Abstract

This year's work on hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and cardiovascular disease has been remarkable for the publication of the first randomised controlled trial of HRT use, the Heart Estrogen Replacement Study (HERS). The findings go against not only the trend of previous observational epidemiological studies, but also against findings in the very many studies which have previously shown and continue to show this year a beneficial effect of HRT on a large variety of cardiovascular risk factors, including endothelial function, here reviewed. The aspect of the effect of HRT on clotting variables is clearly crucial given the increased risk of venous thrombosis, and also increased number of cardiac events in the first 4 months of the HERS. Prothrombotic factors increase with age in women, and HRT alters these, particularly fibrinogen, factor VII, and PAI (less change with transdermal HRT) and antithrombin III. In normal women therefore the balance should be towards fibrinolysis rather than coagulation. Work has been presented in abstract for clarifying the effects of HRT on coagulation markers and grasping the problem of differences according to its route of administration. The full publications on this work are expected shortly. We are still awaiting evidence from randomized controlled trials of HRT in primary prevention; one is now recruited but will not report until 2005.

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