Group’s recommendation shuts UC Irvine study
Deirdre Newman
UC IRVINE -- Part of a nationwide study that tracks the effect of
hormone replacement therapy on a variety of cardiovascular diseases and
bone fractures was halted Monday because of an increased risk of
cardiovascular disease and breast cancer.
UC Irvine is one of 40 centers around the country participating in the
Women’s Health Initiative, a comprehensive, government-funded study for
more than 160,000 post-menopausal women. The study began in 1995.
The hormone replacement therapy is one of three major parts of the
study and was designed to gauge the effect of estrogen and progestin. An
estimated 6 million women throughout the country take this combination to
treat such menopausal symptoms as hot flashes and night sweats.
The other two parts of the study examine the effect of calcium and
vitamin D on bone fractures and certain cancers, and the effect of a
low-fat diet on cardiovascular disease and cancer of the breast and
colon.
The study was curtailed when the Data and Safety Monitoring Board, an
independent group, determined that the risk of the combination outweighed
the benefits. On May 31, it recommended that the study stop. At UCI, 379
women are affected and will be closely monitored until the end of the
study in 2005, said F. Allan Hubbell, chairman of the Department of
Medicine.
While the study showed that the risks of hormone replacement therapy
are severe, there are some benefits, including a decreased risk for colon
cancer and hip fractures, Hubbell said.
“What I would recommend is that women talk to their doctors if they
have menopausal systems and review any risk factors they might have,”
Hubbell said. “Many women may choose to take the small risk if their
symptoms are severe. Taking the medication long term -- we would
recommend against that.”
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