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Published 10 July 2008, doi:10.1136/bmj.a386
Cite this as: BMJ 2008;337:a386
Bette Liu, clinical epidemiologist1, Valerie Beral, professor of epidemiology1, Angela Balkwill, statistical programmer1, Jane Green, clinical research scientist1, Siân Sweetland, statisticial epidemiologist1, Gillian Reeves, statistical epidemiologist1, for the Million Women Study Collaborators
1 Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford OX3 7LF
Correspondence to: B Liu Bette.Liu{at}ceu.ox.ac.uk
Design Prospective cohort study (Million Women Study).
Setting Women registered with the National Health Service (NHS) in England and Scotland.
Participants 1 001 391 postmenopausal women (mean age 56) recruited between 1996 and 2001 from NHS breast screening centres and followed by record linkage to routinely collected NHS hospital admission data for gallbladder disease.
Main outcome measures Adjusted relative risk and standardised incidence rates of hospital admission for gallbladder disease or cholecystectomy according to use of hormone replacement therapy.
Results During follow-up 19 889 women were admitted for gallbladder disease; 17 190 (86%) had a cholecystectomy. Compared with never users of hormone replacement therapy, current users were more likely to be admitted for gallbladder disease (relative risk 1.64, 95% confidence interval 1.58 to 1.69) but risks were substantially lower with transdermal therapy than with oral therapy (relative risk 1.17, 1.10 to 1.24 v 1.74, 1.68 to 1.80; heterogeneity P<0.001). Among women using oral therapy, equine oestrogens were associated with a slightly greater risk of gallbladder disease than estradiol (relative risk 1.79, 1.72 to 1.87 v 1.62, 1.54 to 1.70; heterogeneity P<0.001) and higher doses of oestrogen increased the risk more than lower doses: for equine oestrogens >0.625 mg, 1.91 (1.78 to 2.04) v
0.625 mg, 1.76 (1.68 to 1.84); heterogeneity P=0.02; estradiol >1 mg, 1.68 (1.59 to 1.77) v
1 mg, 1.44 (1.31 to 1.59); heterogeneity P=0.003. The risk of gallbladder disease decreased with time since stopping therapy (trend P=0.004). Results were similar taking cholecystectomy as the outcome. Standardised hospital admission rates per 100 women over five years for cholecystectomy were 1.1 in never users, 1.3 with transdermal therapy, and 2.0 with oral therapy.
Conclusion Gallbladder disease is common in postmenopausal women and use of hormone replacement therapy increases the risk. Use of transdermal therapy rather than oral therapy over a five year period could avoid one cholecystectomy in every 140 users.
All participants were registered with the NHS at recruitment and their NHS number is a unique personal identifier used in all NHS health records, including the NHS breast cancer screening programme and admissions to NHS hospitals. Study participants were followed by record linkage using their unique NHS number and other personal details for deaths,5 cancer registrations,5 emigration,5 and hospital admissions,6 7 thus providing close to complete follow-up for all these events. The hospital admission data include details of all NHS funded hospital admissions, including day surgery, dating from 1981 in Scotland6 and from 1997 in England.7 For every hospital record the primary reason for admission and up to 13 additional clinical diagnoses are coded using the International Classification of Diseases 10th revision (ICD-10)8; as well, up to 12 procedures are coded using the Office of Population Censuses and Surveys Classification of Surgical Operations and Procedures, fourth revision (OPCS 4).9 For these analyses the main outcome, gallbladder disease, is defined as the first hospital admission after recruitment to the study with a primary diagnosis of cholelithiasis or cholecystitis (K80 and K81, ICD-10) or a cholecystectomy (codes J181-J189, OPCS 4). Analyses were also done using as an outcome the first admission for cholecystectomy alone (codes J181-J189).
