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Influence of Estrogen Plus Progestin on Breast Cancer and Mammography in Healthy Postmenopausal Women

Influence of Estrogen Plus Progestin on Breast Cancer and Mammography in Healthy Postmenopausal... ContextThe Women's Health Initiative trial of combined estrogen plus progestin was stopped early when overall health risks, including invasive breast cancer, exceeded benefits. Outstanding issues not previously addressed include characteristics of breast cancers observed among women using hormones and whether diagnosis may be influenced by hormone effects on mammography.ObjectiveTo determine the relationship among estrogen plus progestin use, breast cancer characteristics, and mammography recommendations.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsFollowing a comprehensive breast cancer risk assessment, 16 608 postmenopausal women aged 50 to 79 years with an intact uterus were randomly assigned to receive combined conjugated equine estrogens (0.625 mg/d) plus medroxyprogesterone acetate (2.5 mg/d) or placebo from 1993 to 1998 at 40 clinical centers. Screening mammography and clinical breast examinations were performed at baseline and yearly thereafter.Main Outcome MeasuresBreast cancer number and characteristics, and frequency of abnormal mammograms by estrogen plus progestin exposure.ResultsIn intent-to-treat analyses, estrogen plus progestin increased total (245 vs 185 cases; hazard ratio [HR], 1.24; weighted P<.001) and invasive (199 vs 150 cases; HR, 1.24; weighted P= .003) breast cancers compared with placebo. The invasive breast cancers diagnosed in the estrogen plus progestin group were similar in histology and grade but were larger (mean [SD], 1.7 cm [1.1] vs 1.5 cm [0.9], respectively; P= .04) and were at more advanced stage (regional/metastatic 25.4% vs 16.0%, respectively; P= .04) compared with those diagnosed in the placebo group. After 1 year, the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms was substantially greater in the estrogen plus progestin group (716 [9.4%] of 7656) compared with placebo group (398 [5.4%] of 7310; P<.001), a pattern which continued for the study duration.ConclusionsRelatively short-term combined estrogen plus progestin use increases incident breast cancers, which are diagnosed at a more advanced stage compared with placebo use, and also substantially increases the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms. These results suggest estrogen plus progestin may stimulate breast cancer growth and hinder breast cancer diagnosis.Breast cancer is the most common invasive cancer in US women and its etiology is not fully defined.Despite observational studies suggesting increased breast cancer risk with estrogenand especially long-duration combined hormone use,the magnitude of breast cancer risk associated with menopausal hormone therapy is controversial.On July 9, 2002, the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) reported results from the randomized controlled trial of 16 608 postmenopausal women comparing effects of estrogen plus progestin with placebo on chronic disease risk and confirmed that combined estrogen plus progestin use increases the risk of invasive breast cancer.To better understand the relationship between breast cancer and exposure to estrogen plus progestin, a detailed analysis of the breast cancers that developed among women receiving active treatment compared with those receiving placebo was performed.METHODSStudy DesignThe WHI combined estrogen plus progestin randomized clinical trial enrolled 16 608 postmenopausal women with no prior hysterectomy from 1993 to 1998 at 40 clinical centers following a previously described design.The study was approved by human subjects committees at each institution. Women who were recruited by mass mailings and media were eligible if they were between 50 and 79 years of age at study entry, postmenopausal, and provided written informed consent. Women with prior hysterectomy, breast cancer, or those with medical conditions likely to result in death within 3 years were excluded. Prior menopausal hormone use required a 3-month wash out period before baseline testing. All women had baseline mammogram and clinical breast examinations; abnormal findings required clearance before study entry.Women were randomly assigned to receive estrogen plus progestin taken as a single daily tablet containing conjugated equine estrogens (0.625 mg) and medroxyprogesterone acetate (2.5 mg) (Prempro, Wyeth Ayerst, Philadelphia, Pa) or to receive an identical-appearing placebo. Randomization by the WHI clinical coordinating center was implemented locally by using a distributed study database and study medication bottles with unique bar codes for blinded dispensing. Descriptive characteristics for the 2 groups were assessed at baseline (Table 1).Table 1.Descriptive Characteristics of Participants at Baseline by Treatment Group*CharacteristicNo. (%)Estrogen + Progestin (n = 8506)†Placebo (n = 8102)Age at screening, y50-592839 (33.4)2683 (33.1)60-693853 (45.3)3657 (45.1)70-791814 (21.3)1762 (21.7)EthnicityWhite7140 (83.9)6805 (84.0)Black549 (6.5)575 (7.1)Hispanic472 (5.5)416 (5.1)American Indian26 (0.3)30 (0.4)Asian/Pacific Islander194 (2.3)169 (2.1)Unknown125 (1.5)107 (1.3)Education0-8 y202 (2.4)177 (2.2)Some high school373 (4.4)362 (4.5)High school diploma/GED1614 (19.1)1608 (20.0)School after high school3356 (39.7)3059 (38.0)College degree or higher2915 (34.5)2838 (35.3)Gail Risk Assessment, % per 5 y<1.252806 (33.0)2717 (33.5)1.25-1.742859 (33.6)2703 (33.4)≥1.752841 (33.4)2682 (33.1)Age at menarche, y<111725 (20.3)1670 (20.7)12-134578 (54.0)4334 (53.7)≥142182 (25.7)2061 (25.6)No. of term pregnanciesNever pregnant655 (7.7)633 (7.8)Never had term pregnancy201 (2.4)199 (2.5)1690 (8.2)661 (8.2)21908 (22.5)1708 (21.2)32020 (23.9)1952 (24.2)41416 (16.7)1412 (17.5)≥51575 (18.6)1500 (18.6)Age at first birth, yNever pregnant/no term pregnancy860 (11.2)833 (11.5)<201124 (14.6)1117 (15.4)20-294996 (64.8)4698 (64.6)≥30727 (9.4)624 (8.6)No. of children breastfedNone3813 (45.3)3669 (45.7)1-22606 (31.0)2485 (31.0)≥32001 (23.8)1867 (23.3)Oral contraceptive use, yNo4811 (56.6)4655 (57.5)Yes3693 (43.4)3444 (42.5)<51982 (23.3)1781 (22.0)5 to <10825 (9.7)808 (10.0)≥10886 (10.4)855 (10.6)Prior estrogen only use, yNo7603 (89.4)7237 (89.3)Yes903 (10.6)864 (10.7)<5677 (8.0)659 (8.1)5 to <10134 (1.6)109 (1.3)≥1092 (1.1)96 (1.2)Prior estrogen plus progestin use, yNo6990 (82.2)6706 (82.8)Yes1516 (17.8)1396 (17.2)<51050 (12.3)997 (12.3)5 to <10315 (3.7)258 (3.2)≥10151 (1.8)141 (1.7)Recency of hormone use, yNonuser6277 (73.8)6020 (74.3)Past <5727 (8.6)679 (8.4)Past 5 to <10335 (3.9)310 (3.8)Past >10609 (7.2)599 (7.4)Current554 (6.5)491 (6.1)No. of first-degree relatives with breast cancerNone6954 (87.3)6676 (88.2)1927 (11.6)816 (10.8)≥282 (1.0)79 (1.0)No. of second-degree relatives with breast cancer‡None7184 (95.8)6880 (96.0)1304 (4.1)282 (3.9)≥213 (0.2)3 (<0.1)Benign breast diseaseNo6340 (83.5)6278 (83.2)Yes, 1 biopsy967 (12.7)981 (13.0)Yes, ≥2 biopsies290 (3.8)288 (3.8)BMI<252579 (30.4)2479 (30.8)25-302992 (35.3)2834 (35.2)>302899 (34.2)2737 (34.0)Dietary energy, kcal≤11191630 (19.8)1575 (20.1)>1119-1414.51632 (19.9)1583 (20.2)>1414.5-17151601 (19.5)1611 (20.6)>1715-2129.51689 (20.6)1518 (19.4)>2129.51661 (20.2)1549 (19.8)% Energy from fat≤271620 (19.7)1539 (19.6)>27-32.51601 (19.5)1600 (20.4)>32.5-371754 (21.4)1660 (21.2)>37-41.51590 (19.4)1504 (19.2)>41.51648 (20.1)1533 (19.6)Physical activity, metabolic equivalents/wkNone1427 (18.6)1356 (17.9)>0-3.751501 (19.6)1519 (20.0)>3.75-8.751355 (17.7)1352 (17.8)>8.75-17.51648 (21.5)1634 (21.5)>17.51739 (22.7)1735 (22.8)Alcohol useNondrinker972 (11.5)938 (11.7)Past drinker1427 (16.9)1380 (17.2)<1 drink/mo1174 (13.9)1117 (13.9)<1 drink/wk1710 (20.3)1513 (18.8)1 to <7 drinks/wk2113 (25.0)2038 (25.4)≥7 drinks/wk1047 (12.4)1049 (13.1)SmokingNever4178 (49.6)3999 (50.0)Past3362 (39.9)3157 (39.5)Current880 (10.5)838 (10.5)NSAID medication useNo8112 (95.4)7715 (95.2)Yes394 (4.6)387 (4.8)Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters); GED, general equivalency diploma; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug.*Because of rounding, percentages may not all total 100. Not all characteristics sum to total number of participants for either estrogen plus progestin or placebo because of missing values for some participants. Mean (SD) for estrogen plus progestin vs placebo was 63.2 years (7.1) and 63.3 years (7.1), respectively, for age at screening; 28.5 (5.8) and 28.5 (5.9), respectively, for BMI; 1554.7 kcal (599.1) and 1544.8 kcal (588.2), respectively, for dietary energy; and 34.4 (8.4) and 34.3 (8.4), respectively, for percentage energy from fat.†Includes 331 women previously randomized to an estrogen alone group who were reassigned to the estrogen plus progestin group following a protocol change as previously described.8‡P= .051 by χ2test.Study medication was discontinued for development of breast cancer; endometrial pathology (hyperplasia not responsive to treatment, atypia, or cancer); deep-vein thrombosis or pulmonary emboli; malignant melanoma; meningeoma; triglyceride level of more than 1000 mg/dL (11.3 mmol/L); or use of any nonstudy estrogen, progestin, androgen, tamoxifen, or raloxifene. Comprehensive breast cancer risk was assessed at baseline by interview (lifetime hormone use) or by self-report (other covariates) by using standardized questionnaires.Follow-up ProceduresParticipants were contacted after 6 weeks to assess symptoms and promote adherence, at 6-month intervals for clinical outcome, and annually for clinic visits. Yearly mammography and clinical breast examination were required, and study medications were withheld if they were not completed. Participants were followed for clinical outcomes regardless of medication adherence.Initial reports of outcomes were ascertained by self-administered questionnaires. Breast cancer end points were confirmed by review of medical records and pathology reports (available in 98.2% of participants) by physician adjudicators at the local clinics. Women with in situ breast cancers, which at a later date were diagnosed with a new invasive breast cancer, were considered to have 2 separate breast cancer events (3 cases). All cases were subsequently centrally adjudicated using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results coding system. Invasive cancers originally classified as mixed ductal and lobular underwent additional blinded review by an oncologist (R.T.C.).With the exception of these trial conduct procedures, the WHI clinical centers did not provide comprehensive health care. Mammograms in the WHI were performed at more than 3000 clinics, hospitals, and practice settings. Medical decisions regarding workup of breast findings were directed by community physicians.Mammogram reports were obtained from performance sites and were reviewed locally and coded for recommendation (negative, benign finding-negative, short interval follow-up suggested, suspicious abnormality, and highly suggestive of malignancy). Mammograms with suspicious abnormalities or highly suggestive of malignancy required clearance before dispensing additional study medication.Study TerminationThe study sample size was based on the estimated influence of estrogen plus progestin on coronary heart disease. For monitoring purposes, a global index of benefit and risk was defined to include coronary heart disease, stroke, colorectal cancer, endometrial cancer, pulmonary embolus, hip fracture, and death due to other causes as well as invasive breast cancer.After a mean (SD) follow-up of 5.2 years (1.3) (including end points through April 2002), the WHI data and safety monitoring board recommended stopping the trial based on the breast cancer comparison exceeding the predefined stopping boundary and overall risks exceeding benefits as measured by the global index. At that time, 290 locally adjudicated invasive breast cancers were described and the in situ breast cancers were not quantitated.This report provides an updated analysis based on a mean (SD) follow-up of 5.6 years (1.3) with detailed analyses of the centrally adjudicated breast cancers (349 invasive and 84 in situ) diagnosed before July 8, 2002, the date participants were instructed to stop their study pills.Statistical AnalysisA major hypothesis of the current analysis was that invasive breast cancer characteristics in the estrogen plus progestin group differed from the placebo group. In addition, given the influence of menopausal hormones on breast densityand the suggestion that hormones can complicate mammographic interpretation,associations among estrogen plus progestin use, mammographic results, and breast cancer diagnoses were explored.Primary results are assessed with time-to-event