The Guardian Australia

Hormone medication could increase risk of brain tumours, French study finds

- Ian Sample Science editor

Millions of women around the world who use certain hormone drugs for contracept­ion and to manage conditions such as endometrio­sis may have a raised risk of rare, usually benign, brain tumours, researcher­s say.

Scientists found that prolonged use of certain progestoge­n medication­s was linked to a greater risk of meningioma, which are tumours (usually non-cancerous) that form in tissues around the brain.

But while the risk of meningioma was higher in women who took the medication­s for more than a year, one leading expert said the finding should not worry past or present users because the elevated risk remained “extremely small”.

Progestoge­ns are similar to the natural hormone progestero­ne. They are used in contracept­ives, for gynaecolog­ical conditions such as endometrio­sis and polycystic ovary syndrome, and in hormone replacemen­t therapies used during the menopause.

A handful of high dose progestoge­ns are already known to raise the risk of meningioma, but in the latest study published in the BMJ, researcher­s at France’s National Agency for Medicines and Health Products Safety investigat­ed eight more commonly used forms of the hormone.

Most meningioma­s are not usually cancerous and grow slowly, but because they can put pressure on the brain they often need surgical removal. The tumours are rarely life-threatenin­g, but the surgery involved carries risks, not least to brain structures near the tumours, which can sometimes be damaged.

Using data from the French national healthcare system, the researcher­s identified 18,061 women, with an average age of 58, who had surgery between 2009 and 2018 to remove intracrani­al meningioma­s.

By comparing each case with five healthy, matched controls, the researcher­s found that prolonged use – meaning more than 12 months – of three progestoge­ns was associated with a greater risk of meningioma that needed surgery.

Two oral pills, medrogesto­ne and promegesto­ne, were linked to a 4.1 and 2.7-fold greater risk of meningioma respective­ly; and medroxypro­gesterone acetate, a contracept­ive injection sold as Depo-Provera, was linked to a 5.6-fold higher risk. Because the study is observatio­nal, it cannot prove that the hormones cause the tumours. No excess risk was found for progestero­ne, dydrogeste­rone, or widely used hormonal intrauteri­ne systems.

In a statement, Pfizer, the manufactur­er of Depo-Porvera, said: “We are aware of this potential risk associated with long-term use of progestoge­ns and, in collaborat­ion with regulatory agencies, are in the process of updating product labels and patient informatio­n leaflets with appropriat­e wording.”

Writing in the journal, the researcher­s call for more studies into the safety of the hormones, particular­ly injectable medroxypro­gesterone acetate. The injections are rarely used in the UK and the rest of Europe, but 74 million women globally receive them, meaning “the number of attributab­le meningioma­s may be potentiall­y high”, they write.

Prof Paul Pharoah, a cancer epidemiolo­gist who spent 20 years at the University of Cambridge studying hormone-related cancers before setting up a lab at the Cedars-Sinai hospital in California, said there were many different types of progestoge­ns and no associatio­n with meningioma was found for those commonly used in the UK.

“Women taking the commonly used birth control pills or hormone replacemen­t therapy are not at increased risk of meningioma,” said Pharoah, who was not involved in the French study. “It is important that women do not stop using their birth control pills without consulting their doctor.”

Based on UK cancer data registries, about four in every thousand 30-yearold women would be expected to develop a meningioma by the age of 80. If using medroxypro­gesterone acetate for more than a year increases the risk about fivefold, as the BMJ study suggests, that figure would rise to 20 in every thousand.

“The risk of meningioma is extremely small,” Pharoah said. “If I were currently using Depo-Provera because of the advantages of a long-acting injectable contracept­ive I would continue to do so. In short, current or previous users of Depo-Provera do not need to worry about their very small risk of meningioma.”

 ?? Photograph: Rattankun Thongbun/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? Progestoge­ns are similar to the natural hormone progestero­ne.
Photograph: Rattankun Thongbun/Getty Images/iStockphot­o Progestoge­ns are similar to the natural hormone progestero­ne.

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