Video Feature








Main Menu


Allergy & Immunology

Cancer

Careers

Children’s Health

Diet & Nutrition

Endowments & Grants

Environment

Geriatrics

Heart Disease

Infectious Diseases

Men’s Health

Public Health

Psychiatry

Research

Substance Abuse

Technology

Vascular Disease

Who’s Who

Women’s Health


Noticias En Espanol


Medical Specialties

(Featured Sites)


Allergy & Immunology

Anesthesia

Cardiovascular Disease

Dermatology

Emergency Medicine

Endocrinology and

     Metabolism

Family Practice

Gastroenterology

General Practice

Geriatric Medicine

Gynecology

Gynecologic Oncology

Hematology

Infectious Diseases

Internal Medicine

Neonatology

Nephrology

Neurology

Neurological Surgery

Obstetrics and

     Gynecology

Oncology

Ophthalmology

Orthopedic Surgery

Otorhinolaryngology

Pathology

Pediatrics

Physical Medicine and

     Rehabilitation

Plastic Surgery

Podiatric Medicine

Preventative Medicine

Psychiatry 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

Pulmonary Disease

Radiology, Diagnostic

Radiology, Interventional

Radiology, Nuclear

Radiation Oncology

Rheumatology

Sports Medicine

Surgery, General

Surgery, Hand

Surgery, Thoracic

Surgery, Vascular

Surgery, Colon and

     Rectal

Surgery, Urology


























































Home | Contact | Disclaimer | Tour | Links Exchange

TeleMed International HQ, Inc. | Medical Standard Systems Corporation

Copyrights 1994- 2017 All Rights Reserved


Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by governmental institutions, authorities, scholars, academicians, researchers, educational institutions, pharmaceutical organizations, advertisers, individuals, websites, blogs and links featured at HcVN are their own. They may not reflect or parallel our own thoughts and should not be taken as an endorsement.  With regards to your health related issues traditional or integrated, please consult your physicians.

 

Featured Procedures & Websites












.



Heart Bypass Surgery



Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm



Angioplasty



Angiography

In this test, your doctor injects contrast dye into blood vessels and uses X-ray images to diagnose blockages in coronary arteries and coronary artery bypass grafts. Doctors also use angiography to diagnose blockages in arteries to the kidneys, limbs, brain and other organs and to guide instruments during treatment

 
Contacthttp://www.hcvn.com/HcVNNewWeb/Contact1/index.html

Login

Register


Women’s Health


BMJ: Doubt cast on Million Women Study, implicating HRT in breast cancer risk

[Does hormone replacement therapy cause breast cancer? An application of causal principles to three studies Part 4. The Million Women Study Online First 2012 doi: 10.1136/jfprhc-2011-100229]


Findings from the Million Women Study, which were used to establish that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) causes breast cancer, do not in fact, prove a causal link, concludes a review of the evidence published online in the Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care.


The Million Women Study (MWS), which has produced four reports (2003, 2004, 2006 and 2011), and is the largest study of its kind on the topic, was one of three major pieces of research that prompted a rethink of the long term safety of HRT.


The MWS drew on new cases of breast cancer arising in women invited for breast screening in the UK between 1966 and 2001. The estimated risk levels it found for the disease were higher than those found in either of the other two studies---the collaborative reanalysis (CR) and the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI).


Given its key role in influencing the regulatory authorities and public perception, the current authors assessed generally accepted causal criteria applied to scientific research, such as biases and biological implausibility, to review the findings of the MWS.


Their analysis highlighted several design flaws that would have skewed the findings.


For example, cancers detected within a few months of the study’s start would have already been present when the women were enrolled in the research, but these were not excluded.


Using study participants taking part in a breast screening programme, and the invitation to the study itself, would have increased the participation of HRT users already aware of breast lumps/pre-cancerous changes, so leading to higher numbers of cancers being detected (detection bias), say the authors.


This is borne out by a higher rate of cancers among the study participants than in the general population, irrespective of whether or not they used HRT.


Breast cancer can sometimes grow slowly, and remain undetected for years. Even a small bias resulting in the detection of 1 to 1.2 extra cases each year among 1000 women who had used HRT for five years, or an extra 1.5 to 1.9 cases in those using HRT for 10 years, would have invalidated the overall findings, say the authors.


The average time from recruitment to the MWS to detection of breast cancer of 1.2 to 1.7 years, and the likelihood of a fatal breast cancer being 22% higher among HRT users within this short time frame, which the study found, was biologically implausible, they claim.


For the most aggressive forms of cancer, it is generally accepted that it takes a decade for a tumour to reach the size of 1 cm, which is the smallest size that can be diagnosed clinically.


Crucial data were often also missing, say the authors. In the third MWS report, follow up data on HRT use was not available for 57%-62% of the study participants.


“The name ‘Million Women Study’ implies an authority beyond criticism or refutation. Many commentators, and the investigators, have repeatedly stressed that it was the largest study of HRT and breast cancer ever conducted,” write the authors.


“Yet the validity of any study is dependent on the quality of its design, execution, analysis and interpretation. Size alone does not guarantee that the findings are reliable,” they continue.


“The MWS was an observational study, and it has the attendant problems and uncertainties intrinsic to such studies. If the evidence was unreliable, the only effect of its massive size would have been to confer spurious statistical authority to doubtful findings,” they conclude, adding that the MWS evidence “was indeed unreliable.”


Source: British Medical Journal

International News:    Asia    Africa    Europe    Latin America/Caribbean    Middle East