methods, based on the intent-to-treat principle. Hazard ratios (HRs) are reported from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression analyses. Pvalues from Wald Z statistics are reported from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression analyses stratified by age and randomization status in the dietary modification trial of the WHI. This weighting was specified in the trial design and motivated by observational reports suggesting lag to full effect of hormone on breast cancer incidence. The weighting, reflecting this hypothesis, varied linearly from zero at time of randomization to a maximum of 1 beginning at follow-up year 10.Nominal confidence intervals (CIs) for inference regarding invasive breast cancer are used as these are considered final trial results for the primary safety outcome. The multiple testing over time is acknowledged in adjusted CIs derived from the monitoring plan, as previously described.The fact that this outcome was a key factor in the early stopping of the trial could lead to some anticonservatism in the reported HR estimates.Hazard ratios by time since randomization were calculated by using unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models for all women and separately for women who had either received or not received menopausal hormone therapy before entering the study. Tests of trends with time were performed in an unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression model incorporating a linear time interaction term. Kaplan-Meier method plots describe breast cancer event rates over time. Sensitivity analyses examining the effect of nonadherence were conducted by repeating these analyses after censoring events that occurred 6 months after a woman became nonadherent (prospectively defined for adherence monitoring purposes as consuming <80% of study pills or starting hormone therapy during most recent study interval).Comparisons of participant baseline and breast cancer tumor characteristics were based on χ2, Fisher exact, or ttests. Interactions between baseline characteristics and randomization assignment were assessed in Cox proportional hazards regression models (weighted and unweighted) that included both the risk factor (where applicable as a continuous variable for computing the test statistic and Pvalue) and randomization assignment as main effects. Pvalues for assessing possible interactions were computed from likelihood ratio tests by comparing models with and without the interaction term. Women with missing values for a risk factor were omitted from these analyses. Twenty-three subgroup comparisons were tested and, accordingly, 1 test would be expected to be significant at the .05 level by chance alone. Ten comparisons are presented.Calculated variables included (1) Gail Risk Assessmentthat incorporated age, history of benign breast disease (atypia status unknown in WHI), age at menarche, age at first live birth, race/ethnicity, and numbers of mothers and sisters with breast cancer; (2) duration and recency of menopausal hormone therapy and oral contraceptive use; (3) body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters); (4) dietary variables, including energy, percentage energy from fat, and alcohol use; and (5) physical activity (metabolic equivalent–hours per week of activity). Analyses were performed by using SAS version 8.02 (SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC); P<.05 was considered significant.RESULTSBreast cancer risk characteristics were closely comparable in the 2 study groups including factors related to prior hormonal exposure, family history, dietary intake, education, ethnicity, and the Gail Risk Assessment (Table 1). Participants were at moderate breast cancer risk for their age given a mean (SD) Gail 5-year risk estimate of 1.50% (0.67%).Recent (within 18 months) outcome information was available on 15 931 women (95.9% of randomized participants). Survival status was known for 16 067 participants (96.7%), including 485 (2.9%) known to be deceased. At the time of this study, the mean follow-up was 5.6 years with a maximum of 8.6 years. As previously described,at the time of our interim study, 42% of estrogen plus progestin and 38% of placebo participants stopped their study medications for at least some period. Drop-ins, based on women who self-reported discontinuation of study medication and subsequently received any menopausal hormones through other sources, were 6.2% in the estrogen plus progestin group and 10.7% in the placebo group.In intent-to-treat analyses, estrogen plus progestin increased total (245 vs 185 cases; HR, 1.24; weighted P<.001) and invasive (199 vs 150 cases; HR, 1.24; weighted P= .003) breast cancers compared with placebo (Pvalues from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, Figure 1). The nominal 95% CI for the unweighted HR for invasive breast cancer was 1.01 to 1.54. Accounting for the sequential monitoring gives an adjusted 95% CI of 0.97 to 1.59. There was also a suggestion of an increase for in situ breast cancers in the estrogen plus progestin group (47 vs 37 cases; HR, 1.18; weighted P= .09).Figure 1.Breast Cancer by Category and Treatment Group (Estrogen Plus Progestin vs Placebo)Hazard ratios (HRs) are from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. Z statistics and Pvalues are from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. CI indicates confidence interval.Sensitivity analyses examining the impact of nonadherence suggest a stronger effect on invasive breast cancer incidence when events in nonadherent women are excluded (HR, 1.49; weighted P<.001), including the possibility of an earlier divergence in the cumulative hazard estimates (Figure 2).Figure 2.Sensitivity Analysis of Invasive Breast Cancers in Adherent Participants by Treatment GroupParticipants were censored 6 months after becoming nonadherent (defined as taking <80% of study medication or starting nonprotocol hormone therapy). Hazard ratio (HR) is from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression model, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. Z statistic and Pvalue are from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression model, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. CI indicates confidence interval.The number of invasive breast cancers by year and treatment group for all women and stratified by prior hormone use are shown in Table 2. For women with no menopausal hormone use before entering the study, invasive breast cancer rates were lower for the initial 2 years in the estrogen plus progestin group compared with placebo, and similar in the third year. In the fourth year and thereafter, invasive breast cancer rates were higher in the estrogen plus progestin group, with a significant trend for increasing breast cancer risk over time (Z = 2.31). In women with prior menopausal hormone use, the rate of invasive breast cancer incidence was greater in the third year and beyond for women receiving estrogen plus progestin.Table 2.Invasive Breast Cancers (Annualized Percentage) by Treatment Group and Prior Menopausal Hormone Therapy*Time After Entry, yZ for Trend12345≥6Without Prior Menopausal Hormone UseEstrogen plus progestin (n = 6277)7 (0.11)15 (0.24)19 (0.31)35 (0.58)28 (0.54)37 (0.69)2.31Placebo (n = 6020)14 (0.23)22 (0.37)19 (0.33)23 (0.40)17 (0.34)26 (0.56)HR (95% CI)0.48 (0.19-1.20)0.65 (0.34-1.25)0.96 (0.51-1.82)1.45 (0.85-2.45)1.61 (0.88-2.94)1.24 (0.75-2.05)With Prior Menopausal Hormone UseEstrogen plus progestin (n = 2225)5 (0.23)11 (0.50)10 (0.46)9 (0.42)15 (0.82)8 (0.39)1.62Placebo (n = 2079)5 (0.24)10 (0.49)3 (0.15)4 (0.20)4 (0.23)3 (0.17)HR (95% CI)0.90 (0.26-3.15)1.10 (0.47-2.61)3.09 (0.84-11.27)2.16 (0.66-7.05)3.56 (1.18-10.73)1.99 (0.52-7.60)OverallEstrogen plus progestin (N = 8506)12 (0.14)26 (0.31)29 (0.35)44 (0.54)43 (0.61)45 (0.61)2.56Placebo (N = 8102)19 (0.24)32 (0.40)22 (0.28)27 (0.35)21 (0.32)29 (0.45)HR (95% CI)0.60 (0.29-1.23)0.77 (0.46-1.30)1.26 (0.73-2.20)1.54 (0.95-2.49)1.99 (1.18-3.35)1.35 (0.85-2.16)Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.*Data are No. (%) unless otherwise specified. Hazard ratios and 95% CIs are from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group.The relationship between variables in Table 1and treatment were examined in the form of interactions, none of which were significant, although power was limited by small sample size within subgroups. These results, as well as subgroup specific analyses, are presented for selected covariates in Table 3. Overall, findings in specific risk categories underscored the consistency of the main results; women assigned to estrogen plus progestin had higher rates of invasive breast cancer in nearly all subgroups. Effects by race/ethnicity were examined and no differences were found.Table 3.Invasive Breast Cancers (Annualized Percentage) by Baseline Characteristics and Treatment GroupNo. (%)HR (95% CI)*PValue for Interaction†Estrogen + ProgestinPlaceboNo. of participants randomized85068102Follow-up time, mean (SD), mo67.8 (16.2)66.8 (15.2)Invasive breast cancer199 (0.41)150 (0.33)1.24 (1.01-1.54).003Selected covariates for invasive breast cancerAge at screening, y50-5952 (0.31)40 (0.26)1.20 (0.80-1.82)60-6994 (0.44)72 (0.36)1.22 (0.90-1.66).2070-7953 (0.54)38 (0.41)1.34 (0.88-2.04)Gail Risk Assessment, % per 5 y<1.2549 (0.30)34 (0.22)1.35 (0.87-2.09)1.25-1.7473 (0.45)53 (0.35)1.27 (0.89-1.80).33≥1.7577 (0.49)63 (0.43)1.13 (0.81-1.57)Prior oral contraceptive use, yNo122 (0.45)99 (0.39)1.15 (0.88-1.50)<552 (0.46)24 (0.24)2.06 (1.27-3.35).315-1017 (0.36)13 (0.28)1.38 (0.67-2.86)>108 (0.16)14 (0.29)0.54 (0.22-1.28)Prior menopausal hormone use, yNo prior hormone use‡141 (0.40)121 (0.36)1.09 (0.86-1.39)<537 (0.42)21 (0.25)1.70 (0.99-2.91).15≥521 (0.54)8 (0.24)2.27 (1.00-5.15)Prior estrogen-only use, yNo prior hormone use‡141 (0.40)121 (0.36)1.09 (0.86-1.39)<523 (0.59)13 (0.35)1.77 (0.89-3.53).32≥57 (0.54)3 (0.27)2.06 (0.53-7.99)Prior estrogen plus progestin use, yNo prior hormone use‡141 (0.40)121 (0.36)1.09 (0.86-1.39)<522 (0.36)9 (0.16)2.34 (1.07-5.11).21≥514 (0.55)6 (0.28)2.04 (0.77-5.39)Recency of hormone use, y§Current13 (0.41)4 (0.15)2.86 (0.91-8.97)Past, <517 (0.40)8 (0.21)2.02 (0.87-4.69).65Past, 5-1010 (0.53)5 (0.29)2.49 (0.82-7.55)Past, ≥1018 (0.52)12 (0.36)1.43 (0.69-2.99)BMI<2545 (0.31)32 (0.23)1.35 (0.86-2.13)25-3072 (0.42)49 (0.31)1.40 (0.97-2.01).12≥3082 (0.50)68 (0.45)1.08 (0.78-1.49)SmokingNever92 (0.39)66 (0.30)1.29 (0.94-1.77)Past86 (0.45)70 (0.40)1.14 (0.83-1.56).23Current21 (0.43)9 (0.19)2.28 (1.04-4.98)NSAID medication useNo190 (0.41)142 (0.33)1.25 (1.01-1.56).75Yes9 (0.42)8 (0.37)1.10 (0.41-2.90)Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters); CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug.*Hazard ratios and 95% CIs are from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group.†Weighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group‡Users of alternate preparations are excluded.§Recency of use only applies to women who have ever taken hormones. Current users had 3 months wash out before entry.These data suggest that women reporting prior menopausal hormone use may have had higher HRs for breast cancer associated with estrogen plus progestin use than those who never used menopausal hormones (among never users, 141 vs 121; HR, 1.09; for women with <5 years of prior use, 37 vs 21; HR, 1.70; and women with ≥5 years of prior use, 21 vs 8; HR, 2.27), but the trend with duration of use was not statistically significant (weighted P= .15).Breast Cancer CharacteristicsInvasive breast cancers associated with estrogen plus progestin use were larger (mean [SD], 1.7 cm [1.1] vs 1.5 cm [0.9], respectively; P= .04), were more likely to be node positive (25.9% vs 15.8%, respectively; P= .03), and were diagnosed at a significantly more advanced stage (regional/metastatic 25.4% vs 16.0%, respectively; P= .04) compared with placebo use (Table 4). There was no difference in tumor grade by treatment group. The percentages and distribution of invasive ductal, invasive lobular, mixed ductal, and lobular as well as tubular carcinomas were similar in the estrogen plus progestin group vs the placebo group.Table 4.Characteristics of Invasive Breast Cancers by Treatment Group*No. (%)PValue†Estrogen + Progestin (N = 199)Placebo (N = 150)No. of participants randomized85068102Follow-up, mean (SD), mo67.8 (16.2)66.8 (15.2)Tumor size, mean (SD), cm‡1.7 (1.1)1.5 (0.9).04No tumor found/no primary mass01 (0.7)Microscopic focus or foci, cm8 (4.3)9 (6.4)≤0.518 (9.7)17 (12.1)>0.5-145 (24.2)36 (25.5).50>1-273 (39.2)56 (39.7)>2-537 (19.9)21 (14.9)>55 (2.7)1 (0.7)Missing13 (6.5)9 (6.0).84Lymph nodes examinedNo19 (9.9)13 (9.1).79Yes172 (90.1)130 (90.9)Missing8 (4.0)7 (4.7).77No. of lymph nodes examined, mean (SD)§10.3 (7.9)10.9 (7.8).52No. of positive lymph nodesNone129 (74.1)112 (84.2)1-336 (20.7)15 (11.3).08≥49 (5.2)6 (4.5)Missing25 (12.6)17 (11.3).73Lymph nodes positive (yes)45 (25.9)21 (15.8).03SEER stageLocalized144 (74.6)124 (82.7)Regional47 (24.4)21 (14.0).048Metastatic2 (1.0)3 (2.0)Missing6 (3.0)2 (1.3).47SEER stage regional/metastatic (yes)49 (25.4)24 (16.0).04HistologyInvasive ductal carcinoma135 (67.8)101 (67.3)Invasive lobular carcinoma22 (11.1)16 (10.6)Invasive ductal and invasive lobular15 (7.5)8 (5.3).89Invasive carcinoma with ductal and lobular features1 (0.5)1 (0.7)Tubular8 (4.0)6 (4.0)Other17 (8.5)18 (12.0)Morphology, gradeWell differentiated41 (25.0)26 (20.3)Moderately differentiated71 (43.3)61 (47.7).61Poorly differentiated/anaplastic52 (31.7)41 (32.0)Missing35 (17.6)22 (14.7).46Receptor statusEstrogen-receptor assayPositive158 (86.8)112 (88.2).72Negative24 (13.2)15 (11.8)Missing17 (8.5)23 (15.4).049Progesterone-receptor assayPositive135 (75.0)86 (69.9).33Negative45 (25.0)37 (30.0)Missing19 (9.5)27 (18.0).02Abbreviation: SEER, Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results.