ACOG
News Release
For
Release July 9, 2002
Statement
on the Estrogen Plus Progestin Trial of The Women's Health
Initiative by the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists
Today, The American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists (ACOG) is announcing the formation of a
special Task Force on Hormone Replacement Therapy, a
multi-specialty panel of medical experts, to make clinical
practice recommendations in light of the latest research
findings on estrogen / progestin use in postmenopausal
women.
Chairing
ACOG's Task Force will be Isaac Schiff, MD, Chair of the
Medical Advisory Board to ACOG's Managing Menopause
magazine and the Chief of the Vincent Memorial Obstetrics
and Gynecology Service at Massachusetts General Hospital in
Boston.
ACOG's Task
Force, formed in June, will expedite its research review and
deliberations in light of recent study findings on the
effect of combined estrogen and progestin therapy in women,
including today's announcement by the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health
that it has stopped a major clinical trial on the risks and
benefits of this combination therapy in healthy menopausal
women. The trial was halted after 5.2 years of an
8-year study, due to an increased risk of invasive breast
cancer.
The trial, a
part of the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), also found
small increases in coronary heart disease, stroke, and
pulmonary embolism in study participants taking estrogen
plus progestin (specifically, 0.625 mg conjugated estrogens
plus 2.5 mg medrosyprojestreron acctate daily) compared to
placebo group. While the trial found benefits to the
estrogen / progestin combination, including reduced rates of
hip fracture and colon cancer, overall the harm was greater
than the benefit of the hormone combination. The WHI
trial on estrogen use alone is continuing, as study authors
report no increased risk for breast cancer in the
estrogen-only study group.
A full study
report will appear in the July 17, 2002, issue of The
Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), and
is also available today on the JAMA web site at www.jama.com.
This WHI
population study group was 16,608 healthy women ages 50 to
79. The data indicate that if 10,000 women take the
hormone combination for one year, as compared to 10,000
women not taking the hormone combination,
- 8 more
will develop invasive breast cancer
- 7 more
will have a heart attack or other coronary event
- 8 more
will have a stroke, and
- 8 more
will have blood clots in the lungs.
However,
among women receiving combination hormone therapy, as
compared to the placebo group,
- 6 fewer
will have colorectal cancers, and
- 5 fewer
will have hip fractures.
The
increased breast cancer risk did not appear in the first
four years of use. Risks for blood clots were greatest
during the first 2 years of hormone use. The reduced
risk of colorectal cancer emerged after 3 years of hormone
use.
Until ACOG
releases final recommendations from its Task Force, ACOG
advises the following:
1. Women
who for a number of years have been on the combined
estrogen / progestin therapy studied here should not
panic, but discuss their individual situation with their
physician. The WHI study authors took pains to
emphasize that women should not be unduly alarmed. The
increased risk of breast cancer applied to an entire
population of women, not to increased risks for individual
women -- which were very small, less than a tenth of 1
percent per year. The population risks, applied over
several years to millions of women, make the hormone use
risks an important public health concern. However, as for
individual women, a decision about hormone use should take
into account a woman's individual risk for specific
conditions that may be harmed or benefited by hormone
use.
2. With
respect to women on short-term use of combination hormone
therapy for relief of menopausal symptoms, the WHI authors
note that although such use was not the focus of this
study, it may be reasonable for women to continue use for
this purpose, since the benefits are likely to outweigh
the risks. Regarding a woman's short-term use of
combined estrogen / progestin therapy when indicated for
relief of menopausal symptoms, ACOG continues to recommend
that this be a personal, individualized decision, made
after consultations between a woman and her physician and
taking into account a woman's individual benefits and
risks from such use.
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The
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists (ACOG) is
the national medical organization representing over 40,000
physicians who provide health care for women.
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