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Michael Wells a Academic
Unit of Pathology, Section of Oncology and Pathology, Division of
Genomic Medicine, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield S10
2RX, b Department
of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Solihull Hospital, Solihull B91
2JL, c University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3
9DU, d Department
of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Copenhagen County Hospital Gentofte,
2900 Hellerup, Denmark, e Medical Department, Novo Nordisk, Crawley RH11
9RT, f School of Health and Related
Research, Community Sciences Centre, Northern General Hospital,
Sheffield S5 7AU, g Department of Public Health, Institute of Health Sciences,
Oxford OX3 7LF
Correspondence to: M Wells m.wells{at}sheffield.ac.uk
Objective:
To determine effects of five years of
treatment with an oral continuous combined regimen of 2 mg
17 What is already known on this topic
Continuous combined hormone replacement therapy regimens are safe and
effective in the short term treatment of postmenopausal women Previous trials have involved small numbers of patients (<100) or
short durations of treatment (2-3 years), or both What this study adds
Continuous combined hormone replacement therapies that include
continuous progestogen improve endometrial safety when used in the long
term (up to five years)
-oestradiol and 1 mg norethisterone acetate on endometrial
histology in postmenopausal women.
Design:
Follow up study in postmenopausal women.
Setting:
31 menopause clinics in the United Kingdom.
Participants:
534 postmenopausal women, all
with an intact uterus, who had completed nine months of treatment with
oral continuous combined 2 mg 17
-oestradiol and 1 mg norethisterone
acetate agreed to take part in a long term follow up study. Women were
assigned to different groups on the basis of the treatment status
immediately before entering the original study: 360 women had taken
sequential oestrogen-progestogen hormone replacement therapy, 164 had
taken no hormone replacement therapy, and 10 had taken unopposed
oestrogen therapy.
Methods:
Endometrial aspiration specimens were taken before the women started the continuous combined regimen, after 9 and
24-36 months, and at the end of the five year treatment period or on
withdrawal from the study.
Main outcome measure:
Results of endometrial histology.
Results:
The duration of treatment with continuous combined hormone replacement therapy was 4.4 (range 1.1-5.9) years. Data on endometrial specimens were available for 526 women after nine
months of treatment, 465 women after 24-36 months of treatment, and 398 women who completed the five years treatment (345 women) or were
withdrawn between the two latter visits for biopsies (53 women). No
cases of endometrial hyperplasia or malignancy were detected at biopsy;
69% of women had an endometrium classified as atrophic or unassessable
on completion of the study or withdrawal from it. Before the continuous
combined therapy was started, complex hyperplasia was detected in 21 women who had taken sequential hormone replacement therapy before the
study and in one who had taken unopposed oestrogen. All of these women
had normal results on histological examination of endometrial tissue
after nine months of treatment with continuous combined hormone
replacement therapy, and hyperplasia did not recur after up to five
years of treatment.
Conclusions:
Long term treatment (for up to five
years) with continuous combined hormone replacement therapy containing oestradiol 2 mg and norethisterone 1 mg daily was associated with neither endometrial hyperplasia nor malignancy. In women who had complex hyperplasia during previous sequential or unopposed regimens, the endometrium returned to normal during treatment with continuous combined hormone replacement therapy. These findings provide
reassurance about the long term safety of this continuous combined
regimen in terms of the endometrium.
Long term use of sequential oestrogen-progestogen hormone replacement
therapy increases the risk of endometrial cancer
All women who had complex hyperplasia while taking sequential or
unopposed hormone replacement therapies reverted to normal endometrial
patterns
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