*Tumors <1 cm with no node or missing nodes were classified as local; tumors ≥1 cm with no nodes or missing nodes on pathology review were not given a stage if there was no clinical statement in the medical record regarding nodal involvement.†From a 2-sample ttest for continuous variables or from a χ2or Fisher exact test for categorized variables. The first Pvalue for a given characteristic tests association with treatment group by using only known values of the characteristic. Pvalue corresponding to the "missing" rows tests the association of percentage missing for the given characteristic with treatment group.‡Mean (SD) only applies to those with a known tumor size (n = 170 for estrogen plus progestin and n = 128 for placebo).§Mean (SD) only applies to those with a known number of lymph nodes examined, including those with zero nodes examined (n = 191 for estrogen plus progestin and n = 143 for placebo).The number of both receptor-positive and receptor-negative breast cancers were greater in the estrogen plus progestin group; the distribution of estrogen receptor-positive and progesterone-receptor cancers did not differ significantly between the estrogen plus progestin and placebo groups when considering tumors with known receptor status. There was a modest difference in receptor status ascertainment between treatment groups that could not be attributed to tumor size differences (data not shown).For in situ breast cancers, the tumor grade did not differ between study groups (P= .56). The size of the in situ cancers was slightly larger in the estrogen plus progestin group (mean [SD], 1.6 cm [2.0] vs 1.1 cm[0.6], respectively), but the difference was not statistically significant (P= .33), and a substantial number of in situ cancers had no measurable size. At this time, few deaths have been attributed to breast cancer (4 in the estrogen plus progestin group and 4 in the placebo group).MammographyMammography clearance was required before entry for all participants. Eighty-two women with mammographic abnormalities suspicious or highly suggestive of malignancy were entered after medical clearance; only 3 subsequently developed invasive breast cancers. Detailed mammogram reading results (other than cancer/no cancer) were available for 14 607 women at baseline. At baseline, the percentage of women with an abnormal mammogram was closely comparable with the 2 treatment groups (Table 5).Table 5.Mammographic Findings by Treatment Group and Time From Entry*BaselineYear 1Year 2Year 3Estrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboMammography performance of women due for visit with mammography in study period, %10010090.390.588.888.087.386.7Mammography recommendationNegative4125 (56.4)4118 (56.5)3766 (49.2)4012 (54.9)3799 (50.7)3895 (55.0)3712 (50.6)3744 (53.9)Benign finding (negative)2807 (38.4)2810 (38.5)3174 (41.5)2900 (39.7)3045 (40.6)2799 (39.5)2971 (40.5)2796 (40.3)Abnormal (total)384 (5.2)363 (5.0)716 (9.4)†398 (5.4)651 (8.7)†386 (5.5)650 (8.9)405 (5.8)Short interval follow-up suggested341 (4.7)324 (4.4)625 (8.2)332 (4.5)564 (7.5)326 (4.6)556 (7.6)347 (5.0)Suspicious abnormality43 (0.6)38 (0.5)85 (1.1)59 (0.8)82 (1.1)55 (0.8)86 (1.2)52 (0.7)Highly suggestive of malignancy0 (0)1 (<0.1)6 (0.1)7 (0.1)5 (0.1)5 (0.1)8 (0.1)6 (0.1)Year 4Year 5Year 6 and LaterCumulative‡Estrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboMammography performance of women due for visit with mammography in study period, %87.086.387.086.789.189.297.397.8Mammography recommendationNegative3397 (48.8)3471 (52.6)2358 (47.3)2366 (51.0)2094 (51.1)1834 (54.6)1359 (16.5)1631 (20.7)Benign finding (negative)2901 (41.7)2696 (40.9)2153 (43.2)2004 (43.2)1634 (39.9)1301 (38.7)4294 (52.0)4590 (58.1)Abnormal (total)661 (9.5)†432 (6.5)478 (9.6)†269 (5.8)371 (9.1)†224 (6.7)2601 (31.5)†1677 (21.2)Short interval follow-up suggested553 (7.9)364 (5.5)398 (8.0)245 (5.3)303 (7.4)188 (5.6)2121 (25.7)1395 (17.7)Suspicious abnormality94 (1.4)58 (0.9)71 (1.4)20 (0.4)58 (1.4)33 (1.0)428 (5.2)247 (3.1)Highly suggestive of malignancy14 (0.2)10 (0.2)9 (0.2)4 (0.1)10 (0.2)3 (0.1)52 (0.6)35 (0.4)*Data are No. (%) unless otherwise specified. A total of 100% of estrogen plus progestin participants had mammograms at baseline; because of form changes, participants with version 1 of the mammography form are not displayed in this table.†P<.001 for comparison of frequency of abnormal mammogram (short interval follow-up, suspicious abnormality, highly suggestive of malignancy) in the estrogen plus progestin compared with placebo group.‡Most severe mammography recommendation category during the entire follow-up period.After the first year, the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms (with recommendations for either short interval follow-up, a suspicious abnormality, or highly suggestive of malignancy) was substantially higher in the estrogen plus progestin group vs the placebo group (716 [9.4%] of 7656 vs 398 [5.4%] of 7310 women with abnormal mammograms, respectively; P<.001). The frequency of abnormal mammograms was higher in women aged 50 to 59 years in the hormone therapy group after 1 year as well (8.8% vs 5.9%, respectively; P<.001). In each year thereafter, the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms was significantly higher in the estrogen plus progestin group vs the placebo group. In total, 31.5% of women in the estrogen plus progestin group had at least 1 abnormal mammogram vs 21.2% of women in the placebo group (P<.001). Thus, even short-term estrogen plus progestin use resulted in a substantial increase in abnormal mammograms requiring medical evaluation.COMMENTThis report provides randomized clinical trial evidence that postmenopausal estrogen plus progestin use significantly increases the incidence of breast cancer within a 5-year period. The breast cancers diagnosed in women in the hormone therapy group had similar histology and grade but were more likely to have advanced stage vs women in the placebo group. These results suggest that invasive breast cancers developing in women receiving estrogen plus progestin therapy may have an unfavorable prognosis. Follow-up continues in these women to determine survival outcome.Mammographic breast density was not routinely measured, but when the mammographic results were examined over time by treatment group, a substantial and statistically significant increase in the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms requiring additional medical evaluation was observed beginning in the first year of hormone use. The absolute increase in abnormal mammograms of about 4% per year in women receiving estrogen plus progestin translates into approximately 120 000 otherwise avoidable abnormal mammograms annually for the estimated 3 million US postmenopausal women currently using this hormone regimen. Prior reports of menopausal hormone therapy influence on mammographic interpretation have been mixed, varying from no effect to substantial negative influence.Our literature review found no prior large randomized trials with comprehensive serial mammographic assessment reporting the effects of estrogen plus progestin on the frequency of abnormal mammograms.Estrogen plus progestin use increases mammographic breast density vs estrogen alone or placebo,but the biological significance of such changes or their effect on mammographic interpretation is not established.An ongoing ancillary study in the WHI, formally evaluating mammographic breast density on a subset of participants, may provide additional information on the relationships among mammographic breast density change, mammographic interpretation, and breast cancer risk.Given the known psychological sequelae and requirement for medical evaluations associated with any abnormal mammography report,the substantially increased frequency of women receiving estrogen plus progestin who have abnormal mammograms represents an additional adverse effect of menopausal hormone use. This is an important consideration for women choosing even short-term estrogen plus progestin therapy, because the increase in women with abnormal mammograms was observed within the first year.The breast cancers among women in the estrogen plus progestin group vs those in the placebo group were diagnosed initially at a slightly lower rate, subsequently at a higher rate, and were at a similar grade but a more advanced stage at the time of diagnosis. This pattern, coupled with the increased frequency of women with abnormal mammograms, suggests the hypothesis that estrogen plus progestin stimulates breast cancer growth and delays breast cancer diagnosis, perhaps mediated through differences in mammographic detection.Although a longer time to diagnosis could explain some of the increases in tumor size observed in the hormone therapy group, direct effects of estrogen plus progestin on tumor growth cannot be excluded. The pattern of differential breast cancer diagnosis observed over time is also consistent with the delay hypothesis. This problem supports the use of weighted Cox proportional hazards regression model statistics that are not highly sensitive to events early in the follow-up period for comparisons between treatment groups.Observational studies linking the characteristics of breast cancers associated with menopausal hormone therapy, mostly involving the use of estrogen alone, have given mixed results.Overall, most report favorable stageand favorable prognostic characteristicswith a predominance of receptor-positive cancers.In the WHI randomized trial, breast cancers that occurred among women taking estrogen plus progestin did not have such favorable characteristics. The demonstration of an increased number of more advanced breast cancers without favorable characteristics directly challenges the concept that hormone therapy might simply lead to earlier diagnosis of more favorable cancers. This discrepancy could be related to differential mammography use in women receiving hormones in observational studies, an issue difficult to address directly since retrospectively recalled frequency of mammography has proven relatively unreliable.Somebut not allrecent observational studies evaluating combined estrogen plus progestin therapy report a striking and, in some cases, almost exclusive increase in invasive lobular breast cancers with little effect on invasive ductal cancers. In the WHI trial, the number of cases in most subtypes is small, but there is no evidence of a differential effect; all major categories of invasive breast cancer were increased in the estrogen plus progestin group, with only a slight excess in the invasive lobular or mixed invasive ductal and lobular carcinoma categories.The relatively early development of more breast cancers in the estrogen plus progestin group was unexpected because most recent reviews of observational studies suggest that breast cancer risk would be increased mainly with longer term (>5 years) menopausal hormone use.This discrepancy could be related to estrogen plus progestin hindering mammographic identification of breast cancers as suggested by the current results. If this is correct, determination of the effect of even short-term estrogen plus progestin use relative to breast cancer risk becomes a vexing clinical problem.A nonsignificant trend for higher HRs for breast cancer in women randomized to estrogen plus progestin was observed for women reporting prior menopausal hormone use. This observation suggests a role for cumulative exposure. However, this finding could also reflect selection biases and, for this reason, reliable interpretation is precluded. Despite the somewhat increased breast cancer risk for estrogen plus progestin vs placebo use among prior hormone users, prior hormone users were at somewhat lower risk