| Literature DB >> 27456847 |
Noor Asi1,2, Khaled Mohammed3, Qusay Haydour3,4, Michael R Gionfriddo5, Oscar L Morey Vargas6, Larry J Prokop7, Stephanie S Faubion8, Mohammad Hassan Murad3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Use of menopausal hormonal therapy (MHT)-containing estrogen and a synthetic progestin is associated with an increased risk of breast cancer. It is unclear if progesterone in combination with estrogen carries a lower risk of breast cancer. Limited data suggest differences between progesterone and progestins on cardiovascular risk factors, including cholesterol and glucose metabolism. Whether this translates to differences in cardiovascular outcomes is uncertain. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to synthesize the existing evidence about the effect of progesterone in comparison to synthetic progestins, each in combination with estrogens, on the risk of breast cancer and cardiovascular events.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Cardiovascular events; Meta-analysis; Progesterone; Synthetic progestins; Systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27456847 PMCID: PMC4960754 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-016-0294-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Study selection process. The initial search resulted in 3410 citations. After screening the abstracts, this was limited to 46 potentially relevant articles. These were reviewed in full text by two authors and eventually two cohort studies and one population-based case-control study were included with 44 being excluded
Description of included studies
| Study | Study population | Age (mean) ±SD | Location | Group 1 | Group 2 | Type and route of estrogen | Follow-up (mean) in years | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Espie et al. [ | 4949 postmenopausal women were included in two groups: exposed group, 2693 postmenopausal women who were receiving MHT or who stopped <5 years, and unexposed group, 2256 postmenopausal women who had never received MHT or who had stopped >5 years. | 60.6 ± 6.3 for exposed group, 64.2 ± 8.3 for unexposed group | France | Estradiol + natural progesterone | Estradiol + synthetic progestins (excluding medroxyprogesterone acetate and 19-nortestosterone derivatives) | Estradiol transdermal in 78 % and oral in 22 % | 2.5 | Breast cancer risk |
| Fournier et al. 2008 [ | 80,377 postmenopausal women were included in two groups: MHT never-users with 23,703 postmenopausal women and MHT ever-users with 56,674 postmenopausal women. | 55.0 ± 4.8 for MHT never-users, 52.3 ± 4.1 for MHT ever-users | France | Estrogen + progesterone (almost exclusively estradiol compounds) | Estrogen + synthetic progestins (almost exclusively estradiol compounds) | Postmenopausal women received either oral or transdermal estrogen (% not reported) | 8.1 | Breast cancer risk |
| Cordina-Duverger et al. 2013 [ | 1555 postmenopausal woman, 739 cases treated with combined estrogen and progestagen. 816 controls | Range (25–75) | France | Estrogen + progesterone: 25 cases and 34 controls | Estrogen + synthetic progestins : 55 cases and 43 controls | Not specified | 4 | Breast cancer risk |
MHT menopausal hormone therapy
The effect of progesterone vs. synthetic progestins in combination with estrogen on breast cancer incidence
| Study | Group 1 | Incidence of breast cancer in group 1 | Group 2 | Incidence of breast cancer in group 2 | Relative risk (RR) | 95 % confidence interval (95 % CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Espie et al. 2007 [ | Estradiol + progesterone | 4/999 | Estradiol + synthetic progestina | 12/1272 | 0.42 | 0.13–1.31 |
| Fournier et al. 2008 [ | Estrogen + progesterone (almost exclusively estradiol compounds) | 129/40,537 person-years | Estrogen + synthetic progestin (almost exclusively estradiol compounds) | 635/135,288 person-years | 0.68 | 0.56–0.82 |
| Estrogen + progesterone (almost exclusively estradiol compounds) | 129/40,537 person-years | Estrogen + synthetic progestinb (almost exclusively estradiol compounds) | 606/128,253 person-years | 0.67 | 0.76–0.81 |
aThis study excluded users of medroxyprogesterone acetate and 19-nortestosterone derivatives
bThis is a partial cohort that does not include users of medroxyprogesterone acetate from the analysis
Fig. 2Random effects model of breast cancer risk in postmenopausal women receiving estrogen with progesterone vs. synthetic progestins. This figure shows that progesterone was found to be associated with lower breast cancer compared to synthetic progestins in combination with estrogen
The relative risk (95 %) for breast cancer according to the route of administration of estradiol and the type of progestogen used
| Study name | Type of MHT | Progesterone | Synthetic progestins |
|---|---|---|---|
| Espie et al. 2007 [ | Oral estradiol | NR | 0.81 (0.23–2.85) |
| Transdermal estradiol | 0.46 (0.13–1.62) | 1.07 (0.50–2.27) |
NR not reported in the study
Risk of bias assessment of the included studies
| Study | Representativeness of the exposed cohort | Selection of the non-exposed cohort | Ascertainment of exposure | Outcome of interest was not present at start of study | Comparability of cohorts | Assessment of outcome | Adequacy of follow-up cohort |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Espie et al. 2007 [ | Somehow representative | Drawn from the same community | No description | Yes | Study control for most important factors | No description | Yes |
| Fournier et al. 2008 [ | Somehow representative | Drawn from the same community | Written self-report questionnaires | Yes | Study control for most important factors | Self-report questionnaires or files of health insurance plan. (Pathology reports were obtained in 96 % of cases) | Yes |