MEDICATIONS: ESTROGEN THERAPY DOES NOT
APPEAR TO PROTECT POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN FROM HEART DISEASE
Study suggests possible benefit among those aged 50 to 59 years
Feb. 16, 2006 — Estrogen therapy does not appear to reduce the risk of heart
attack or coronary death in healthy postmenopausal women, although some data
suggest a lower coronary heart disease risk in women aged 50 to 59 years,
according to a new article in the February 13 issue of Archives of Internal
Medicine, a journal of the American Medical Association.
The Women's Health Initiative (WHI) included two large clinical trials that
evaluated whether hormone therapy with estrogen reduces the risk of coronary
heart disease in postmenopausal women, according to background information in
the article. In the part of the study designed to test estrogen therapy alone,
10,739 women aged 50 to 79 years who had undergone hysterectomy were assigned to
take either conjugated equine estrogens — a mix of several estrogens-or a
placebo. Though researchers had planned to study the women for 8.5 years, the
estrogen — only trial was stopped in March 2004 after only 6.8 years because the
hormone treatment appeared to increase the risk of stroke.
Judith Hsia, M.D., of George Washington University, Washington, D.C., and
colleagues analyzed data from the estrogen-only portion of the WHI study. During
the course of the trial, the women taking hormones experienced 201 coronary
events, which included heart attacks and coronary deaths, while those taking
placebo had 217 events. Overall, the risk was similar for women who took
hormones compared with those who did not, though there was a suggestion of lower
risk in women age 50 to 59 years.
Among these women (a total of 1,396) who were aged 50 to 59 years at the
start of the study, there was no significant reduction in myocardial infarction
(heart attack) or coronary death among those taking estrogen. However, coronary
revascularization (reestablishment of blood supply to the heart) was less
frequent among women taking estrogen, as were several combined endpoints, such
as myocardial infarction, coronary death and revascularization. "This trial may
have been unable to demonstrate a significant difference in the risk of
myocardial infarction or coronary death by age group because of the low event
rate in young women," the authors report.
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