vs never users (Table 2). It is unclear whether this is due to a successful user effect, wherein prior long-term users already demonstrated themselves to be less susceptible to breast cancer, or to other factors such as greater vasomotor symptoms reflecting lower estrogen levels.The magnitude of the increased breast cancer risk observed with estrogen plus progestin in this clinical trial closely parallels observational study results,but the fact that the cancers developed after a shorter than predicted interval suggests an effect on growth of established breast cancers. Evidence from other randomized trials on this question is limited. In the Heart and Estrogen Replacement Study trial, which included women with coronary heart disease, more breast cancers occurred with estrogen plus progestin therapy compared with placebo (34 vs 25 cases, respectively), but the difference was not statistically significant.The strengths of the WHI study of estrogen plus progestin include the randomized double-blind study design, the large ethnically diverse study population, comprehensive and detailed assessment of a range of breast cancer risk factors at baseline, use of placebo controls, the requirement for baseline and ongoing yearly mammography and clinical breast examination in both study groups, and the central adjudication of the breast cancer end point via pathology report review. The rates of discontinuation of study medications in both study groups are limitations. However, these discontinuation rates are comparable with those observed in other trials of menopausal hormones and are less than observed in current clinical practice.Furthermore, the discontinuation of study hormones in the WHI trial is likely to dilute the estimate of effects of estrogen plus progestin, suggesting that the underlying biological effect may be greater. Finally, the early stopping based on these results provides less precision and may have introduced some anticonservative bias in the HR estimates.Because vaginal bleeding led to a high prevalence of de facto unblinding, some potential for detection bias exists. The amount of bias, if any, is likely to be small based on several factors. First, the WHI achieved very high compliance with annual mammography, which was nearly identical between study groups throughout follow-up. Furthermore, the readings and response to mammographic findings were managed by the women's own physicians, independent of WHI and with no access to study reports, thereby minimizing the opportunity for reported bleeding to influence these findings. The potential influence of estrogen plus progestin on breast cancer diagnostic decisions and procedures, including sensitivity and specificity of mammograms and clinical breast examinations, represents a complex issue that will be the focus of future analyses.The WHI evaluated a single drug regimen, conjugated equine estrogens (0.625 mg/d) plus medroxyprogesterone acetate (2.5 mg/d), and therefore cannot inform questions regarding risk associated with other oral or topical menopausal hormone therapies. A parallel study of the WHI evaluating conjugated equine estrogens alone compared with placebo for women with prior hysterectomy continues in a blinded fashion with data and safety monitoring board oversight (scheduled to be completed in 2005). Importantly, the data and safety monitoring board indicated on May 31, 2002, that at this time no increase in breast cancer has been observed in the trial of conjugated equine estrogens.In summary, results from this prospective randomized trial indicate that combined estrogen plus progestin use increases the risk of incident breast cancers, which are diagnosed at a more advanced stage compared with placebo use, and substantially increases the frequency of abnormal mammograms. In light of these findings, abnormal mammograms in women receiving menopausal hormone therapy deserve heightened scrutiny. The increased frequency of abnormal mammograms requiring medical evaluation and increased breast cancer risk should be added to the already known risks of short-duration menopausal hormone use. 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interpretation of data:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Langer, Stefanick, Lane, Rodabough, Cyr, Khandekar, McTiernan.Drafting of the manuscript:Chlebowski, McTiernan.Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Langer, Stefanick, Gass, Lane, Rodabough, Gilligan, Cyr, Thomson, Khandekar, Petrovitch.Statistical expertise:Langer, Rodabough.Obtained funding:Hendrix, Langer, Stefanick, Lane, Khandekar, Petrovitch.Administrative, technical, or material support:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Langer, Cyr, Khandekar, McTiernan.Study supervision:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Stefanick, Thomson, Petrovitch, McTiernan.Financial Disclosures:Dr Chlebowski is a consultant for Astra-Zeneca and Eli Lilly. Dr Hendrix receives grant support from Bristol Myers Squibb, 3M, Organon, Merck, TAP, Wyeth-Ayerst, GlaxoSmithKline; consultant for Eli Lilly, Merck, Organon, Proctor & Gamble, GlaxoSmithKline; on the speaker's bureau for Eli Lilly, Merck, 3M, Pfizer. Dr Langer receives research support from Wyeth-Ayerst and Organon, and is a consultant for Solvay Pharmaceuticals and King Pharmaceuticals. Dr Gass receives research grants from Duramed, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Proctor & Gamble, and Wyeth-Ayerst; honoraria from Aventis, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Ortho-McNeil, Proctor & Gamble, and Wyeth-Ayerst; and is on the company advisory board of Eli Lilly, Merck, and Proctor & Gamble.Funding/Support:This study was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services. The active study drug and placebo were supplied by Wyeth-Ayerst Research Laboratories, Philadelphia, Pa.The WHI Investigators: Program Office:National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md: Barbara Alving, Jacques E. Rossouw, Linda Pottern, Shari Ludlam, Joan A. McGowan, Leslie Ford; Clinical Coordinating Center:Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Wash:Ross Prentice, Garnet Anderson, Andrea LaCroix, Ruth E. Patterson, Anne McTiernan, Barb Cochrane, Julie Hunt, Lesley Tinker, Charles Kooperberg, Martin McIntosh, C. Y. Wang, Chu Chen, Deborah Bowen, Alan Kristal, Janet Stanford, Nicole Urban, Noel Weiss, Emily White; Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC:Sally Shumaker, Pentti Rautaharju, Ronald Prineas, Michelle Naughton; Medical Research Labs, Highland Heights, Ky:Evan Stein, Peter Laskarzewski; University of California at San Francisco:Steven Cummings, Michael Nevitt, Maurice Dockrell; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis:Lisa Harnack; McKesson BioServices, Rockville, Md:Frank Cammarata, Steve Lindenfelser; University of Washington, Seattle:Bruce Psaty, Susan Heckbert; Clinical Centers:Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY:Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller, William Frishman, Judith Wylie-Rosett, David Barad, Ruth Freeman; Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tex:Jennifer Hays, Ronald Young, Jill Anderson, Sandy Lithgow, Paul Bray; Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass:JoAnn Manson, Julie Buring, J. Michael Gaziano, Kathryn Rexrode, Claudia Chae; Brown University, Providence, RI:Annlouise R. Assaf, Richard Carleton, Carol Wheeler, Charles Eaton, Michelle Cyr; Emory University, Atlanta, Ga:Lawrence Phillips, Margaret Pedersen, Ora Strickland, Margaret Huber, Vivian Porter; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Wash:Shirley A. Beresford, Vicky M. Taylor, Nancy F. Woods, Maureen Henderson, Mark Kestin; George Washington University, Washington, DC:Judith Hsia, Nancy Gaba, Joao Ascensao, Somchia Laowattana; Harbor-UCLA Research and Education Institute, Torrance, Calif:Rowan Chlebowski, Robert Detrano, Anita Nelson, James Heiner, John Marshall; Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland, Ore:Cheryl Ritenbaugh, Barbara Valanis, Patricia Elmer, Victor Stevens, Njeri Karanja; Kaiser Permanente Division of Research, Oakland, Calif:Bette Caan, Stephen Sidney, Geri Bailey, Jane Hirata; Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee:Jane Morley Kotchen, Vanessa Barnabei, Theodore A. Kotchen, Mary Ann C. Gilligan, Joan Neuner; MedStar Research Institute/Howard University, Washington, DC:Barbara V. Howard, Lucile Adams-Campbell, Maureen Passaro, Monique Rainford, Tanya Agurs-Collins; Northwestern University, Chicago, Ill:Linda Van Horn, Philip Greenland, Janardan Khandekar, Kiang Liu, Carol Rosenberg; Rush-Presbyterian St Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Ill:Henry Black, Lynda Powell, Ellen Mason; Stanford Center for Research in Disease Prevention, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif:Marcia L. Stefanick, Mark A. Hlatky, Bertha Chen, Randall S. Stafford, Linda C. Giudice; State University of New York at Stony Brook:Dorothy Lane, Iris Granek, William Lawson, Gabriel San Roman, Catherine Messina; Ohio State University, Columbus:Rebecca Jackson, Randall Harris, David Frid, W. Jerry Mysiw, Michael Blumenfeld; University of Alabama at Birmingham:Cora E. Lewis, Albert Oberman, Mona N. Fouad, James M. Shikany, Delia Smith West; University of Arizona, Phoenix: Tamsen Bassford, John Mattox, Marcia Ko, Timothy Lohman; University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY:Maurizio Trevisan, Jean Wactawski-Wende, Susan Graham, June Chang, Ellen Smit; University of California at Davis, Sacramento:John Robbins, S. Yasmeen, Karen Lindfors, Judith Stern; University of California at Irvine, Orange:Allan Hubbell, Gail Frank, Nathan Wong, Nancy Greep, Bradley Monk; University of California at Los Angeles:Howard Judd, David Heber, Robert Elashoff; University of California at San Diego:Robert D. Langer, Michael H. Criqui, Gregory T. Talavera, Cedric F. Garland, R. Elaine Hanson; University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio:Margery Gass, Suzanne Wernke, Nelson Watts; University of Florida, Gainesville:Marian Limacher, Michael Perri, Andrew Kaunitz, R. Stan Williams, Yvonne Brinson; University of Hawaii, Honolulu:David Curb, Helen Petrovitch, Beatriz Rodriguez, Kamal Masaki, Santosh Sharma; University of Iowa, Iowa City:Robert Wallace, James Torner, Susan Johnson, Linda Snetselaar, Bradley VanVoorhis; University of Massachusetts/Fallon Clinic, Worcester:Judith Ockene, Milagros Rosal, Ira Ockene, Robert Yood, Patricia Aronson; University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark:Norman Lasser, Norman Hymowitz, Vera Lasser, Monika Safford, John Kostis; University of Miami, Miami, Fla:Mary Jo O'Sullivan, Linda Parker, R. Estape, Diann Fernandez; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis:Karen L. Margolis, Richard H. Grimm, Donald B. Hunninghake, June LaValleur, Kathleen M. Hall; University of Nevada, Reno:Robert Brunner, Sachiko St. Jeor, William Graettinger, Vicki Oujevolk; University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill:Gerardo Heiss, Pamela Haines, David Ontjes, Carla Sueta, Ellen Wells; University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa:Lewis Kuller, Arlene Caggiula, Jane Cauley, Sarah Berga, N. Carole Milas; University of Tennessee, Memphis:Karen C. Johnson, Suzanne Satterfield, Raymond W. Ke, Jere Vile, Fran Tylavsky; University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio:Robert Brzyski, Robert Schenken, Jose Trabal, Mercedes Rodriguez-Sifuentes, Charles Mouton; University of Wisconsin, Madison:Catherine Allen, Douglas Laube, Patrick McBride, Julie Mares-Perlman, Barbara Loevinger; Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC:Greg Burke, Robin Crouse, Lynne Parsons, Mara Vitolins; Wayne State University School of Medicine/Hutzel Hospital, Detroit, Mich:Susan Hendrix, Michael Simon, Gene McNeeley, Pamela Gordon, Paul Makela.Acknowledgment:The dedicated efforts of the WHI participants and of the WHI investigators and staff at the Clinical Center and Clinical Coordinating Center are acknowledged. The contributions of Garnet L. Anderson, PhD, and Allison M. Weber, BSN, BS, from the Clinical Coordinating Center warrant specific acknowledgement. A complete listing of the WHI investigators can be found at http://www.whi.org.Corresponding Author and Reprints:Rowan T. Chlebowski, MD, PhD, Harbor-UCLA Research and Education Institute, 1124 W Carson St, Bldg J-3, Torrance, CA 90502 (e-mail: rchlebowski@rei.edu). http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png JAMA American Medical Association

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Publisher
American Medical Association
Copyright
Copyright 2003 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS Restrictions Apply to Government Use.
