Hormone Replacement Therapy after Breast Cancer
Generally speaking, a great deal has already been discussed on the issue of hormone replacement therapy. However, less is known specifically about this form of therapy for breast cancer survivors. One reason for this is that physicians are concerned about prescribing any of these drugs to their patients for fear that it might increase the risk of cancer recurrence. But along with this, blanket statements regarding hormone replacement therapy are quite inappropriate. Each individual woman should be given the chance to consider the risks and benefits of hormone replacement based on their personal situation. Every woman experiences menopause differently, with varying degrees of symptoms. Some women go through menopause with little difficulty and without increased risk of osteoporosis or heart disease. For others, menopause is traumatic and can introduce increased chances of illness into their lives.
Professional practice in medicine has endorsed allowing women to replace ovarian hormones with hormone replacement therapy once the ovaries begin to fail. Evidence and clinical experiences indicate that the benefits clearly outweigh the risk and expense of such therapy. However, evidence has yet to be found with regards to the risks to women surviving beast cancer. Most concerns are based on speculation and anecdotal experience alone.
For most women, the question lies in the correlation between hormone replacement therapy and an increased risk of breast cancer. Does hormone therapy contribute to breast cancer? Before starting such treatment, physicians often require their patients to get a baseline screening mammogram and because women receiving treatment are under a physician's surveillance, they are more likely to get annual screenings. Although there is no difference between women who are not on hormone replacement and those who are on it for less than ten years, once the duration exceeds the ten-year benchmark, there is a slight increase in breast cancer incidence, but the numbers are insignificant. There also appears to be anecdotal data that women with breast lobular neoplasm may have an increased risk for recurrence with hormone replacement therapy. However, with or without this form of therapy, these women are still at an increased risk of recurrence.
On the other end of the spectrum, how does one know that one is cured of breast cancer? Unfortunately, there is no absolute way to know. Statistical probabilities can be given based on the cancer's characteristics. If one is destined to relapse, it will usually happen in the first five years after the diagnosis. Regrettably, late recurrences do rarely occur. Breast cancer patients are advised that once treatment is complete, they should consider themselves cured, move on.
Medical research shows that low dose hormone replacement therapy for less than 10 years does not significantly contribute to the development of breast cancer in the general population, but the question is, does this apply to the population of women cured of breast cancer? Sadly, there are no studies to confirm this and no evidence has yet surfaced from past studies to answer this. The safest way to think about it though, is that for women with a high probability of cure, the benefits of this treatment far outweigh the risks.
Michael Russell Your Independent guide to Breast Cancer.
Hormone Replacement Therapy and Breast Cancer
Many women are hesitant to take hormone replacement because they fear that it will increase their chances of developing breast cancer. Up to this tim...
Alcohol Increases The Risk For The Most Frequent Kinds Of Breast Cancer
A new report from the Karolinska Institute in Sweden states that women who have been through menopause, who drink daily more than 250 ml beer, 100 ml ...
Breast Cancer Awareness Going Pink In October
Breast Cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths for American women. This year, an estimated 180,000 Americans will be diagnosed wit...
Breast Cancer and Hormone Therapy
Since my breast cancer, I was obsessed to find the core of it. I started asking myself the following questions:1. What causes breast cancer?2. What ma...
An Overview Of Breast Cancer
Many women consider their breasts to be their defining feature and cancer is one of the most dreaded diseases of the world. As the name signifies, ca...
Breast Cancer is Cureable!
Every few minutes a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer. The disease is the most common cause of death in women between the ages of 40 and 55, and t...
Tamoxifen and Breast Cancer
A number of cells in the female body contain receptors for estrogen and estrogen-like substances. Examples of these organs are the breast, uterus, va...
Recognize Breast Cancer Symptoms
The figures concerning breast cancer are alarming. One woman in every nine will get breast cancer at some point in her life. There are more than 212,0...
Is There Ways To Prevent Breast Cancer?
The best approach is to avoid as many risk factors as possible while increasing protective factors.Doctors and scientists do not know why one person g...
Alternative Treatments for Breast Cancer
It is shocking to live with breast cancer statistics rising to 1 in 8 women developing some form of breast cancer in their lifetime. Women 50 and olde...
Do You Have Breast Cancer?
Have you noticed a lump or thickening in your breast? Do you find your breast size uneven? Do your nipples appear retracted or inverted? Are you wo...
Breast Cancer Symptoms - Do You Have Them?
If you want to get nervous about developing breast cancer, then just read some figures. The reality is that one woman out of nine will develop breast...
Breast Cancer Diagnosis
Among all the types of cancer, breast cancer is one of the most frequently diagnosed in the world today. But compared to other cancer types that are n...
Breast Cancer Treatment: Conventional Treatment Methods
Your team of doctors will make treatment recommendations based on the stage of your cancer. Your standard treatment options may include surgery, chemo...
Risk Factors for Breast Cancer
There are many different risk factors for breast cancer. The most significant of these risks factors is gender and age. Most occurrences of breast can...