Statistical analysis
We excluded women from analyses if they were premenopausal or perimenopausal (as previously defined10), had a history of cancer at baseline (except non-melanoma skin cancers; code C44, ICD-10), had a record of a hospital admission for gallbladder disease before recruitment, or whose hormone replacement therapy use was unknown. Person years were calculated from the date of recruitment to the date of first hospital admission for gallbladder disease, date of death, date of emigration, or the end of follow-up, whichever came first. For women recruited in Scotland the last date of follow-up was 31 December 2003 and for those in England the last date was 31 March 2005, corresponding to the dates that the hospital records were complete at the time of record linkage. We calculated person years from 1 April 1997 for the small proportion of women (5%) recruited in England before that date, as hospital admission data were not available before then. Sensitivity analyses were done by recalculating person years as in the main analysis but censoring women who had breast cancer (C50, ICD-10), cardiovascular disease (I20-I25, I60-I69, ICD-10), or thromboembolic disease (I26, I80-I82, ICD-10) at the date of diagnosis or admission to hospital for any of these events and also by censoring follow-up from 1 July 2002. In the sensitivity analyses we also excluded women recruited in England before the date that hospital admissions were available (5%) and those who reported pre-existing heart disease, stroke, or thrombosis at recruitment.
We used Cox regression to estimate the relative risk of hospital admission for gallbladder disease in relation to use of hormone replacement therapy. Analyses were routinely adjusted for area of recruitment (10 geographical regions), socioeconomic status in thirds (as defined previously10), body mass index (<22.5, 22.5-24.9, 25-27.4, 27.5-29.9, 30-34.9,
35 kg/m2), and parity (nulliparous, parous), and routinely stratified for age (two year age categories) and for hysterectomy (no, yes), as hysterectomy is known to alter the type of hormone replacement therapy prescribed. We also examined the effect of adjusting for other potential confounders including smoking,11 alcohol intake,12 physical activity,13 dietary factors (intake of fruit, vegetables, nuts, and coffee),14 15 previous oral contraceptive use,16 treatment for hypertension,4 reporting of high cholesterol levels, and a history of stroke, heart disease, thrombosis, or bilateral oophorectomy.
We categorised participants according to their reported use of hormone replacement therapy at recruitment. Proprietary hormone replacement therapy preparations were classified on the basis of method of administration and hormonal constituents using the British National Formulary.17 We defined women as users of oral therapy if they were taking any tablet formulation of hormone replacement therapy or users of transdermal therapy if they were using a patch or gel formulation of oestrogen with or without a progestogen (patch or tablet form). Women using oestrogen implants were categorised separately. When the type of hormone replacement therapy could not be categorised, we included women in the "other and unknown" category and included them in all analyses. For past users of hormone replacement therapy we assumed the time since last use increased by one year for each year of follow-up. Furthermore, as hormone use may have changed during follow-up, we examined the potential effect of this by using information on use of hormone replacement therapy reported at resurvey.
We calculated standardised incidence rates for hospital admissions for cholecystectomy in users of hormone replacement therapy, taking incidence rates in never users as the standard and adjusting for age, hysterectomy, region, socioeconomic group, body mass index, and parity. Relative risks are reported with 95% confidence intervals. Analyses were done using Stata 9.2 statistical software.
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Figure 1
shows the relation between the risk of gallbladder disease and use of hormone replacement therapy. Compared with never users, current and past users had an increased risk of gallbladder disease, although the risk was significantly greater in current users (relative risk 1.64, 95% confidence interval 1.58 to 1.69) than in past users (1.27, 1.22 to 1.32; test for heterogeneity
21=158, P<0.001). Among past users the risk of gallbladder disease declined with increasing time since last use (P=0.004 for linear trend); for women who stopped hormone use more than 10 years previously, however, the risk remained significantly greater than in never users (1.19, 1.10 to 1.29). Results were similar when cholecystectomy was taken as the outcome: on the basis of 6406 cholecystectomies in never users, 7570 in current users, and 3214 in past users, the relative risk for current users was 1.69 (1.63 to 1.75) and for past users was 1.29 (1.23 to 1.34).
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23=170, P<0.001). Transdermal therapy conferred a substantially lower risk of gallbladder disease than oral therapy (relative risk 1.17, 1.10 to 1.24 v 1.74, 1.68 to 1.80; heterogeneity
21=166, P<0.001). The lower risk with transdermal therapy compared with oral therapy was also seen when cholecystectomy alone was used as the outcome: relative risk 1.18 (1.10 to 1.27) and 1.80 (1.74 to 1.87), respectively.