ISSN
0098-7484
eISSN
1538-3598
DOI
10.1001/jama.289.24.3243
pmid
12824205
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ContextThe Women's Health Initiative trial of combined estrogen plus progestin was stopped early when overall health risks, including invasive breast cancer, exceeded benefits. Outstanding issues not previously addressed include characteristics of breast cancers observed among women using hormones and whether diagnosis may be influenced by hormone effects on mammography.ObjectiveTo determine the relationship among estrogen plus progestin use, breast cancer characteristics, and mammography recommendations.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsFollowing a comprehensive breast cancer risk assessment, 16 608 postmenopausal women aged 50 to 79 years with an intact uterus were randomly assigned to receive combined conjugated equine estrogens (0.625 mg/d) plus medroxyprogesterone acetate (2.5 mg/d) or placebo from 1993 to 1998 at 40 clinical centers. Screening mammography and clinical breast examinations were performed at baseline and yearly thereafter.Main Outcome MeasuresBreast cancer number and characteristics, and frequency of abnormal mammograms by estrogen plus progestin exposure.ResultsIn intent-to-treat analyses, estrogen plus progestin increased total (245 vs 185 cases; hazard ratio [HR], 1.24; weighted P<.001) and invasive (199 vs 150 cases; HR, 1.24; weighted P= .003) breast cancers compared with placebo. The invasive breast cancers diagnosed in the estrogen plus progestin group were similar in histology and grade but were larger (mean [SD], 1.7 cm [1.1] vs 1.5 cm [0.9], respectively; P= .04) and were at more advanced stage (regional/metastatic 25.4% vs 16.0%, respectively; P= .04) compared with those diagnosed in the placebo group. After 1 year, the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms was substantially greater in the estrogen plus progestin group (716 [9.4%] of 7656) compared with placebo group (398 [5.4%] of 7310; P<.001), a pattern which continued for the study duration.ConclusionsRelatively short-term combined estrogen plus progestin use increases incident breast cancers, which are diagnosed at a more advanced stage compared with placebo use, and also substantially increases the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms. These results suggest estrogen plus progestin may stimulate breast cancer growth and hinder breast cancer diagnosis.Breast cancer is the most common invasive cancer in US women and its etiology is not fully defined.Despite observational studies suggesting increased breast cancer risk with estrogenand especially long-duration combined hormone use,the magnitude of breast cancer risk associated with menopausal hormone therapy is controversial.On July 9, 2002, the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) reported results from the randomized controlled trial of 16 608 postmenopausal women comparing effects of estrogen plus progestin with placebo on chronic disease risk and confirmed that combined estrogen plus progestin use increases the risk of invasive breast cancer.To better understand the relationship between breast cancer and exposure to estrogen plus progestin, a detailed analysis of the breast cancers that developed among women receiving active treatment compared with those receiving placebo was performed.METHODSStudy DesignThe WHI combined estrogen plus progestin randomized clinical trial enrolled 16 608 postmenopausal women with no prior hysterectomy from 1993 to 1998 at 40 clinical centers following a previously described design.The study was approved by human subjects committees at each institution. Women who were recruited by mass mailings and media were eligible if they were between 50 and 79 years of age at study entry, postmenopausal, and provided written informed consent. Women with prior hysterectomy, breast cancer, or those with medical conditions likely to result in death within 3 years were excluded. Prior menopausal hormone use required a 3-month wash out period before baseline testing. All women had baseline mammogram and clinical breast examinations; abnormal findings required clearance before study entry.Women were randomly assigned to receive estrogen plus progestin taken as a single daily tablet containing conjugated equine estrogens (0.625 mg) and medroxyprogesterone acetate (2.5 mg) (Prempro, Wyeth Ayerst, Philadelphia, Pa) or to receive an identical-appearing placebo. Randomization by the WHI clinical coordinating center was implemented locally by using a distributed study database and study medication bottles with unique bar codes for blinded dispensing. Descriptive characteristics for the 2 groups were assessed at baseline (Table 1).Table 1.Descriptive Characteristics of Participants at Baseline by Treatment Group*CharacteristicNo. (%)Estrogen + Progestin (n = 8506)†Placebo (n = 8102)Age at screening, y50-592839 (33.4)2683 (33.1)60-693853 (45.3)3657 (45.1)70-791814 (21.3)1762 (21.7)EthnicityWhite7140 (83.9)6805 (84.0)Black549 (6.5)575 (7.1)Hispanic472 (5.5)416 (5.1)American Indian26 (0.3)30 (0.4)Asian/Pacific Islander194 (2.3)169 (2.1)Unknown125 (1.5)107 (1.3)Education0-8 y202 (2.4)177 (2.2)Some high school373 (4.4)362 (4.5)High school diploma/GED1614 (19.1)1608 (20.0)School after high school3356 (39.7)3059 (38.0)College degree or higher2915 (34.5)2838 (35.3)Gail Risk Assessment, % per 5 y<1.252806 (33.0)2717 (33.5)1.25-1.742859 (33.6)2703 (33.4)≥1.752841 (33.4)2682 (33.1)Age at menarche, y<111725 (20.3)1670 (20.7)12-134578 (54.0)4334 (53.7)≥142182 (25.7)2061 (25.6)No. of term pregnanciesNever pregnant655 (7.7)633 (7.8)Never had term pregnancy201 (2.4)199 (2.5)1690 (8.2)661 (8.2)21908 (22.5)1708 (21.2)32020 (23.9)1952 (24.2)41416 (16.7)1412 (17.5)≥51575 (18.6)1500 (18.6)Age at first birth, yNever pregnant/no term pregnancy860 (11.2)833 (11.5)<201124 (14.6)1117 (15.4)20-294996 (64.8)4698 (64.6)≥30727 (9.4)624 (8.6)No. of children breastfedNone3813 (45.3)3669 (45.7)1-22606 (31.0)2485 (31.0)≥32001 (23.8)1867 (23.3)Oral contraceptive use, yNo4811 (56.6)4655 (57.5)Yes3693 (43.4)3444 (42.5)<51982 (23.3)1781 (22.0)5 to <10825 (9.7)808 (10.0)≥10886 (10.4)855 (10.6)Prior estrogen only use, yNo7603 (89.4)7237 (89.3)Yes903 (10.6)864 (10.7)<5677 (8.0)659 (8.1)5 to <10134 (1.6)109 (1.3)≥1092 (1.1)96 (1.2)Prior estrogen plus progestin use, yNo6990 (82.2)6706 (82.8)Yes1516 (17.8)1396 (17.2)<51050 (12.3)997 (12.3)5 to <10315 (3.7)258 (3.2)≥10151 (1.8)141 (1.7)Recency of hormone use, yNonuser6277 (73.8)6020 (74.3)Past <5727 (8.6)679 (8.4)Past 5 to <10335 (3.9)310 (3.8)Past >10609 (7.2)599 (7.4)Current554 (6.5)491 (6.1)No. of first-degree relatives with breast cancerNone6954 (87.3)6676 (88.2)1927 (11.6)816 (10.8)≥282 (1.0)79 (1.0)No. of second-degree relatives with breast cancer‡None7184 (95.8)6880 (96.0)1304 (4.1)282 (3.9)≥213 (0.2)3 (<0.1)Benign breast diseaseNo6340 (83.5)6278 (83.2)Yes, 1 biopsy967 (12.7)981 (13.0)Yes, ≥2 biopsies290 (3.8)288 (3.8)BMI<252579 (30.4)2479 (30.8)25-302992 (35.3)2834 (35.2)>302899 (34.2)2737 (34.0)Dietary energy, kcal≤11191630 (19.8)1575 (20.1)>1119-1414.51632 (19.9)1583 (20.2)>1414.5-17151601 (19.5)1611 (20.6)>1715-2129.51689 (20.6)1518 (19.4)>2129.51661 (20.2)1549 (19.8)% Energy from fat≤271620 (19.7)1539 (19.6)>27-32.51601 (19.5)1600 (20.4)>32.5-371754 (21.4)1660 (21.2)>37-41.51590 (19.4)1504 (19.2)>41.51648 (20.1)1533 (19.6)Physical activity, metabolic equivalents/wkNone1427 (18.6)1356 (17.9)>0-3.751501 (19.6)1519 (20.0)>3.75-8.751355 (17.7)1352 (17.8)>8.75-17.51648 (21.5)1634 (21.5)>17.51739 (22.7)1735 (22.8)Alcohol useNondrinker972 (11.5)938 (11.7)Past drinker1427 (16.9)1380 (17.2)<1 drink/mo1174 (13.9)1117 (13.9)<1 drink/wk1710 (20.3)1513 (18.8)1 to <7 drinks/wk2113 (25.0)2038 (25.4)≥7 drinks/wk1047 (12.4)1049 (13.1)SmokingNever4178 (49.6)3999 (50.0)Past3362 (39.9)3157 (39.5)Current880 (10.5)838 (10.5)NSAID medication useNo8112 (95.4)7715 (95.2)Yes394 (4.6)387 (4.8)Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters); GED, general equivalency diploma; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug.*Because of rounding, percentages may not all total 100. Not all characteristics sum to total number of participants for either estrogen plus progestin or placebo because of missing values for some participants. Mean (SD) for estrogen plus progestin vs placebo was 63.2 years (7.1) and 63.3 years (7.1), respectively, for age at screening; 28.5 (5.8) and 28.5 (5.9), respectively, for BMI; 1554.7 kcal (599.1) and 1544.8 kcal (588.2), respectively, for dietary energy; and 34.4 (8.4) and 34.3 (8.4), respectively, for percentage energy from fat.†Includes 331 women previously randomized to an estrogen alone group who were reassigned to the estrogen plus progestin group following a protocol change as previously described.8‡P= .051 by χ2test.Study medication was discontinued for development of breast cancer; endometrial pathology (hyperplasia not responsive to treatment, atypia, or cancer); deep-vein thrombosis or pulmonary emboli; malignant melanoma; meningeoma; triglyceride level of more than 1000 mg/dL (11.3 mmol/L); or use of any nonstudy estrogen, progestin, androgen, tamoxifen, or raloxifene. Comprehensive breast cancer risk was assessed at baseline by interview (lifetime hormone use) or by self-report (other covariates) by using standardized questionnaires.Follow-up ProceduresParticipants were contacted after 6 weeks to assess symptoms and promote adherence, at 6-month intervals for clinical outcome, and annually for clinic visits. Yearly mammography and clinical breast examination were required, and study medications were withheld if they were not completed. Participants were followed for clinical outcomes regardless of medication adherence.Initial reports of outcomes were ascertained by self-administered questionnaires. Breast cancer end points were confirmed by review of medical records and pathology reports (available in 98.2% of participants) by physician adjudicators at the local clinics. Women with in situ breast cancers, which at a later date were diagnosed with a new invasive breast cancer, were considered to have 2 separate breast cancer events (3 cases). All cases were subsequently centrally adjudicated using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results coding system. Invasive cancers originally classified as mixed ductal and lobular underwent additional blinded review by an oncologist (R.T.C.).With the exception of these trial conduct procedures, the WHI clinical centers did not provide comprehensive health care. Mammograms in the WHI were performed at more than 3000 clinics, hospitals, and practice settings. Medical decisions regarding workup of breast findings were directed by community physicians.Mammogram reports were obtained from performance sites and were reviewed locally and coded for recommendation (negative, benign finding-negative, short interval follow-up suggested, suspicious abnormality, and highly suggestive of malignancy). Mammograms with suspicious abnormalities or highly suggestive of malignancy required clearance before dispensing additional study medication.Study TerminationThe study sample size was based on the estimated influence of estrogen plus progestin on coronary heart disease. For monitoring purposes, a global index of benefit and risk was defined to include coronary heart disease, stroke, colorectal cancer, endometrial cancer, pulmonary embolus, hip fracture, and death due to other causes as well as invasive breast cancer.After a mean (SD) follow-up of 5.2 years (1.3) (including end points through April 2002), the WHI data and safety monitoring board recommended stopping the trial based on the breast cancer comparison exceeding the predefined stopping boundary and overall risks exceeding benefits as measured by the global index. At that time, 290 locally adjudicated invasive breast cancers were described and the in situ breast cancers were not quantitated.This report provides an updated analysis based on a mean (SD) follow-up of 5.6 years (1.3) with detailed analyses of the centrally adjudicated breast cancers (349 invasive and 84 in situ) diagnosed before July 8, 2002, the date participants were instructed to stop their study pills.Statistical AnalysisA major hypothesis of the current analysis was that invasive breast cancer characteristics in the estrogen plus progestin group differed from the placebo group. In addition, given the influence of menopausal hormones on breast densityand the suggestion that hormones can complicate mammographic interpretation,associations among estrogen plus progestin use, mammographic results, and breast cancer diagnoses were explored.Primary results are assessed with time-to-event methods, based on the intent-to-treat principle. Hazard ratios (HRs) are reported from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression analyses. Pvalues from Wald Z statistics are reported from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression analyses stratified by age and randomization status in