HRT linked to recurrence of breast cancer

October 20th, 2008 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

Once thought of as a cure-all for a host of menopausal symptoms with benefits ranging from increased bone strength and protection against heart disease, hormone replacement therapy (HRT) continues to come under fire for causing more harm than good. Now researchers believe that women who survived breast cancer and then took to relieve menopause symptoms may be at a significantly higher risk for recurrence, according to Natural News.

According to the report, Kings College London researchers tracked 442 female survivors for more than four years, half of which had been given . The women who were taking had a 14 percent higher recurrence rate than those who did not take .

All women tracked participated in the 2002 U.S. government-sponsored Women’s Health Initiative, which studied the effects of on women. That study was halted after researchers found that led to an increased risk of dangerous medical conditions such as breast cancer, heart attack, stroke and blood clots.

In a related commentary in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Dr. Kathy Prichard of Canada’s Sunnybrook Odette Cancer Center, indicated that the data is convincing. “It seems that the harmful side effects of (in survivors) have finally been clearly demonstrated in what is, by today’s standards, a small randomized trial, carried out in a few relatively small countries,” Dr. Pritchard wrote.

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