Literature DB >> 10362122

Exposure to female hormone drugs during pregnancy: effect on malformations and cancer.

E Hemminki1, M Gissler, H Toukomaa.   

Abstract

This study aimed to investigate whether the use of female sex hormone drugs during pregnancy is a risk factor for subsequent breast and other oestrogen-dependent cancers among mothers and their children and for genital malformations in the children. A retrospective cohort of 2052 hormone-drug exposed mothers, 2038 control mothers and their 4130 infants was collected from maternity centres in Helsinki from 1954 to 1963. Cancer cases were searched for in national registers through record linkage. Exposures were examined by the type of the drug (oestrogen, progestin only) and by timing (early in pregnancy, only late in pregnancy). There were no statistically significant differences between the groups with regard to mothers' cancer, either in total or in specified hormone-dependent cancers. The total number of malformations recorded, as well as malformations of the genitals in male infants, were higher among exposed children. The number of cancers among the offspring was small and none of the differences between groups were statistically significant. The study supports the hypothesis that oestrogen or progestin drug therapy during pregnancy causes malformations among children who were exposed in utero but does not support the hypothesis that it causes cancer later in life in the mother; the power to study cancers in offspring, however, was very low. Non-existence of the risk, negative confounding, weak exposure or low study-power may explain the negative findings.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10362122      PMCID: PMC2363045          DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6690469

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


  20 in total

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6.  Evidence of prenatal influences on breast cancer risk.

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Review 3.  Testicular dysgenesis syndrome and the estrogen hypothesis: a quantitative meta-analysis.

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5.  Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Pattern in Turkey: Analysis of the National Database in the Context of the First Pharmacovigilance Legislation.

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6.  Complications related to in vitro reproductive techniques support the implementation of natural procreative technologies.

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  6 in total

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