Abstract

BackgroundMenopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases breast cancer (BC) risk, but cohort studies largely consider use only at enrollment. Evidence is limited on how changes in MHT use alter the magnitude of risk, and whether risk varies between invasive and in situ cancer, by histology or by hormone receptor status.MethodsWe investigated the roles of estrogen-alone therapy (ET) and estrogen plus progestin therapy (EPT) on BC risk overall, by histology and estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) status, and on incidence of in situ disease, in the NIH-AARP cohort. Participants included 118,760 postmenopausal women (50–71 years), of whom 63.5% (n = 75,398) provided MHT use information at baseline in 1996 and in a follow-up survey in 2004, subsequent to the dissemination in 2002 of the Women’s Health Initiative trial safety concerns regarding EPT. ET analyses included 50,476 women with hysterectomy (31,439 with follow-up data); EPT analyses included 68,284 women with intact uteri (43,959 with follow-up data). Adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) were estimated using Cox proportional hazards models using age as the time metric with follow-up through 2011.ResultsEight thousand three hundred thirty-three incident BC cases were accrued, 2479 in women with follow-up data. BC risk was not elevated in current ET users at baseline (HR = 1.05, 95% confidence interval [CI] CI = 0.95–1.16) but was higher in women continuing use through 2004 (HR = 1.35, 95% CI = 1.04–1.75). Ever EPT use at baseline was associated with elevated BC risk overall (HR = 1.54 (1.44–1.64), with a doubling in risk for women with 10 or more years of use, for in situ disease, and across subtypes defined by histology and ER/PR status (all p < 0.004). Risk persisted in women who continued EPT through 2004 (HR = 1.80, 95% CI = 1.39–2.32). In contrast, no association was seen in women who discontinued EPT before 2004 (HR = 1.14, 95% CI = 0.99–1.30).ConclusionsET use was not associated with BC risk in this cohort, although excess risk was suggested in women who continued use through 2004. EPT use was linked to elevated in situ and invasive BC risk, and elevated risk across invasive BC histologic and hormone receptor-defined subtypes, with the highest risk for women who continued use through the 2004 follow-up survey.

Highlights

  • Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases breast cancer (BC) risk, but cohort studies largely consider use only at enrollment

  • estrogen-alone therapy (ET) use was not associated with BC risk in this cohort, excess risk was suggested in women who continued use through 2004

  • estrogen plus progestin therapy (EPT) use was linked to elevated in situ and invasive BC risk, and elevated risk across invasive BC histologic and hormone receptor-defined subtypes, with the highest risk for women who continued use through the 2004 follow-up survey

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Summary

Introduction

Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases breast cancer (BC) risk, but cohort studies largely consider use only at enrollment. Whereas WHI restricted the CEE alone arm to postmenopausal women with hysterectomy and EPT to women with intact uteri, similar restrictions were not applied in most observational studies including the recent meta-analysis [2]; rather, for the 24 participating prospective cohorts, a nested case-control study design was implemented, with up to 4 randomly selected controls matched to each BC case based on age, year of birth, and region For both cohort and randomized trial studies, incomplete capture of MHT use over the follow-up period or during the trial may bias risk estimates [6]. In the WHI trial, lack of adherence to treatment protocol was notable, as 42% in the EPT arm discontinued use, while 10.7% in the placebo arm started this treatment [4]

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