Women need evidence-based balanced information on HRT

Millions of middle-aged women were needlessly denied HRT because a landmark report which found it raised the risk of breast cancer was exaggerated, while the benefits to middle-aged women were overlooked.

Eluned Hughes, of the charity Breakthrough Breast Cancer, said: “We do know that taking HRT can increase your risk of developing breast cancer, however, there is on-going confusion and differing opinion around the extent of this increased risk.

“It is therefore vital that women have access to clear, accurate and balanced information outlining the benefits and limitations of taking HRT which will allow them to make an informed choice about their treatment. If women do decide to take HRT, they should be closely monitored and reviewed at least once a year.”

Eluned Hughes, of the charity Breakthrough Breast Cancer says the risks of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) can change depending on a woman age and how long she takes it for so clear, accurate information is vital.

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Middle-aged women ‘needlessly denied HRT over breast cancer link’
Millions of middle-aged women were needlessly denied hormone replacement therapy because a landmark report which found it raised the risk of breast cancer was exaggerated, the study’s author’s have admitted.

Ten years after the publication of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study, two academics who worked on it now say the risks of HRT were overblown while the benefits to middle-aged women were overlooked.

The initial research concluded that use of combined HRT - progesterone plus oestrogen - increased the risk of breast cancer by 26 per cent. The following year a separate British investigation, the Million Women Study, found it doubled the risk.

Use of HRT subsequently plummeted, with women frightened to take it and doctors reluctant to prescribe it. In England, the number taking it is thought to have fallen from a peak of about 1.5 million to less than half that.

Yet now two of the prinicipal investigators on the WHI study - which mainly involved women over 60 - say the results were ” wrongly generalised” to apply to all post-menopausal women.
The original WHI study included 16,608 women aged 50 to 79, whose average age was 63. It found that use of combined HRT increased the risk of breast cancer by 26 per cent.

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By Stephen Adams, Medical Correspondent

Provided by ArmMed Media