periods stop and they can no longer become pregnant naturally.

In the UK, the average age to reach the menopause is 51.

There is a marked fall in two hormones in the body - oestrogen and progestero­ne - which can have profound effects throughout the body.

It can result in hot flushes, night sweats, mood swings, vaginal dryness and reduced sex drive.

Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) essentiall­y replaces the missing hormones to alleviate menopausal symptoms.

It is commonly referred to as HRT (hormone replacemen­t therapy), although this also includes other therapies such as thyroid hormones, growth hormones or testostero­ne which are not part of this study.

MHT comes in different forms such as tablets, gels, patches or vaginal creams. It can be made up of different hormones - some are just oestrogen, others include progestage­n (synthetic hormones that simulate progestero­ne).

However, all drugs have side-effects and in this case that includes an increased risk of cancer.

How big is the risk?

The study calculated six in every 100 women not taking menopausal hormone therapy would develop breast cancer between the ages of 50 and 69.

If they took oestrogen and progestage­n every day for five years, eight of the women would develop breast cancer.

So out of every 50 people taking the combined therapy, one would develop breast cancer as a result of the drugs.

There are other types of hormone replacemen­t therapy and each of those showed an increased risk too.

Taking intermitte­nt hormone therapy (daily oestrogen, but progestage­n for around half the monthly cycle) led to one extra case of breast cancer in every 70 people.

And just taking oestrogen caused an extra case in every 200 women.

However, taking oestrogen alone increases the risk of womb cancer and is normally used only after a hysterecto­my.

How much of this is new?

The risk of breast cancer from menopausal hormone therapy is already well known.

It is in the official guidance on the use of these drugs and does form part of the conversati­on between patient and doctor when balancing the risks and benefits.

What is new is showing the increased risk of breast cancer lasts more than a decade and the impact that has.

Does it matter how I take menopausal hormone therapy?

Yes.

The study, published in the Lancet, showed nearly all types of therapy (pills, gels, patches) increased the risk of breast cancer.

Oestrogen therapies applied in the vagina such as creams or a pessary - did not increase the risk.

With these methods the therapeuti­c hormones do not reach the bloodstrea­m and circulate around the body.

It means they do not provide all of the benefits of menopausal hormone therapy, but do not have all the risks either.

What should people do?

Deciding whether to use menopausal hormone therapy involved balancing the risks and the benefits before this report was published and the same is true now.

"We don't want to alarm women, but we don't want to give them false reassuranc­e," Prof Gillian Reeves, from the University of Oxford told.

She added: "What we would hope is women use this informatio­n to make a much more informed decision about whether they want to start taking HRT or continue taking HRT."

Baroness Delyth Morgan, the chief executive at Breast Cancer Care and Breast Cancer Now, said: "On balance, many women will feel HRT to be a necessity, as it can be really effective in helping them control debilitati­ng menopausal symptoms such as hot flushes.

"In order to minimise the risk of breast cancer, it is normally recommende­d that the lowest effective dose is used for the shortest possible time."

 ??  ?? Hormone therapy for menopause comes in a variety of forms, including tablets and patches. The treatment should be used for the shortest possible time.
Hormone therapy for menopause comes in a variety of forms, including tablets and patches. The treatment should be used for the shortest possible time.

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