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The relative risk of gallbladder disease in current users of oral and transdermal therapies was also compared with never users in various subgroups of women that had been defined a priori (fig 3
).10 18 19 The relative risks differed significantly only by body mass index, decreasing with increasing body mass index: relative risk was 1.88 (1.77 to 2.01) for a body mass index <25 kg/m2 and 1.47 (1.30 to 1.67) for a body mass index
35 kg/m2; P=0.001 for trend.
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21=13.7, P<0.001. Furthermore, use of both equine oestrogen and estradiol at higher doses were associated with greater risks than lower doses: with equine oestrogen the relative risks were 1.76 (1.68 to 1.84) for
0.625 mg and 1.91 (1.78 to 2.04) for >0.625 mg (heterogeneity
21=5.2, P=0.02); with estradiol the risks were 1.44 (1.31 to 1.59) for
1 mg and 1.68 (1.59 to 1.77) for >1 mg (heterogeneity
21=8.6, P=0.003). No substantial variation was found in risk between users of oestrogen only, oestrogen plus progestogen, tibolone, and other types (heterogeneity
23=7.1, P=0.07). Within each category of oestrogen type and dose, the type of progestogen used and frequency of administration varied considerably, limiting comparisons (table 2
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Among users of oral hormone therapy we found a dose effect, with increased relative risks of gallbladder disease among users of higher doses compared with lower doses. These findings suggest that the concentration of oestrogen and its metabolites in the bile affect the risk of gallbladder disease. Use of equine oestrogen was associated with a slightly higher risk of gallbladder disease than estradiol and this may be because the equine preparations consist largely of conjugated oestrogens, which are metabolised somewhat differently from estradiol20; however, it is unknown what effects this may have on biliary concentrations of hormone. Oestrogen implants, which can result in high blood concentrations of oestrogen20 21 22 but avoid the first pass metabolism, were also found to increase the relative risk of gallbladder disease to a level somewhere between oral users and transdermal users.
Our results suggest that the addition of progestogens to oestrogen therapy does not have a large additional effect on the risk of gallbladder disease. This is in agreement with findings from the womens health initiative randomised controlled trial.1 Furthermore, among users of transdermal oestrogens, the risks did not vary appreciably if the progestogens were administered orally or transdermally, although owing to the number of cases statistical power was limited.
In past users of hormone replacement therapy the risk of gallbladder disease was lower than in current users and decreased gradually with increasing time since therapy stopped although some excess risk still remained 10 years after stopping. This finding suggests that oestrogen induces some persistent change in the gallbladder. Similar findings have been described in other studies3 23 and one possible explanation is the formation of asymptomatic gallstones, which continue to increase a womans risk of gallbladder disease long after stopping hormone replacement therapy.23 Results from one study suggest that the risk of gallbladder disease may increase with increasing duration of use3; however we found no significant trends. Finally, we did not compare the risks associated with past use of oral and transdermal formulations because a large proportion of past users provided no information on the type of hormone replacement therapy used and evidence suggests that recall of brand names by past users is poor.24
Among users of oral hormone replacement therapy the relative risk, but not the absolute risk, of gallbladder disease associated with hormone replacement therapy was found to decrease with increasing body mass index. A similar attenuation of the hormone replacement therapy associated relative risks in overweight and obese women has been observed with breast cancer25 and endometrial cancer.18 The absolute risk of gallbladder disease increases with increasing body mass index26 probably because circulating levels of endogenous oestradiol are higher in overweight and obese women and the addition of exogenous oestrogens may alter total oestrogen levels to a lesser extent than in thinner women (see fig 3
). It has been suggested that the attenuated relative risks with increasing body mass index might be because we could not exclude every woman who had a cholecystectomy before recruitment, although additional analyses suggest this is unlikely.
