Estrogen-progestin menopausal hormone therapy associated
with high risk of both lobular and tubular breast cancer
Estrogen-progestin menopausal hormone therapy is
associated with a more than two-fold higher relative
risk of developing lobular cancer or tubular cancer than
of developing ductal cancer.
The results of a large European study published in the
journal Breast Cancer Research show for the first time
that estrogen-progestin therapy is associated with a
higher relative risk of developing tubular cancer than
ductal cancer, when taken for more than five years. The
study also confirms previous findings that
estrogen-progestin therapy is associated with a higher
relative risk of lobular cancer than ductal cancer.
Lena Rosenberg from the Karolinska Institutet in
Stockholm, Sweden and colleagues from the Karolinska
Institutet and the Genome Institute of Singapore carried
out a population-based case-control study of women
recently diagnosed with invasive breast cancer. They
selected 1,888 women with ductal breast cancer, 308
women with lobular cancer and 93 women with tubular
breast cancer. All women were matched for age with 3,065
women randomly selected from the population, acting as
controls. Both patients and controls were asked to fill
in a questionnaire about their medical history, health
status and use of menopausal hormone therapy.
Rosenberg et al.'s results show that women who used
medium potency estrogen-progestin combination therapy
had a higher risk of developing lobular or tubular
breast cancer than of developing ductal cancer, compared
with women who did not use hormone therapy. The risk of
developing any of the cancers was higher for women who
had used the therapy for more than five years. For these
women, the risk of developing tubular cancer (OR 6.5,
95% confidence interval 2.8-14.9) or lobular cancer (OR
5.6, 95% confidence interval 3.2-9.7) was more than
twice the risk of developing ductal cancer (OR 2.3, 95%
confidence interval 1.6-3.3).
Other factors, such as the number of births, age at
menopause or body mass index, were found to be
associated with a similar risk of developing the three
subtypes of breast cancer.