skip banner navigation
National Cancer Institute
NCI Home Cancer Topics Clinical Trials Cancer Statistics Research & Funding News About NCI

Clinical Trial Results

Summaries of Newsworthy Clinical Trial Results

< Back to Main

    Posted: 02/05/2004
Page Options
Print This Page  Print This Page
E-Mail This Document  E-Mail This Document
Search by Cancer Type
Breast Cancer

Lung Cancer

Prostate Cancer

More Results
Search Results

    Go  
Quick Links
Dictionary
Cancer-related terms

Funding Opportunities
Research and training

NCI Publications
Order/download free booklets

NCI Calendar
Scientific meetings

Español
Informacion en español
NCI Highlights
Chemo Extends Life in Advanced Prostate Cancer

Temozolomide Plus Radiation Helps Brain Cancer

Confirmed: Raloxifene Drops Risk of Breast Cancer

Bortezomib Delays Progression of Multiple Myeloma

Annual Report to the Nation

Past Highlights
Need Help?
Related Pages
Breast Cancer Home Page
NCI's gateway for information about breast cancer.

Menopausal Hormone Use
A collection of material about research related to the risks and benefits of hormone medication taken to ease symptoms associated with menopause.
Hormone Replacement Therapy and Breast Cancer Relapse

Key Words
Breast cancer, hormone replacement therapy. (Definitions of many terms related to cancer can be found in the Cancer.gov Dictionary.)

Summary
Breast cancer survivors who took hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to relieve menopausal symptoms had more than three times as many breast cancer recurrences as survivors who did not take HRT, a new study from Sweden has found. The study - which was stopped ahead of schedule because of these findings - was the first randomized clinical trial to examine the effect of HRT in women with breast cancer.

Source
The Lancet (published online February 3, 2004, and in the February 7, 2004, print edition).

Background
Improved survival among women with breast cancer has meant that more breast cancer survivors are going through menopause, which for some women causes severe symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, and loss of sexual desire. For many years, HRT (usually a combination of the hormones estrogen and progestin) was widely prescribed to women to relieve these menopausal symptoms. It was also thought that HRT might reduce the risk of breast cancer, heart disease, and other conditions.

However, in July 2002, a large randomized clinical trial of estrogen and progestin in healthy postmenopausal women (part of the Women's Health Initiative) was stopped early when researchers found that women who took the hormones had an increased risk of developing breast cancer and heart disease. (For more information, see Digest Page: Menopausal Hormone Use.)

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has since recommended that women discuss with their doctors whether the benefits of taking estrogen and progestin outweigh the risks and that, if used, the hormones should be taken "at the lowest doses for the shortest duration to reach treatment goals.”

The effects of HRT on women who had already had breast cancer had not been studied in a randomized controlled trial, considered the “gold standard” in medical research. Because more than half of breast cancers are fueled by estrogen, some researchers worried that use of the hormone could stimulate recurrence of the disease. However, studies that simply observed breast cancer survivors for several years concluded that the risk of cancer recurring in HRT users was low.

The Study
In 1997, Swedish researchers began a randomized trial to determine whether a two-year course of HRT for menopausal symptoms was safe for women who had been treated for breast cancer. A total of 434 study participants were randomly assigned to receive either HRT or non-hormonal treatment for their menopausal symptoms. The research team was led by Lars Holmberg, M.D., of University Hospital in Uppsala, Sweden.

Results
The researchers intended to follow the women for a median of five years. However, after a median follow-up of just over two years, they found that 26 women in the HRT group - but only seven in the non-HRT group - had had a recurrence of breast cancer. They terminated the study, concluding that even short-term use of HRT posed an “unacceptably high risk” of breast cancer recurrence.

Limitations
The study fell far short of its recruitment goal, enrolling just 434 women instead of 1,300 as originally planned. In addition, the study was not blinded or placebo-controlled, two characteristics that are generally considered to strengthen the findings of a clinical trial.

Comments
“In and of itself, this study would not be strong enough to provide conclusive evidence that breast cancer survivors should avoid HRT,” said JoAnne Zujewski, M.D., a medical oncologist who specializes in breast cancer at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

“However, these results are consistent with those of other studies, including the Women’s Health Initiative study,” Zujewski added. “As a practical matter, given what we already know about the serious risks and extremely limited benefits of HRT, these findings can be considered definitive.”

Zujewski’s comments are supported by an editorial accompanying the study report, which says that the “conclusion that even short-term use of hormone therapy poses an unacceptably high risk of breast cancer can now reasonably guide clinical practice for women with breast cancer.” The editorial is written by Rowan T. Chlebowski, M.D., of the Harbor-UCLA Research and Education Institute in Torrance, California, and Nananda Col, M.D. of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

The study also demonstrates the importance of testing treatments in randomized clinical trials, Zujewski said. “You cannot draw definitive conclusions from observational studies. Definitive conclusions come from randomized studies.”

Back to TopBack to Top

skip footer navigation

A Service of the National Cancer Institute
Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health FirstGov.gov