the dietary modification trial of the WHI. This weighting was specified in the trial design and motivated by observational reports suggesting lag to full effect of hormone on breast cancer incidence. The weighting, reflecting this hypothesis, varied linearly from zero at time of randomization to a maximum of 1 beginning at follow-up year 10.Nominal confidence intervals (CIs) for inference regarding invasive breast cancer are used as these are considered final trial results for the primary safety outcome. The multiple testing over time is acknowledged in adjusted CIs derived from the monitoring plan, as previously described.The fact that this outcome was a key factor in the early stopping of the trial could lead to some anticonservatism in the reported HR estimates.Hazard ratios by time since randomization were calculated by using unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models for all women and separately for women who had either received or not received menopausal hormone therapy before entering the study. Tests of trends with time were performed in an unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression model incorporating a linear time interaction term. Kaplan-Meier method plots describe breast cancer event rates over time. Sensitivity analyses examining the effect of nonadherence were conducted by repeating these analyses after censoring events that occurred 6 months after a woman became nonadherent (prospectively defined for adherence monitoring purposes as consuming <80% of study pills or starting hormone therapy during most recent study interval).Comparisons of participant baseline and breast cancer tumor characteristics were based on χ2, Fisher exact, or ttests. Interactions between baseline characteristics and randomization assignment were assessed in Cox proportional hazards regression models (weighted and unweighted) that included both the risk factor (where applicable as a continuous variable for computing the test statistic and Pvalue) and randomization assignment as main effects. Pvalues for assessing possible interactions were computed from likelihood ratio tests by comparing models with and without the interaction term. Women with missing values for a risk factor were omitted from these analyses. Twenty-three subgroup comparisons were tested and, accordingly, 1 test would be expected to be significant at the .05 level by chance alone. Ten comparisons are presented.Calculated variables included (1) Gail Risk Assessmentthat incorporated age, history of benign breast disease (atypia status unknown in WHI), age at menarche, age at first live birth, race/ethnicity, and numbers of mothers and sisters with breast cancer; (2) duration and recency of menopausal hormone therapy and oral contraceptive use; (3) body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters); (4) dietary variables, including energy, percentage energy from fat, and alcohol use; and (5) physical activity (metabolic equivalent–hours per week of activity). Analyses were performed by using SAS version 8.02 (SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC); P<.05 was considered significant.RESULTSBreast cancer risk characteristics were closely comparable in the 2 study groups including factors related to prior hormonal exposure, family history, dietary intake, education, ethnicity, and the Gail Risk Assessment (Table 1). Participants were at moderate breast cancer risk for their age given a mean (SD) Gail 5-year risk estimate of 1.50% (0.67%).Recent (within 18 months) outcome information was available on 15 931 women (95.9% of randomized participants). Survival status was known for 16 067 participants (96.7%), including 485 (2.9%) known to be deceased. At the time of this study, the mean follow-up was 5.6 years with a maximum of 8.6 years. As previously described,at the time of our interim study, 42% of estrogen plus progestin and 38% of placebo participants stopped their study medications for at least some period. Drop-ins, based on women who self-reported discontinuation of study medication and subsequently received any menopausal hormones through other sources, were 6.2% in the estrogen plus progestin group and 10.7% in the placebo group.In intent-to-treat analyses, estrogen plus progestin increased total (245 vs 185 cases; HR, 1.24; weighted P<.001) and invasive (199 vs 150 cases; HR, 1.24; weighted P= .003) breast cancers compared with placebo (Pvalues from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, Figure 1). The nominal 95% CI for the unweighted HR for invasive breast cancer was 1.01 to 1.54. Accounting for the sequential monitoring gives an adjusted 95% CI of 0.97 to 1.59. There was also a suggestion of an increase for in situ breast cancers in the estrogen plus progestin group (47 vs 37 cases; HR, 1.18; weighted P= .09).Figure 1.Breast Cancer by Category and Treatment Group (Estrogen Plus Progestin vs Placebo)Hazard ratios (HRs) are from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. Z statistics and Pvalues are from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. CI indicates confidence interval.Sensitivity analyses examining the impact of nonadherence suggest a stronger effect on invasive breast cancer incidence when events in nonadherent women are excluded (HR, 1.49; weighted P<.001), including the possibility of an earlier divergence in the cumulative hazard estimates (Figure 2).Figure 2.Sensitivity Analysis of Invasive Breast Cancers in Adherent Participants by Treatment GroupParticipants were censored 6 months after becoming nonadherent (defined as taking <80% of study medication or starting nonprotocol hormone therapy). Hazard ratio (HR) is from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression model, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. Z statistic and Pvalue are from weighted Cox proportional hazards regression model, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group. CI indicates confidence interval.The number of invasive breast cancers by year and treatment group for all women and stratified by prior hormone use are shown in Table 2. For women with no menopausal hormone use before entering the study, invasive breast cancer rates were lower for the initial 2 years in the estrogen plus progestin group compared with placebo, and similar in the third year. In the fourth year and thereafter, invasive breast cancer rates were higher in the estrogen plus progestin group, with a significant trend for increasing breast cancer risk over time (Z = 2.31). In women with prior menopausal hormone use, the rate of invasive breast cancer incidence was greater in the third year and beyond for women receiving estrogen plus progestin.Table 2.Invasive Breast Cancers (Annualized Percentage) by Treatment Group and Prior Menopausal Hormone Therapy*Time After Entry, yZ for Trend12345≥6Without Prior Menopausal Hormone UseEstrogen plus progestin (n = 6277)7 (0.11)15 (0.24)19 (0.31)35 (0.58)28 (0.54)37 (0.69)2.31Placebo (n = 6020)14 (0.23)22 (0.37)19 (0.33)23 (0.40)17 (0.34)26 (0.56)HR (95% CI)0.48 (0.19-1.20)0.65 (0.34-1.25)0.96 (0.51-1.82)1.45 (0.85-2.45)1.61 (0.88-2.94)1.24 (0.75-2.05)With Prior Menopausal Hormone UseEstrogen plus progestin (n = 2225)5 (0.23)11 (0.50)10 (0.46)9 (0.42)15 (0.82)8 (0.39)1.62Placebo (n = 2079)5 (0.24)10 (0.49)3 (0.15)4 (0.20)4 (0.23)3 (0.17)HR (95% CI)0.90 (0.26-3.15)1.10 (0.47-2.61)3.09 (0.84-11.27)2.16 (0.66-7.05)3.56 (1.18-10.73)1.99 (0.52-7.60)OverallEstrogen plus progestin (N = 8506)12 (0.14)26 (0.31)29 (0.35)44 (0.54)43 (0.61)45 (0.61)2.56Placebo (N = 8102)19 (0.24)32 (0.40)22 (0.28)27 (0.35)21 (0.32)29 (0.45)HR (95% CI)0.60 (0.29-1.23)0.77 (0.46-1.30)1.26 (0.73-2.20)1.54 (0.95-2.49)1.99 (1.18-3.35)1.35 (0.85-2.16)Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.*Data are No. (%) unless otherwise specified. Hazard ratios and 95% CIs are from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group.The relationship between variables in Table 1and treatment were examined in the form of interactions, none of which were significant, although power was limited by small sample size within subgroups. These results, as well as subgroup specific analyses, are presented for selected covariates in Table 3. Overall, findings in specific risk categories underscored the consistency of the main results; women assigned to estrogen plus progestin had higher rates of invasive breast cancer in nearly all subgroups. Effects by race/ethnicity were examined and no differences were found.Table 3.Invasive Breast Cancers (Annualized Percentage) by Baseline Characteristics and Treatment GroupNo. (%)HR (95% CI)*PValue for Interaction†Estrogen + ProgestinPlaceboNo. of participants randomized85068102Follow-up time, mean (SD), mo67.8 (16.2)66.8 (15.2)Invasive breast cancer199 (0.41)150 (0.33)1.24 (1.01-1.54).003Selected covariates for invasive breast cancerAge at screening, y50-5952 (0.31)40 (0.26)1.20 (0.80-1.82)60-6994 (0.44)72 (0.36)1.22 (0.90-1.66).2070-7953 (0.54)38 (0.41)1.34 (0.88-2.04)Gail Risk Assessment, % per 5 y<1.2549 (0.30)34 (0.22)1.35 (0.87-2.09)1.25-1.7473 (0.45)53 (0.35)1.27 (0.89-1.80).33≥1.7577 (0.49)63 (0.43)1.13 (0.81-1.57)Prior oral contraceptive use, yNo122 (0.45)99 (0.39)1.15 (0.88-1.50)<552 (0.46)24 (0.24)2.06 (1.27-3.35).315-1017 (0.36)13 (0.28)1.38 (0.67-2.86)>108 (0.16)14 (0.29)0.54 (0.22-1.28)Prior menopausal hormone use, yNo prior hormone use‡141 (0.40)121 (0.36)1.09 (0.86-1.39)<537 (0.42)21 (0.25)1.70 (0.99-2.91).15≥521 (0.54)8 (0.24)2.27 (1.00-5.15)Prior estrogen-only use, yNo prior hormone use‡141 (0.40)121 (0.36)1.09 (0.86-1.39)<523 (0.59)13 (0.35)1.77 (0.89-3.53).32≥57 (0.54)3 (0.27)2.06 (0.53-7.99)Prior estrogen plus progestin use, yNo prior hormone use‡141 (0.40)121 (0.36)1.09 (0.86-1.39)<522 (0.36)9 (0.16)2.34 (1.07-5.11).21≥514 (0.55)6 (0.28)2.04 (0.77-5.39)Recency of hormone use, y§Current13 (0.41)4 (0.15)2.86 (0.91-8.97)Past, <517 (0.40)8 (0.21)2.02 (0.87-4.69).65Past, 5-1010 (0.53)5 (0.29)2.49 (0.82-7.55)Past, ≥1018 (0.52)12 (0.36)1.43 (0.69-2.99)BMI<2545 (0.31)32 (0.23)1.35 (0.86-2.13)25-3072 (0.42)49 (0.31)1.40 (0.97-2.01).12≥3082 (0.50)68 (0.45)1.08 (0.78-1.49)SmokingNever92 (0.39)66 (0.30)1.29 (0.94-1.77)Past86 (0.45)70 (0.40)1.14 (0.83-1.56).23Current21 (0.43)9 (0.19)2.28 (1.04-4.98)NSAID medication useNo190 (0.41)142 (0.33)1.25 (1.01-1.56).75Yes9 (0.42)8 (0.37)1.10 (0.41-2.90)Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters); CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug.*Hazard ratios and 95% CIs are from unweighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group.†Weighted Cox proportional hazards regression models, stratified by age and dietary modification randomization group‡Users of alternate preparations are excluded.§Recency of use only applies to women who have ever taken hormones. Current users had 3 months wash out before entry.These data suggest that women reporting prior menopausal hormone use may have had higher HRs for breast cancer associated with estrogen plus progestin use than those who never used menopausal hormones (among never users, 141 vs 121; HR, 1.09; for women with <5 years of prior use, 37 vs 21; HR, 1.70; and women with ≥5 years of prior use, 21 vs 8; HR, 2.27), but the trend with duration of use was not statistically significant (weighted P= .15).Breast Cancer CharacteristicsInvasive breast cancers associated with estrogen plus progestin use were larger (mean [SD], 1.7 cm [1.1] vs 1.5 cm [0.9], respectively; P= .04), were more likely to be node positive (25.9% vs 15.8%, respectively; P= .03), and were diagnosed at a significantly more advanced stage (regional/metastatic 25.4% vs 16.0%, respectively; P= .04) compared with placebo use (Table 4). There was no difference in tumor grade by treatment group. The percentages and distribution of invasive ductal, invasive lobular, mixed ductal, and lobular as well as tubular carcinomas were similar in the estrogen plus progestin group vs the placebo group.Table 4.Characteristics of Invasive Breast Cancers by Treatment Group*No. (%)PValue†Estrogen + Progestin (N = 199)Placebo (N = 150)No. of participants randomized85068102Follow-up, mean (SD), mo67.8 (16.2)66.8 (15.2)Tumor size, mean (SD), cm‡1.7 (1.1)1.5 (0.9).04No tumor found/no primary mass01 (0.7)Microscopic focus or foci, cm8 (4.3)9 (6.4)≤0.518 (9.7)17 (12.1)>0.5-145 (24.2)36 (25.5).50>1-273 (39.2)56 (39.7)>2-537 (19.9)21 (14.9)>55 (2.7)1 (0.7)Missing13 (6.5)9 (6.0).84Lymph nodes examinedNo19 (9.9)13 (9.1).79Yes172 (90.1)130 (90.9)Missing8 (4.0)7 (4.7).77No. of lymph nodes examined, mean (SD)§10.3 (7.9)10.9 (7.8).52No. of positive lymph nodesNone129 (74.1)112 (84.2)1-336 (20.7)15 (11.3).08≥49 (5.2)6 (4.5)Missing25 (12.6)17 (11.3).73Lymph nodes positive (yes)45 (25.9)21 (15.8).03SEER stageLocalized144 (74.6)124 (82.7)Regional47 (24.4)21 (14.0).048Metastatic2 (1.0)3 (2.0)Missing6 (3.0)2 (1.3).47SEER stage regional/metastatic (yes)49 (25.4)24 (16.0).04HistologyInvasive ductal carcinoma135 (67.8)101 (67.3)Invasive lobular carcinoma22 (11.1)16 (10.6)Invasive ductal and invasive lobular15 (7.5)8 (5.3).89Invasive carcinoma with ductal and lobular features1 (0.5)1 (0.7)Tubular8 (4.0)6 (4.0)Other17 (8.5)18 (12.0)Morphology, gradeWell differentiated41 (25.0)26 (20.3)Moderately differentiated71 (43.3)61 (47.7).61Poorly differentiated/anaplastic52 (31.7)41 (32.0)Missing35 (17.6)22 (14.7).46Receptor statusEstrogen-receptor assayPositive158 (86.8)112 (88.2).72Negative24 (13.2)15 (11.8)Missing17 (8.5)23 (15.4).049Progesterone-receptor assayPositive135 (75.0)86 (69.9).33Negative45 (25.0)37 (30.0)Missing19 (9.5)27 (18.0).02Abbreviation: SEER, Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results.