Executive Director: Mrs Jean Wright
PO Box 687, Wray,
Lancaster LA2 8WY, UK
Tel: +44 15242 21190
Fax: +44 15242 22596
e-mail:
jwright.ims@btopenworld.com
Press Statement
ISSUED ON BEHALF OF THE
INTERNATIONAL MENOPAUSE SOCIETY BY
Amos Pines, President,
David Sturdee, General Secretary and
Martin Birkhäuser, Treasurer
December 19, 2006
IMS reaction to recent
breast cancer data
In the 29th San-Antonio
Breast Cancer Symposium, December 14–17, 2007, data from the M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center at the University of Texas demonstrated an unexpected sharp
decline in the incidence of breast cancer in certain areas in the United
States. Overall, the incidence dropped by 8%, whereas for women aged 50–69 years,
diagnosed with estrogen receptor (ER)-positive cancer, the drop was 12%. A similar
observation of 11% difference in the rate of breast cancer between 2001 and 2003
was reported last month in women aged 50–74 years by the Kaiser Permanente Division
of Research and the Northern California Cancer Center1. Both teams speculated
that there could be a link with the dramatic decrease in postmenopausal hormone
use which occurred after the first release of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI)
data in July 2002. But the investigators were very careful with their
suggestion on possible association between discontinuation of hormones and
breast cancer: “We can’t say that changes in hormone therapy use caused the
decline in breast cancer, because these data don’t link hormone users directly
to breast cancer diagnoses” (Dr Lisa Herrinton from Kaiser Permanente’s
Division of Research). The media, however, presented those observations in a
more definite way: “Big fall in breast cancer cases after women abandon HRT”
(Times online, December 15); “Fewer breast cancers linked to less hormone
therapy” (Reuters, December 14); “Breast cancer drop tied to hormones” (Yahoo
News, December 15).
With all the above
information in mind, the International Menopause Society (IMS) wishes to stress
the following:
(1) Currently, two
parallel trends were observed in the United States – less breast cancer and
less hormone use. However, any attempt to link both into one framework is
premature and the scientific basis for such an assumption has not been
established. Many important factors were not evaluated: the rate of
mammography, the rate of
routine visits to the primary physician, the rate ofother risk factors which
are relevant to breast cancer risk (smoking, physical activity, medications,
e.g. SERMS). It is legitimate to speculate whether many women, after having
stopped taking their hormone therapy, also stopped seeing their gynecologist
regularly and so omitted their mammography examinations, leading to a decrease
in diagnosed breast cancer cases. Furthermore, a careful look at the presented
data on breast cancer incidence demonstrates that some decrease in rate was
already apparent by 1999–2001, before the WHI scare and the massive abandonment
of hormone use.
(2) If the decrease in
breast cancer incidence was largely related to hormones, how would one explain
the 4% drop in ER-negative cases seen in the above University of Texas study?
(3) Data from other
countries are still lacking or inconsistent. “The UK statistics show nothing as
dramatic as this”, Professor Valerie Beral, of Cancer Research UK, said. “There
had been a slight drop in breast cancer between 2003 and 2004 in women aged
50–64”.
(4) Current knowledge of
the biology and development of breast cancer points at the unlikelihood of a
10% drop in breast cancer incidence occurring within a year after cessation of
estrogen therapy. The Nurses’ Health Study reported in 1995 that the risk of
breast cancer for women stopping hormone therapy equalled that of non-users
within 2 years after cessation2. However, analysis of a subgroup of women who
stopped taking hormones after 5 or more years of use showed that the adjusted
relative risk remained high at 1.44 during the first 2 years, but declined
later on in years 2–4. Based on the above, the IMS calls the medical community,
the media, and the public to be very cautious when interpreting the new data on
trends in breast cancer incidence in the United States. It is certainly a very
positive sign, which should be followed carefully, but has little to do with
the well-established data on breast cancer risk and hormone therapy that were
collected in the WHI study. During a mean follow-up of 5.2 years, the added
absolute risk for invasive breast cancer in the conjugated equine estrogen
(CEE) plus medroxyprogesterone acetate arm was of the order of less than one
case per 1000 women-years3. There was no risk for women who never used hormones
prior to the study and in those aged less than 60 years. Fewer cases of
invasive breast cancer were actually seen in the CEE-only arm of the WHI study
during 6.8 years of follow-up4. The IMS maintains its recommendation that hormone
therapy should be prescribed whenever indicated. The use of hormones in early
menopause and up to age 60 years has a very minor potential for harm, but may carry
substantial benefits. Women should decide annually if they wish to continue with
treatment after consultation with their caregivers.
References
1. Clarke GA, Glaser SL,
Uratsu CS, et al. Recent declines in hormone therapy utilization and
breast
cancer incidence:
clinical and population-based evidence. J Clin Oncol 2006;24:e49–50
2. Colditz GA, Hankinson
SE, Hunter DJ, et al. The use of estrogens and progestins and the risk
of
breast cancer in
postmenopausal women. N Engl J Med 1995;332:1589–93
3. Rossouw JE, Anderson
GL, Prentice RL, et al. Risks and benefits of estrogen plus progestin in
healthy postmenopausal
women: principal results from the Women's Health Initiative randomized
controlled trial. JAMA
2002;288:321–33
4. Stefanick ML,
Anderson GL, Margolis KL, et al. Effects of conjugated equine estrogens
on breast
cancer and mammography
screening in postmenopausal women with hysterectomy. JAMA
2006;295:1647–57