Hormone therapy falls out of favor. (Biomedicine).Pills containing estrogen and progestin progestin /pro·ges·tin/ (-jes´tin) progestational agent. pro·ges·tin n. 1. A natural or synthetic progestational substance that mimics some or all of the actions of progesterone. have been given to provide women protection against heart disease, as well as respite from hot flashes hot flashes Hot flush Gynecology A symptom afflicting 80-85% of middle-aged ♀, first occurring during the perimenopause, continuing with ↓ intensity for yrs, manifesting itself as transient waves of erythema and uncomfortable warmth beginning in the and other symptoms of menopause. Several studies now indicate no heart benefit and increased risks of circulatory disorders and breast and ovarian cancer ovarian cancer Malignant tumour of the ovaries. Risk factors include early age of first menstruation (before age 12), late onset of menopause (after age 52), absence of pregnancy, presence of specific genetic mutations, use of fertility drugs, and personal history of breast , several studies indicate. Scientists who analyzed data on 16,608 postmenopausal post·men·o·paus·al adj. Of or occurring in the time following menopause. postmenopausal Change of life Gynecology adjective Referring to the time in ♀ when menstrual periods stop for ≥ 1 yr women in a nationwide study report in the July 17 Journal of the American Medical Association JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal, published 48 times per year by the American Medical Association. JAMA is the most widely circulated medical journal in the world. (JAMA JAMA abbr. Journal of the American Medical Association ) that women taking the dual-hormone therapy for 5 years had 26 percent more cases of breast cancer than women receiving an inert pill did. Moreover, compared with the placebo, the hormones doubled the incidence of blood clots, hiked stroke incidence by 41 percent, and upped the occurrence of heart disease by 29 percent. Although women taking hormones were less likely to get colorectal cancer or to break a hip than were women on the inert pill, the positives of so-called hormone-replacement therapy weren't enough to offset the negatives, the authors say. Because of that finding, the researchers halted the study. Earlier this year, researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle also reported a significantly higher breast cancer risk from hormone therapy and cited 28 previous studies linking the drugs to breast cancer. Another study in the July 17 JAMA finds that women on estrogen-only therapy are at greater risk of ovarian cancer than are women not taking the pills. The apparent failure of hormones to protect the heart also turned up in the U.S.-based Heart and Estrogen/Progestin Replacement Study (HERS). The HERS researchers report in the July 3 JAMA that postmenopausal women with a history of heart disease who received hormone replacement therapy Hormone Replacement Therapy Definition Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is the use of synthetic or natural female hormones to make up for the decline or lack of natural hormones produced in a woman's body. for nearly 7 years had no better heart health than did similar women getting a placebo. Also, dangerous blood dotting in veins was twice as frequent in women receiving hormone treatment than in those receiving a placebo. Writing in the July 3 JAMA, physician Diana B. Petitti of Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Pasadena says that people are "appropriately pessimistic" about hormone replacement therapy. Nevertheless, they should be heartened by the fact that aspirin, cholesterol-lowering drugs, and other medications remain effective against heart disease and strokes in older women.--N.S. |
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