*Tumors <1 cm with no node or missing nodes were classified as local; tumors ≥1 cm with no nodes or missing nodes on pathology review were not given a stage if there was no clinical statement in the medical record regarding nodal involvement.†From a 2-sample ttest for continuous variables or from a χ2or Fisher exact test for categorized variables. The first Pvalue for a given characteristic tests association with treatment group by using only known values of the characteristic. Pvalue corresponding to the "missing" rows tests the association of percentage missing for the given characteristic with treatment group.‡Mean (SD) only applies to those with a known tumor size (n = 170 for estrogen plus progestin and n = 128 for placebo).§Mean (SD) only applies to those with a known number of lymph nodes examined, including those with zero nodes examined (n = 191 for estrogen plus progestin and n = 143 for placebo).The number of both receptor-positive and receptor-negative breast cancers were greater in the estrogen plus progestin group; the distribution of estrogen receptor-positive and progesterone-receptor cancers did not differ significantly between the estrogen plus progestin and placebo groups when considering tumors with known receptor status. There was a modest difference in receptor status ascertainment between treatment groups that could not be attributed to tumor size differences (data not shown).For in situ breast cancers, the tumor grade did not differ between study groups (P= .56). The size of the in situ cancers was slightly larger in the estrogen plus progestin group (mean [SD], 1.6 cm [2.0] vs 1.1 cm[0.6], respectively), but the difference was not statistically significant (P= .33), and a substantial number of in situ cancers had no measurable size. At this time, few deaths have been attributed to breast cancer (4 in the estrogen plus progestin group and 4 in the placebo group).MammographyMammography clearance was required before entry for all participants. Eighty-two women with mammographic abnormalities suspicious or highly suggestive of malignancy were entered after medical clearance; only 3 subsequently developed invasive breast cancers. Detailed mammogram reading results (other than cancer/no cancer) were available for 14 607 women at baseline. At baseline, the percentage of women with an abnormal mammogram was closely comparable with the 2 treatment groups (Table 5).Table 5.Mammographic Findings by Treatment Group and Time From Entry*BaselineYear 1Year 2Year 3Estrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboMammography performance of women due for visit with mammography in study period, %10010090.390.588.888.087.386.7Mammography recommendationNegative4125 (56.4)4118 (56.5)3766 (49.2)4012 (54.9)3799 (50.7)3895 (55.0)3712 (50.6)3744 (53.9)Benign finding (negative)2807 (38.4)2810 (38.5)3174 (41.5)2900 (39.7)3045 (40.6)2799 (39.5)2971 (40.5)2796 (40.3)Abnormal (total)384 (5.2)363 (5.0)716 (9.4)†398 (5.4)651 (8.7)†386 (5.5)650 (8.9)405 (5.8)Short interval follow-up suggested341 (4.7)324 (4.4)625 (8.2)332 (4.5)564 (7.5)326 (4.6)556 (7.6)347 (5.0)Suspicious abnormality43 (0.6)38 (0.5)85 (1.1)59 (0.8)82 (1.1)55 (0.8)86 (1.2)52 (0.7)Highly suggestive of malignancy0 (0)1 (<0.1)6 (0.1)7 (0.1)5 (0.1)5 (0.1)8 (0.1)6 (0.1)Year 4Year 5Year 6 and LaterCumulative‡Estrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboEstrogen + ProgestinPlaceboMammography performance of women due for visit with mammography in study period, %87.086.387.086.789.189.297.397.8Mammography recommendationNegative3397 (48.8)3471 (52.6)2358 (47.3)2366 (51.0)2094 (51.1)1834 (54.6)1359 (16.5)1631 (20.7)Benign finding (negative)2901 (41.7)2696 (40.9)2153 (43.2)2004 (43.2)1634 (39.9)1301 (38.7)4294 (52.0)4590 (58.1)Abnormal (total)661 (9.5)†432 (6.5)478 (9.6)†269 (5.8)371 (9.1)†224 (6.7)2601 (31.5)†1677 (21.2)Short interval follow-up suggested553 (7.9)364 (5.5)398 (8.0)245 (5.3)303 (7.4)188 (5.6)2121 (25.7)1395 (17.7)Suspicious abnormality94 (1.4)58 (0.9)71 (1.4)20 (0.4)58 (1.4)33 (1.0)428 (5.2)247 (3.1)Highly suggestive of malignancy14 (0.2)10 (0.2)9 (0.2)4 (0.1)10 (0.2)3 (0.1)52 (0.6)35 (0.4)*Data are No. (%) unless otherwise specified. A total of 100% of estrogen plus progestin participants had mammograms at baseline; because of form changes, participants with version 1 of the mammography form are not displayed in this table.†P<.001 for comparison of frequency of abnormal mammogram (short interval follow-up, suspicious abnormality, highly suggestive of malignancy) in the estrogen plus progestin compared with placebo group.‡Most severe mammography recommendation category during the entire follow-up period.After the first year, the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms (with recommendations for either short interval follow-up, a suspicious abnormality, or highly suggestive of malignancy) was substantially higher in the estrogen plus progestin group vs the placebo group (716 [9.4%] of 7656 vs 398 [5.4%] of 7310 women with abnormal mammograms, respectively; P<.001). The frequency of abnormal mammograms was higher in women aged 50 to 59 years in the hormone therapy group after 1 year as well (8.8% vs 5.9%, respectively; P<.001). In each year thereafter, the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms was significantly higher in the estrogen plus progestin group vs the placebo group. In total, 31.5% of women in the estrogen plus progestin group had at least 1 abnormal mammogram vs 21.2% of women in the placebo group (P<.001). Thus, even short-term estrogen plus progestin use resulted in a substantial increase in abnormal mammograms requiring medical evaluation.COMMENTThis report provides randomized clinical trial evidence that postmenopausal estrogen plus progestin use significantly increases the incidence of breast cancer within a 5-year period. The breast cancers diagnosed in women in the hormone therapy group had similar histology and grade but were more likely to have advanced stage vs women in the placebo group. These results suggest that invasive breast cancers developing in women receiving estrogen plus progestin therapy may have an unfavorable prognosis. Follow-up continues in these women to determine survival outcome.Mammographic breast density was not routinely measured, but when the mammographic results were examined over time by treatment group, a substantial and statistically significant increase in the percentage of women with abnormal mammograms requiring additional medical evaluation was observed beginning in the first year of hormone use. The absolute increase in abnormal mammograms of about 4% per year in women receiving estrogen plus progestin translates into approximately 120 000 otherwise avoidable abnormal mammograms annually for the estimated 3 million US postmenopausal women currently using this hormone regimen. Prior reports of menopausal hormone therapy influence on mammographic interpretation have been mixed, varying from no effect to substantial negative influence.Our literature review found no prior large randomized trials with comprehensive serial mammographic assessment reporting the effects of estrogen plus progestin on the frequency of abnormal mammograms.Estrogen plus progestin use increases mammographic breast density vs estrogen alone or placebo,but the biological significance of such changes or their effect on mammographic interpretation is not established.An ongoing ancillary study in the WHI, formally evaluating mammographic breast density on a subset of participants, may provide additional information on the relationships among mammographic breast density change, mammographic interpretation, and breast cancer risk.Given the known psychological sequelae and requirement for medical evaluations associated with any abnormal mammography report,the substantially increased frequency of women receiving estrogen plus progestin who have abnormal mammograms represents an additional adverse effect of menopausal hormone use. This is an important consideration for women choosing even short-term estrogen plus progestin therapy, because the increase in women with abnormal mammograms was observed within the first year.The breast cancers among women in the estrogen plus progestin group vs those in the placebo group were diagnosed initially at a slightly lower rate, subsequently at a higher rate, and were at a similar grade but a more advanced stage at the time of diagnosis. This pattern, coupled with the increased frequency of women with abnormal mammograms, suggests the hypothesis that estrogen plus progestin stimulates breast cancer growth and delays breast cancer diagnosis, perhaps mediated through differences in mammographic detection.Although a longer time to diagnosis could explain some of the increases in tumor size observed in the hormone therapy group, direct effects of estrogen plus progestin on tumor growth cannot be excluded. The pattern of differential breast cancer diagnosis observed over time is also consistent with the delay hypothesis. This problem supports the use of weighted Cox proportional hazards regression model statistics that are not highly sensitive to events early in the follow-up period for comparisons between treatment groups.Observational studies linking the characteristics of breast cancers associated with menopausal hormone therapy, mostly involving the use of estrogen alone, have given mixed results.Overall, most report favorable stageand favorable prognostic characteristicswith a predominance of receptor-positive cancers.In the WHI randomized trial, breast cancers that occurred among women taking estrogen plus progestin did not have such favorable characteristics. The demonstration of an increased number of more advanced breast cancers without favorable characteristics directly challenges the concept that hormone therapy might simply lead to earlier diagnosis of more favorable cancers. This discrepancy could be related to differential mammography use in women receiving hormones in observational studies, an issue difficult to address directly since retrospectively recalled frequency of mammography has proven relatively unreliable.Somebut not allrecent observational studies evaluating combined estrogen plus progestin therapy report a striking and, in some cases, almost exclusive increase in invasive lobular breast cancers with little effect on invasive ductal cancers. In the WHI trial, the number of cases in most subtypes is small, but there is no evidence of a differential effect; all major categories of invasive breast cancer were increased in the estrogen plus progestin group, with only a slight excess in the invasive lobular or mixed invasive ductal and lobular carcinoma categories.The relatively early development of more breast cancers in the estrogen plus progestin group was unexpected because most recent reviews of observational studies suggest that breast cancer risk would be increased mainly with longer term (>5 years) menopausal hormone use.This discrepancy could be related to estrogen plus progestin hindering mammographic identification of breast cancers as suggested by the current results. If this is correct, determination of the effect of even short-term estrogen plus progestin use relative to breast cancer risk becomes a vexing clinical problem.A nonsignificant trend for higher HRs for breast cancer in women randomized to estrogen plus progestin was observed for women reporting prior menopausal hormone use. This observation suggests a role for cumulative exposure. However, this finding could also reflect selection biases and, for this reason, reliable interpretation is precluded. Despite the somewhat increased breast cancer risk for estrogen plus progestin vs placebo use among prior hormone users, prior hormone users were at somewhat lower risk vs never users (Table 2). It is unclear whether this is due to a successful user effect, wherein prior long-term users already demonstrated themselves to be less susceptible to breast cancer, or to other factors such as greater vasomotor symptoms reflecting lower estrogen levels.The magnitude of the increased breast cancer risk observed with estrogen plus progestin in this clinical trial closely parallels observational study results,but the fact that the cancers developed after a shorter than predicted interval suggests an effect on growth of established breast cancers. Evidence from other randomized trials on this question