Hormone replacement therapy and the risk of breast cancer: assessment of therapy acceptance in a cohort of previously treated breast cancer patients

Authors

  • Agnaldo Anelli Hospital, Santo André; Department of Clinical Oncology
  • Daniel L. Gimenez Hospital, Santo André; Department of Clinical Oncology
  • Aline Porto Rocha Hospital, Santo André; Department of Clinical Oncology
  • Cíntia Mendonça de Abreu Hospital, Santo André; Department of Clinical Oncology
  • Helano Carioca Freitas Hospital, Santo André; Department of Clinical Oncology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0041-87812003000200006

Keywords:

Breast cancer, Hormone replacement, Tamoxifen

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In the postmenopausal period, an average of 25% of women will present symptomatic ovarian failure requiring hormonal replacement therapy. Estrogen can relieve vasomotor symptoms. Hormonal replacement therapy is generally not recommended for breast cancer patients due to the potential risk of tumor recurrence. To answer the questions about the safety of hormonal replacement therapy in this subgroup of women, it is necessary to establish the acceptance of treatment. METHODS: Between September 1998 and February 2001, a cohort of 216 breast cancer patients were asked to complete a questionnaire. All patients had completed their treatment and were informed about survival rates after breast cancer and hormonal replacement therapy. RESULTS: Among the 216 patients, 134 (62%) would refuse hormonal replacement therapy. A hundred patients were afraid of relapse (74.6%). Adjuvant tamoxifen therapy was the only statistically significant variable (70.3% versus 29.7% p=0.003). Understanding clinical stage (p= 0.045) and type of medical assistance (private versus public , p=0.033) also seemed to influence the decision. Early stage disease (p= 0.22), type of surgical procedure (radical versus conservative, p=0.67), adjuvant chemotherapy (p=0.082) or marital status (p=0.98 ) were not statistically significant in decision making. Several patients submitted to adjuvant chemotherapy (41.6%) would accept hormonal replacement therapy under medical supervision, as did most of advanced clinical stage patients (58.3%; p=0.022). CONCLUSION: There is a high level of rejection for hormonal replacement therapy among breast cancer patients when current data on tumor cure rates, and potential risks of estrogen use is available. Adverse effects of tamoxifen in the adjuvant setting may be the reason for refusal of hormonal replacement therapy .

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Published

2003-01-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Hormone replacement therapy and the risk of breast cancer: assessment of therapy acceptance in a cohort of previously treated breast cancer patients . (2003). Revista Do Hospital Das Clínicas, 58(2), 91-96. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0041-87812003000200006