But while women with long-lasting menopausal symptoms may have a
slightly higher risk for breast cancer, they are not more likely to
die from the disease, the study found.
Based on the results, such women should get regular mammograms, but
they don't need to take different precautions than what's currently
recommended for breast cancer screening, lead study author Dr. Rowan
Chlebowski told Reuters Health in a phone interview.
"I think the clinical recommendation at this point could just be
diligence to continue screening mammography adherence," said
Chlebowski, an oncologist at the City of Hope National Medical
Center in Duarte, California.
Presently, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG)
recommends mammograms every 1-2 years for women who face an average
risk of developing breast cancer, starting no later than age 50.
According to ACOG, so called vasomotor symptoms - such as hot
flashes and night sweats - are the most commonly reported menopausal
symptoms, occurring in up to 82 percent of women after natural
menopause. Usually, these symptoms peak about a year after the final
menstrual period and are not associated with any extra risk for
breast cancer.
In a small proportion of women, however, the symptoms persist for
many years. The new study focused on nearly 10,000 women with
long-standing menopausal symptoms, half of whom had persistent
symptoms for more than a decade. Researchers compared these women to
nearly 16,000 women who went through menopause without any such
symptoms.
During 18 years of follow-up, 1,399 women developed breast cancer -
and the risk was 13 percent higher in the women with persistent
vasomotor symptoms than in women who didn't have these symptoms at
all.
Like Chlebowski, other experts interviewed by Reuters Health do not
believe extra breast cancer screening is needed for women with
persistent menopausal symptoms, beyond what's currently advised for
the average woman.
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"The women were over age 50. Recommendations are for mammograms
every 1-2 years . . . The findings don't change this
recommendation," Dr. Monica Christmas, director of the Menopause
Program at the University of Chicago, told Reuters Health by email.
"All women over the age of 40 should follow guidelines for breast
cancer screening," she added, whether or not they experience
vasomotor symptoms.
Christmas, who was not involved in the study, also noted that about
70 percent of women in the study were Caucasian, "so the results
might not apply to everyone."
Professor Susan Davis, President of the International Menopause
Society and Chair of the Women's Health Research Program at Monash
University in Australia, and her colleague in the Women's Health
Research Program, epidemiologist Professor Robin Bell, who were not
involved in the study, worry that the findings "will simply frighten
people unnecessarily."
Because the new study excluded women who had vasomotor symptoms for
brief periods, its participants "are not at all representative" of
the average population of women, they emphasized in an email.
They also pointed out that obesity, alcohol use, breast density and
having never been pregnant are all associated with well documented
and far more substantial risks of breast cancer. Unlike the duration
of menopause symptoms, they noted, "These risk factors are not only
important but (in the case of) obesity and alcohol use are
modifiable."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2QWjS5u Menopause, online December 28, 2019.
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