Strengths and limitations
Our results are based on hormone replacement therapy use reported at recruitment and although some changes in use occurred during follow-up this would not substantially alter our findings. Admissions for gallbladder disease occurred a mean of 3.3 years after recruitment and, on the basis of resurvey data, a small proportion of never users, only 1% annually, started use after recruitment. The proportion of current users stopping therapy was similar for women using oral and transdermal preparations and few women switched between oral and transdermal therapies. Sensitivity analyses showed that our estimates of relative risk were essentially unchanged after censoring women at major events that may alter the use of hormone replacement therapy. Also, after censoring follow-up at July 2002 (to coincide with publication of the first results from the womens health initiative trials27), significant differences between the effect of transdermal therapy and oral therapy persisted.
In this cohort, the findings relating to the method of administration of hormone replacement therapy are specific for gallbladder disease, as we found no differences between transdermal therapy and oral therapy for increased risk of breast cancer10 and ovarian cancer,19 or the reduced risk of fracture.28 Prescribing of transdermal oestrogen rather than oral oestrogen differs according to some factors such as history of hysterectomy and bilateral oophorectomy (see table 1
) but we were able to adjust for these as well as other potential confounders that could influence the choice of hormone replacement therapy such as socioeconomic status, body mass index, and other medical history.
Although some non-NHS funded admissions would not be included in our follow-up, privately funded treatment in the United Kingdom is limited,29 and we have previously shown that in this cohort such admissions are uncommon, as most self reported cholecystectomies were included in our linked NHS hospital admission data.30 We excluded from the analyses women with a record of admission for gallbladder disease before recruitment as most of these women will have had a cholecystectomy and would no longer be at risk of an event. For women recruited in Scotland, hospital records were available from 1981 (when participants were a mean age of 36). In these women, had we not excluded those with an admission before recruitment, the relative risks for gallbladder disease in current users of hormone therapy compared with never users would have been 1.70 instead of 1.71, and the relative risks for transdermal therapy versus oral therapy would have been 1.13 versus 1.83 instead of 1.13 versus 1.85. For women recruited in England, hospital records were available only from 1997; however, the small difference in relative risks in Scotland suggests that not excluding comparable women in England would have a minimal effect on our estimates.
Despite these limitations, the study has several strengths. All women were registered with the NHS, and by linking to NHS hospital records we had virtually complete follow-up, with objective recording of gallbladder disease. The large sample size allowed us to compare reliably a variety of types of hormone replacement therapy. The prospective design ensured that use of hormone replacement therapy was ascertained before outcomes thereby reducing biases resulting from recall or differential prescribing, and we were able to adjust for many potential confounders and found our results to be consistent. Reporting of hormone replacement therapy use in this population compares well with prescription data,31 and outcomes were coded by the NHS hospitals, independent of the study investigators and participants. Additionally, both the accuracy of the linkage process and the coding of gallbladder disease has been shown to be good6 30 and as misclassification of hormone replacement therapy use at recruitment or of gallbladder disease from the hospital records should be non-differential, this would result in an underestimate of the effects found.
Implications for practice
Gallbladder disease is common in middle aged women. In the UK over five years an estimated 1.1% of middle aged women who have never used hormone replacement therapy are admitted to hospital for a cholecystectomy. Use of transdermal oestrogen increases the risk to 1.3% and use of oral oestrogens increases this to 2.0%. Transdermal hormone replacement therapy is, however, generally more costly than oral therapy and can cause local skin reactions.20 21 Whereas the number of women using hormone replacement therapy halved between 2002 and 2005, about 1 million UK women were taking it in 2005 and most used oral preparations.32 For women who choose to use hormone replacement therapy, one cholecystectomy could be avoided for every 140 users of transdermal therapy rather than oral therapy over a five year period.
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Cite this as: BMJ 2008;337:a386
Contributors: All authors contributed to the design and conduct of the study and read and approved the final manuscript. VB and BL are the guarantors.
Funding: This work was supported by Cancer Research UK [grant No C570/A5028], the NHS breast screening programme, and the UK Medical Research Council [grant No G0700474]. The funders had no involvement in the design and conduct of the study; the collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; or the preparation, review, or approval of this manuscript.
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: The study has been approved by the Eastern multicentre research ethics committee.
Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
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