is limited. In the Heart and Estrogen Replacement Study trial, which included women with coronary heart disease, more breast cancers occurred with estrogen plus progestin therapy compared with placebo (34 vs 25 cases, respectively), but the difference was not statistically significant.The strengths of the WHI study of estrogen plus progestin include the randomized double-blind study design, the large ethnically diverse study population, comprehensive and detailed assessment of a range of breast cancer risk factors at baseline, use of placebo controls, the requirement for baseline and ongoing yearly mammography and clinical breast examination in both study groups, and the central adjudication of the breast cancer end point via pathology report review. The rates of discontinuation of study medications in both study groups are limitations. However, these discontinuation rates are comparable with those observed in other trials of menopausal hormones and are less than observed in current clinical practice.Furthermore, the discontinuation of study hormones in the WHI trial is likely to dilute the estimate of effects of estrogen plus progestin, suggesting that the underlying biological effect may be greater. Finally, the early stopping based on these results provides less precision and may have introduced some anticonservative bias in the HR estimates.Because vaginal bleeding led to a high prevalence of de facto unblinding, some potential for detection bias exists. The amount of bias, if any, is likely to be small based on several factors. First, the WHI achieved very high compliance with annual mammography, which was nearly identical between study groups throughout follow-up. Furthermore, the readings and response to mammographic findings were managed by the women's own physicians, independent of WHI and with no access to study reports, thereby minimizing the opportunity for reported bleeding to influence these findings. The potential influence of estrogen plus progestin on breast cancer diagnostic decisions and procedures, including sensitivity and specificity of mammograms and clinical breast examinations, represents a complex issue that will be the focus of future analyses.The WHI evaluated a single drug regimen, conjugated equine estrogens (0.625 mg/d) plus medroxyprogesterone acetate (2.5 mg/d), and therefore cannot inform questions regarding risk associated with other oral or topical menopausal hormone therapies. A parallel study of the WHI evaluating conjugated equine estrogens alone compared with placebo for women with prior hysterectomy continues in a blinded fashion with data and safety monitoring board oversight (scheduled to be completed in 2005). Importantly, the data and safety monitoring board indicated on May 31, 2002, that at this time no increase in breast cancer has been observed in the trial of conjugated equine estrogens.In summary, results from this prospective randomized trial indicate that combined estrogen plus progestin use increases the risk of incident breast cancers, which are diagnosed at a more advanced stage compared with placebo use, and substantially increases the frequency of abnormal mammograms. In light of these findings, abnormal mammograms in women receiving menopausal hormone therapy deserve heightened scrutiny. The increased frequency of abnormal mammograms requiring medical evaluation and increased breast cancer risk should be added to the already known risks of short-duration menopausal hormone use. 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Gynecol.2001;97:97-100.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?db=m&form=6&Dopt=r&uid=11152916VBeralEBanksGReevesEvidence from randomized trials on the long-term effects of hormone replacement therapy.Lancet.2002;360:942-944.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?db=m&form=6&Dopt=r&uid=12354487Preventive Services Task ForcePostmenopausal hormone replacement therapy for primary prevention of chronic conditions: recommendations and rationale.Ann Intern Med.2002;137:834-839.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?db=m&form=6&Dopt=r&uid=12435221JHaysJKOckeneRTBrunnerEffects of estrogen plus progestin on health-related quality of life.N Engl J Med.2003;348:1839-1854.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?db=m&form=6&Dopt=r&uid=12642637Author Contributions:Study concept and design:Langer, Lane, McTiernan.Acquisition of data:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Langer, Stefanick, Gass, Lane, Gilligan, Thomson, Khandekar, Petrovitch, McTiernan.Analysis and interpretation of data:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Langer, Stefanick, Lane, Rodabough, Cyr, Khandekar, McTiernan.Drafting of the manuscript:Chlebowski, McTiernan.Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Langer, Stefanick, Gass, Lane, Rodabough, Gilligan, Cyr, Thomson, Khandekar, Petrovitch.Statistical expertise:Langer, Rodabough.Obtained funding:Hendrix, Langer, Stefanick, Lane, Khandekar, Petrovitch.Administrative, technical, or material support:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Langer, Cyr, Khandekar, McTiernan.Study supervision:Chlebowski, Hendrix, Stefanick, Thomson, Petrovitch, McTiernan.Financial Disclosures:Dr Chlebowski is a consultant for Astra-Zeneca and Eli Lilly. Dr Hendrix receives grant support from Bristol Myers Squibb, 3M, Organon, Merck, TAP, Wyeth-Ayerst, GlaxoSmithKline; consultant for Eli Lilly, Merck, Organon, Proctor & Gamble, GlaxoSmithKline; on the speaker's bureau for Eli Lilly, Merck, 3M, Pfizer. Dr Langer receives research support from Wyeth-Ayerst and Organon, and is a consultant for Solvay Pharmaceuticals and King Pharmaceuticals. Dr Gass receives research grants from Duramed, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Proctor & Gamble, and Wyeth-Ayerst; honoraria from Aventis, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Ortho-McNeil, Proctor & Gamble, and Wyeth-Ayerst; and is on the company advisory board of Eli Lilly, Merck, and Proctor & Gamble.Funding/Support:This study was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services. The active study drug and placebo were supplied by Wyeth-Ayerst Research Laboratories, Philadelphia, Pa.The WHI Investigators: Program Office:National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md: Barbara Alving, Jacques E. Rossouw, Linda Pottern, Shari Ludlam, Joan A. McGowan, Leslie Ford; Clinical Coordinating Center:Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Wash:Ross Prentice, Garnet Anderson, Andrea LaCroix, Ruth E. Patterson, Anne McTiernan, Barb Cochrane, Julie Hunt, Lesley Tinker, Charles Kooperberg, Martin McIntosh, C. Y. Wang, Chu Chen, Deborah Bowen, Alan Kristal, Janet Stanford, Nicole Urban, Noel Weiss, Emily White; Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC:Sally Shumaker, Pentti Rautaharju, Ronald Prineas, Michelle Naughton; Medical Research Labs, Highland Heights, Ky:Evan Stein, Peter Laskarzewski; University of California at San Francisco:Steven Cummings, Michael Nevitt, Maurice Dockrell; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis:Lisa Harnack; McKesson BioServices, Rockville, Md:Frank Cammarata, Steve Lindenfelser; University of Washington, Seattle:Bruce Psaty, Susan Heckbert; Clinical Centers:Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY:Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller, William Frishman, Judith Wylie-Rosett, David Barad, Ruth Freeman; Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tex:Jennifer Hays, Ronald Young, Jill Anderson, Sandy Lithgow, Paul Bray; Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass:JoAnn Manson, Julie Buring, J. Michael Gaziano, Kathryn Rexrode, Claudia Chae; Brown University, Providence, RI:Annlouise R. Assaf, Richard Carleton, Carol Wheeler, Charles Eaton, Michelle Cyr; Emory University, Atlanta, Ga:Lawrence Phillips, Margaret Pedersen, Ora Strickland, Margaret Huber, Vivian Porter; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Wash:Shirley A. Beresford, Vicky M. Taylor, Nancy F. Woods, Maureen Henderson, Mark Kestin; George Washington University, Washington, DC:Judith Hsia, Nancy Gaba, Joao Ascensao, Somchia Laowattana; Harbor-UCLA Research and Education Institute, Torrance, Calif:Rowan Chlebowski, Robert Detrano, Anita Nelson, James Heiner, John Marshall; Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland, Ore:Cheryl Ritenbaugh, Barbara Valanis, Patricia Elmer, Victor Stevens, Njeri Karanja; Kaiser Permanente Division of Research, Oakland, Calif:Bette Caan, Stephen Sidney, Geri Bailey, Jane Hirata; Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee:Jane Morley Kotchen, Vanessa Barnabei, Theodore A. Kotchen, Mary Ann C. Gilligan, Joan Neuner; MedStar Research Institute/Howard University, Washington, DC:Barbara V. Howard, Lucile Adams-Campbell, Maureen Passaro, Monique Rainford, Tanya Agurs-Collins; Northwestern University, Chicago, Ill:Linda Van Horn, Philip Greenland, Janardan Khandekar, Kiang Liu, Carol Rosenberg; Rush-Presbyterian St Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Ill:Henry Black, Lynda Powell, Ellen Mason; Stanford Center for Research in Disease Prevention, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif:Marcia L. Stefanick, Mark A. Hlatky, Bertha Chen, Randall S. Stafford, Linda C. Giudice; State University of New York at Stony Brook:Dorothy Lane, Iris Granek, William Lawson, Gabriel San Roman, Catherine Messina; Ohio State University, Columbus:Rebecca Jackson, Randall Harris, David Frid, W. Jerry Mysiw, Michael Blumenfeld; University of Alabama at Birmingham:Cora E. Lewis, Albert Oberman, Mona N. Fouad, James M. Shikany, Delia Smith West; University of Arizona, Phoenix: Tamsen Bassford, John Mattox, Marcia Ko, Timothy Lohman; University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY:Maurizio Trevisan, Jean Wactawski-Wende, Susan Graham, June Chang, Ellen Smit; University of California at Davis, Sacramento:John Robbins, S. Yasmeen, Karen Lindfors, Judith Stern; University of California at Irvine, Orange:Allan Hubbell, Gail Frank, Nathan Wong, Nancy Greep, Bradley Monk; University of California at Los Angeles:Howard Judd, David Heber, Robert Elashoff; University of California at San Diego:Robert D. Langer, Michael H. Criqui, Gregory T. Talavera, Cedric F. Garland, R. Elaine Hanson; University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio:Margery Gass, Suzanne Wernke, Nelson Watts; University of Florida, Gainesville:Marian Limacher, Michael Perri, Andrew Kaunitz, R. Stan Williams, Yvonne Brinson; University of Hawaii, Honolulu:David Curb, Helen Petrovitch, Beatriz Rodriguez, Kamal Masaki, Santosh Sharma; University of Iowa, Iowa City:Robert Wallace, James Torner, Susan Johnson, Linda Snetselaar, Bradley VanVoorhis; University of Massachusetts/Fallon Clinic, Worcester:Judith Ockene, Milagros Rosal, Ira Ockene, Robert Yood, Patricia Aronson; University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark:Norman Lasser, Norman Hymowitz, Vera Lasser, Monika Safford, John Kostis; University of Miami, Miami, Fla:Mary Jo O'Sullivan, Linda Parker, R. Estape, Diann Fernandez; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis:Karen L. Margolis, Richard H. Grimm, Donald B. Hunninghake, June LaValleur, Kathleen M. Hall; University of Nevada, Reno:Robert Brunner, Sachiko St. Jeor, William Graettinger, Vicki Oujevolk; University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill:Gerardo Heiss, Pamela Haines, David Ontjes, Carla Sueta, Ellen Wells; University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa:Lewis Kuller, Arlene Caggiula, Jane Cauley, Sarah Berga, N. Carole Milas; University of Tennessee, Memphis:Karen C. Johnson, Suzanne Satterfield, Raymond W. Ke, Jere Vile, Fran Tylavsky; University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio:Robert Brzyski, Robert Schenken, Jose Trabal, Mercedes Rodriguez-Sifuentes, Charles Mouton; University of Wisconsin, Madison:Catherine Allen, Douglas Laube, Patrick McBride, Julie Mares-Perlman, Barbara Loevinger; Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC:Greg Burke, Robin Crouse, Lynne Parsons, Mara Vitolins; Wayne State University School of Medicine/Hutzel Hospital, Detroit, Mich:Susan Hendrix, Michael Simon, Gene McNeeley, Pamela Gordon, Paul Makela.Acknowledgment:The dedicated efforts of the WHI participants and of the WHI investigators and staff at the Clinical Center and Clinical Coordinating Center are acknowledged. The contributions of Garnet L. Anderson, PhD, and Allison M. Weber, BSN, BS, from the Clinical Coordinating Center warrant specific acknowledgement. A complete listing of the WHI investigators can be found at http://www.whi.org.Corresponding Author and Reprints:Rowan T. Chlebowski, MD, PhD, Harbor-UCLA Research and Education Institute, 1124 W Carson St, Bldg J-3, Torrance, CA 90502 (e-mail: rchlebowski@rei.edu).

Journal

JAMAAmerican Medical Association

Published: Jun 25, 2003

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