Hormone therapy may prevent
heart attacks for women in their 50s
Newswise — For the last few years,
women have heard conflicting reports about the risks and benefits of
hormone replacement therapy (HRT). A new study that analyzes many
trials together concludes that HRT can reduce heart attacks by about
one-third in women under age 60 but has mixed results for older
women.
The statistical analysis of 23
trials with more than 39,000 women found that when women started HRT
(estrogen with or without progesterone) in their 50s to relieve such
menopausal symptoms as hot flashes, their risk of heart attacks or
cardiac death fell by 32 percent compared with those receiving a
placebo or no treatment.
This analysis, by researchers from
Cornell and Stanford universities, is published in the April issue
of the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
For women over the age of 60,
however, HRT increased the risk of heart attacks in the first year
of treatment, but after two years of treatment HRT began to reduce
heart attacks compared with women taking a placebo.
The study follows up on a similar
2004 meta-analysis (a study that pools trials together) conducted by
the same researchers that probed overall deaths related to age and
HRT. That study found 39 percent fewer deaths among women who began
HRT before 60, compared with women of the same age given a placebo
or no treatment.
"In the earlier study we did not
have enough data to evaluate cardiac death, only total death," said
astrophysicist Edwin Salpeter, the J.G. White Distinguished
Professor of Physical Sciences Emeritus at Cornell, who has more
recently focused his attention on medical statistics and led the
statistical analysis in the study.
Various reports on the risks and
benefits of HRT have generated confusion for women, Salpeter said.
One reason is because the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) -- a
long-term national health study focused on strategies for preventing
heart disease, breast and colorectal cancer, and fractures in
postmenopausal women -- had initially reported that HRT was linked
to more heart attacks when they analyzed the sample as a whole, in
women with a mean age of 63 years, rather than breaking down women's
ages after menopause. This is important because younger women may
respond differently to HRT than older women. Since then, the WHI
researchers have provided data for coronary heart disease events for
younger and older women separately.
Salpeter and his colleagues,
including his daughter, lead author Shelley Salpeter, a clinical
professor of medicine at Stanford's School of Medicine and a
physician at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center in San Jose, Calif.,
included the new WHI data in their larger analysis.
"We pooled the data from the two
WHI trials for younger women with all other randomized
placebo-controlled trials and found a statistically significant 32
percent reduction in coronary heart disease events for women who
start treatment in their 50s," said Shelley Salpeter.
A paper published by the two
Salpeters and colleagues in Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism
(2005, electronic publication ahead of print) may offer a clue as to
why younger and older women may respond to HRT in different ways.
That study found that HRT significantly reduces the risk of diabetes
compared with placebo but increases the levels of a protein
associated with inflammation in the body. This may reduce heart
attacks in younger women without heart disease but increase the
risks for older women who already have cardiovascular disease.
The most recent study shows that
HRT reduces coronary heart disease events in women who start
treatment shortly after menopause. Yet, other studies suggest that
HRT increases the risk of breast cancer but reduces risk of
colorectal cancer. Thus, younger postmenopausal women need to
consult their physicians and weigh their medical histories to decide
whether HRT is right for them, said Cornell's Salpeter.