Avoidable cancers in the Nordic countries. Exogenous hormones.

APMIS. Supplementum Pub Date : 1997-01-01
J F Winther, L Dreyer, L Tryggvadottir
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Abstract

The well-described influence of several aspects of reproductive life on the risk for cancer in the reproductive organs has raised concern regarding the safety of exogenous hormones, particularly since sex hormones have become one of the most widely used drugs among women in the western world. The major areas of application include oral contraception and hormone replacement therapy in women with menopausal symptoms. Since the introduction of oral contraceptives onto the Nordic market in the late 1960s, the number of users has grown steadily, to reach proportions of long-term users among women aged 15-45 years in 1985 ranging between 6% (Norway) and 19% (Sweden) and proportions of current users in 1994 ranging between 20% (Norway) and 28% (Sweden). Such data on the current and long-term use of oral contraceptives by the female populations, linked with relative estimates of adverse (cancers of the breast and uterine cervix) and beneficial effects (protection against cancers of the ovary and endometrium), indicate that 95 cases of breast cancer and 40 of cervical cancer will be caused by oral contraceptives annually around 2000 in the Nordic countries, which corresponds to 0.6% of all breast cancers and approximately 3% of all cervical cancers. The beneficial effects include an annual prevention around the year 2000 of approximately 350 cases of ovarian cancer and a similar number of endometrial cancer, for a total about 700 cancer cases annually. The prevalence of long-term users (> or = 5 years) of hormone replacement therapy among Nordic women aged 40-69 in 1995 was estimated to be 10-11%, which on the basis of an associated relative risk for breast cancer ranging from 1.2-1.5 suggests than an annual total of 260 cases of breast cancer could be avoided in the Nordic countries around the year 2000 if hormone replacement therapy were eliminated. This corresponds to 1.8% of all notified cases of breast cancer among women in these countries.

北欧国家可避免的癌症。外源激素。
生殖生活的几个方面对生殖器官癌症风险的影响已得到充分描述,这引起了人们对外源性激素安全性的关注,特别是因为性激素已成为西方世界妇女中最广泛使用的药物之一。主要应用领域包括口服避孕药和更年期症状妇女的激素替代疗法。自20世纪60年代后期将口服避孕药引入北欧市场以来,使用者的数量稳步增长,1985年15-45岁妇女长期使用者的比例达到6%(挪威)至19%(瑞典),1994年目前使用者的比例达到20%(挪威)至28%(瑞典)。这类关于女性人口目前和长期使用口服避孕药的数据,加上不利影响(乳腺癌和子宫癌)和有利影响(防止卵巢癌和子宫内膜癌)的相对估计,表明在2000年前后,北欧国家每年将有95例乳腺癌和40例宫颈癌是由口服避孕药引起的。相当于所有乳腺癌的0.6%和所有宫颈癌的约3%。其有益效果包括在2000年前后每年预防约350例卵巢癌和类似数量的子宫内膜癌,每年总共预防约700例癌症。1995年,40-69岁的北欧妇女中长期(>或= 5年)使用激素替代疗法的比例估计为10-11%,根据乳腺癌的相关相对危险度为1.2-1.5,这表明如果在2000年前后取消激素替代疗法,北欧国家每年总共可以避免260例乳腺癌。这相当于这些国家通报的所有妇女乳腺癌病例的1.8%。
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