News Tagged ‘breast cancer

Study: HRT puts women at greater risk for lung cancer

HRT woman with patchThe reports of health problems associated with hormone replacement therapy () keep coming. First, the Women’s Health Initiative identified women who took the combined estrogen-plus-progestin therapy were at a much greater risk of developing . It later showed these women were at an increased risk of heart disease and other serious health problems. Now, an article published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology suggests that women who took combined are at an increased risk of lung cancer by as much as 50 percent.

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Ghostwritten medical journal articles about HRT should be retracted

JournalofWomensHealth 100x100William T. Creasman was listed as the author of an article written by a freelance writer for the December 1998 Journal of Women’s Health. The title: “Is there an association between hormone replacement therapy and ?” The article points out that there is no “definitive evidence” that is linked to . But the dirty little secret behind that article in the medical journal is that Creasman didn’t actually write the article. It was authored by a writer for DesignWrite, a marketing firm that represented -maker Wyeth, now owned by Pfizer. As the story was going to press, Wyeth was covering up evidence that proved otherwise. The drug company’s estrogen-plus-progestin was, in fact, increasing a woman’s risk for as well as heart disease and Alzheimer’s.

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Estrogen-only HRT linked to asthma after menopause

asthma 100x100A study involving nearly 58,000 women in France over a 12-year period suggests that hormone replacement therapy () may increase a woman’s risk of developing asthma after . Researchers from the Gustave Roussy Institute in France and the Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica in Mexico published the findings in the British medical journal, Thorax. The study suggested that women who took were 21 percent more likely to develop asthma than women who did not take . The risk was even greater for women who took estrogen-only compared to the combined estrogen-plus-progestin therapy, with the estrogen-only group at 54 percent greater risk of developing asthma compared to women who did not take . This is the first long-term, large-scale study to suggest that estrogen-only puts women at much greater risk of asthma than the combined therapy.

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Research helps women make more informed decisions about HRT

hrt pillsThere is plenty of bad press about hormone replacement therapy (), a striking reversal of just a decade or two ago, when drug makers were touting the many benefits of for menopausal women. Those drug makers spent millions of dollars developing advertising campaigns and paying doctors to write articles in medical journals claiming the pills that combined estrogen and progestin were the fountain of youth. They put an end to nasty symptoms such as mood swings and hot flashes, and offered the added benefit of strengthening bones and protecting women against cancer and heart disease.

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Family claims HRT killed their mother

grief 100x100Drug companies’ advertisements touting the benefits of hormone replacement therapy () sold Delores Ann Spann Whatley of Tyler, Texas on the idea that her mood swings and hot flashes could be wiped away with just a daily pill. The estrogen-and-progestin cocktail was touted as a miracle drug, able to squash symptoms while warding against osteoporosis, heart disease and cancer. But the pharmaceutical companies soon realized that the that was making them rich was actually making consumers sick. But instead of notifying the public and pulling their product, the drug companies attempted to cover up the mounting statistics and continued to advertise to women about the benefits of .

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Women on HRT who experience breast tenderness at greater risk of cancer

Breast Cancer Awareness RibbonWomen who reported new-onset breast tenderness following use of estrogen-plus-progestin hormone replacement therapy () were at a much greater risk of developing than women on the same who did not report tenderness in their breasts, according to a study by researchers from the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California – Los Angeles.

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HRT ads built trust, but breast cancer diagnoses changed opinions

hrt pillsThe advertisements no longer blanket magazines or fill television screens, but the message cannot be deleted. Over the years, millions of women were told that estrogen loss during could be dangerous to their health, contributing to problems such as osteoporosis, heart disease, colon cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, tooth loss and blindness. It could also cause uncomfortable symptoms such as hot flashes, vaginal dryness and mood swings. The ads said was a nasty disease that could be eliminated by just taking a once-daily pill, a hormone replacement therapy () that would help women feel like women again.

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Two breast cancer survivors awarded $100 million in HRT lawsuits

judge gavel1 100x100The message was heard loud and clear – powerful drug companies that make billions from products they know pose a significant risk of life-threatening health consequences to the people who take them, owe their victims. Big time.

This week, Pfizer, which recently acquired Wyeth, the makers of the hormone replacement therapies () Prempro and Premarin, were hit with more than $100 million in two punitive-damage awards from Philadelphia juries. The two plaintiffs, Connie Barton and Donna Kendall, claimed the drugs caused their .

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Greater reduction in HRT/breast cancer rates in urban, affluent towns

A decrease in reported cases of across the country linked to the decline of hormone replacement therapy () is more significant in affluent, urban areas, according to a study published in the journal BMC Medicine.

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Researchers working on safer synthetic HRT for menopause

Researchers in Ottawa, Canada are hoping to ease women’s fear of hormone replacement drugs by creating and testing synthetic hormones to combat aggravating symptoms of , according to Canada.com. The research follows an earlier grant from the Canadian Foundation to explore the re-engineering of estrogen estradiol, which is one of the components of the popular hormone replacement therapy () Premarin. The new grant, funded by a $267,000 research grant from the Canadian Foundation, seeks to evaluate those compounds of synthesized molecules on the liver, cardiac and other types of cells. The goal is that it must relieve menopausal symptoms while not promoting breast or uterine cancer.

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