Breast cancer
Your risk of developing breast cancer increases slowly as you age,
especially after age 50. Of American women who live to age 80, about 1 in every
8 will have been diagnosed with breast cancer at some point in her life.1 Taking
estrogen with
progestin (hormone replacement
therapy, HRT) further increases that risk.2
Taking estrogen alone may slightly increase breast cancer risk. Large studies
have shown either a slight risk increase or none at all.3, 4
These average increased breast cancer risks are relatively low for
the general population of postmenopausal women. However, your personal risk
that hormone therapy will stimulate cancerous cell growth may be significantly
lower or higher, depending on your risk factors. For more information about
breast cancer risk factors, see the topic Breast Cancer.
Endometrial cancer
In the United States,
endometrial (uterine) cancer is the most common cancer
of the lower female genital tract. About 1 woman in 50 (2%) will develop
endometrial cancer in her lifetime.5 Women with an
intact uterus who take estrogen therapy without progestin increase their risk
of endometrial cancer. Adding progestin protects the uterus from this
risk.
Weighing cancer risks for women who still have a uterus
- Taking only estrogen
(estrogen replacement therapy, ERT) after menopause increases your risk of
endometrial cancer.
- Taking progestin along with
estrogen (HRT) eliminates endometrial cancer risk. (Estrogen-only
therapy stimulates overgrowth of the uterine lining, which can become
cancerous. Progestin regulates that growth.)
- Although adding
progestin protects your uterus, it increases breast cancer risk. The British
Million Women Study researchers have found that, among women ages 50 to 64,
long-term (10-year) HRT after menopause causes more breast
cancers than long-term estrogen replacement therapy (19 per 1,000 versus
5 per 1,000).3 American Women's Health Initiative
researchers have similarly found that after 5.2 years of use, HRT causes 4 per
1,000 breast cancers. Their ERT data do not show breast cancer from ERT use.
However, experts still take the ERT cancer risk seriously.6, 4
- Some experts have
recently asserted that there may be no advantage to taking progestin with
estrogen (to prevent endometrial cancer), because the addition of progestin
increases breast cancer risk.
Unanswered questions about short-term and low-dose hormone therapy
Using hormone therapy for a short time just after menopause is
hoped to be low-risk. Some studies have suggested that short-term use of
hormone therapy (up to 4 years) may not increase breast cancer risk.5, 6 Ongoing study is needed to see
how much lower-dose and shorter-term HRT and ERT reduce the risks of using
long-term hormone replacement, including risks of breast and gynecological
cancers, cardiovascular disease, and
Alzheimer's disease.
Other treatments that do not appear to increase breast cancer risk
are available for
hot flashes,
osteoporosis, and heart disease.